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Username "Darker45" occurred in the following posts (quoted and/or mentioned):


1. Post 66579977 (unedited backup) (by LoyceV) (scraped on Sat Apr 4 10:03:49 CEST 2026) in LoyceV's Merit data analysis (full data since Jan. 24, 2018; not just 120 days):

Weekly update (2026-03-27_Fri_05.18h)


theymos' raw data (format: time    amount    msg    user_from    user_to)
Sample
Code:
1774578654 1 5578399.msg66548838 901661 889300
1774578579 2 5514805.msg66549858 1166480 3622399
1774577129 1 5578327.msg66548021 950662 3735576
1774576245 1 178336.msg66550804 533727 252510
1774576227 4 5566387.msg66550811 317618 2434463
1774576084 1 178336.msg66550869 18321 120694
1774575268 1 178336.msg66550370 120694 252510
1774573981 2 5475347.msg66548700 1554927 252510
1774573837 4 5578280.msg66550858 1059082 1554927
1774573792 1 5578280.msg66550832 1554927 1059082
1774573378 2 5573413.msg66368941 1059082 3744691
1774573364 2 5578280.msg66541855 1554927 112493
1774572982 2 5577765.msg66549021 1059082 1068464
1774572978 6 5577765.msg66549177 1059082 123824
1774572951 6 5577765.msg66523699 1059082 123824
1774572928 2 5577765.msg66523377 1059082 123824
1774572900 2 5578299.msg66547996 1059082 914465
1774572882 1 5576534.msg66544937 1059082 3751662
1774572833 4 5576534.msg66490361 1059082 3725649
1774572818 2 5578256.msg66545769 1059082 3751516
1774572731 4 5578431.msg66547346 1059082 1298138
1774572533 4 5578174.msg66539244 1059082 123824
1774572517 5 5578174.msg66537996 1059082 516434
1774572372 1 5578280.msg66549229 1059082 1554927
1774571901 8 5578280.msg66541855 1059082 112493
1774571894 4 5578280.msg66548794 1059082 912328
1774571792 4 5578319.msg66550766 1059082 1012655
1774571635 4 5566387.msg66550811 1059082 2434463
1774571175 5 5575676.msg66452637 3729918 3363284
1774571106 2 5399898.msg66318922 3483703 3734294
1774571071 3 5570425.msg66252065 3483703 3734294
1774570930 1 5567112.msg66544681 3332377 3467714
1774570582 1 5578453.msg66548022 1269701 819270
1774570543 1 5578327.msg66548021 1269701 3735576
1774570459 1 301480.msg66550158 1593137 783422
1774570407 1 5526863.msg66549821 1593137 991374
1774570217 2 5578508.msg66550093 2762272 1137579
1774570117 1 5220832.msg66547540 839568 3706783
1774570110 2 5573204.msg66548211 1059082 1170966
1774570100 1 5573204.msg66550613 1059082 1170966
1774569816 1 5578497.msg66549619 1593137 3717645
1774569654 1 3278616.msg66550751 2716227 113670
1774567659 1 5578427.msg66547097 18321 375981
1774567629 1 301480.msg66550158 1593137 783422
1774567486 1 5578511.msg66550198 1247226 3577653
1774567438 1 5552058.msg65636838 18321 375981
1774567437 1 5552058.msg65638090 18321 359716
1774567436 1 5552058.msg65640117 18321 52782
1774567435 1 5552058.msg65690945 18321 106523
1774566487 1 5578350.msg66544882 1021018 3519361
.......
.......
.......
1516833930 7 2228.msg29479 135920 3
1516833833 1 178336.msg28855702 479624 1130992
1516833813 1 2817737.msg28849540 1001644 990403
1516833798 21 5.msg28 520313 3
1516833796 1 2808926.msg28728384 140584 35
1516833779 1 178336.msg28853916 479624 33156
1516833756 20 2482937.msg25417254 101872 135920
1516833713 21 5.msg28 169515 3
1516833686 1 2818179.msg28855276 994466 1196028
1516833610 49 1545652.msg15536651 206143 520313
1516833593 1 2818066.msg28855136 260067 520313
1516833592 2 2806168.msg28855427 520313 355846
1516833591 49 1545652.msg15536651 881377 520313
1516833523 1 2818066.msg28855343 539826 340795
1516833521 1 2818066.msg28855136 514126 520313
1516833478 1 2818066.msg28855136 482980 520313
1516833460 1 2818066.msg28854596 93844 520313
1516833451 1 2816214.msg28845827 1083353 1520388
1516833430 50 178608.msg28854963 884600 520313
1516833349 1 178336.msg28852898 479624 1521711
1516833346 1 2812863.msg28785611 303315 1707287
1516833329 1 2818066.msg28854596 206143 520313
1516833326 1 178336.msg28852768 479624 181806
1516833304 1 2818066.msg28853325 340795 877396
1516833289 1 2716104.msg28846824 1239985 1739247
1516833281 1 2818066.msg28853686 206143 136484
1516833252 1 2816647.msg28837916 169515 1701092
1516833251 1 178336.msg28849600 479624 172400
1516833237 1 2677441.msg28778318 123412 1090430
1516833230 1 2814078.msg28796083 520313 881377
1516833207 1 2772292.msg28837085 1189487 1028592
1516833203 1 2818066.msg28855136 101872 520313
1516833199 1 2818066.msg28853325 926641 877396
1516833148 1 2808926.msg28793321 78147 35
1516833148 1 2634042.msg28672219 123412 1094601
1516833111 1 2818066.msg28855136 535215 520313
1516833078 45 2813828.msg28801076 135920 101872
1516833070 1 2818066.msg28855136 881377 520313
1516833049 1 2677441.msg28848945 88254 903139
1516833048 1 2818066.msg28855136 101872 520313
1516833044 5 2818066.msg28855019 135920 688810
1516833001 5 2813828.msg28801076 135920 101872
1516832978 1 2384335.msg28854772 1344962 1101839
1516832969 1 2818066.msg28855136 881564 520313
1516832953 1 2818066.msg28854621 520313 101872
1516832934 1 2818066.msg28855136 877396 520313
1516832874 1 178608.msg28792130 884600 35
1516832842 5 2818066.msg28853325 688810 877396
1516832833 2 178336.msg28852079 479624 1257516
1516831941 1 2818066.msg28853325 35 877396
Full list* (55 MB) (not limited to 120 days, 2394 Merit transactions added since my previous update).

theymos' data (human readable format, including usernames and post titles)
Sample
On Fri 27 Mar 2026 03:30:54 AM CET, Darker45 (history) sent 1 Merit to giammangiato (history) for Re: Have you ever been discouraged on your bet, and it later turned successful? .
On Fri 27 Mar 2026 03:29:39 AM CET, Julien_Olynpic (history) sent 2 Merit to purple_sparkles (history) for Re: Биткойн соединяет людей..
On Fri 27 Mar 2026 03:05:29 AM CET, julerz12 (history) sent 1 Merit to coinrifft (history) for Re: Kapag Pumalya ang Self-Custody: Mga Totoong Kaso at Aral.
On Fri 27 Mar 2026 02:50:45 AM CET, Hottiek (history) sent 1 Merit to JayJuanGee (history) for Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion.
On Fri 27 Mar 2026 02:50:27 AM CET, nutildah (history) sent 4 Merit to FinneysTrueVision (history) for Re: Three heroes and a legend are cheaters..
.......
.......
.......
On Wed 24 Jan 2018 11:28:54 PM CET, AdolfinWolf (history) sent 1 Merit to Lutpin (history) for Re: What is the function of the "Merit" score?.
On Wed 24 Jan 2018 11:27:54 PM CET, Dahman El_Harrachi (history) sent 1 Merit to theymos (history) for Re: Forum ranks/positions/badges (What do those shiny coins under my name mean?).
On Wed 24 Jan 2018 11:27:22 PM CET, Tyrantt (history) sent 5 Merit to AdolfinWolf (history) for What is the function of the "Merit" score?.
On Wed 24 Jan 2018 11:27:13 PM CET, Last of the V8s (history) sent 2 Merit to Rosewater Foundation (history) for Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion.
On Wed 24 Jan 2018 11:12:21 PM CET, theymos (history) sent 1 Merit to AdolfinWolf (history) for What is the function of the "Merit" score?.
Full list (584 MB)

Usernames to go with theymos' data
Sample
0: deMerit (Bitcoin Forum) (history) earned: 0 Merit.
3: satoshi (history) earned: 8438 Merit.
4: sirius (history) earned: 884 Merit.
10: Xunie (history) earned: 1 Merit.
11: madhatter (history) earned: 5 Merit.
.......
.......
.......
3751306: broccolo9 (history) earned: 1 Merit.
3751426: REAleksij (history) earned: 3 Merit.
3751510: mike.io (history) earned: 1 Merit.
3751516: IgnotusNemo (history) earned: 3 Merit.
3751662: GFOXOG (history) earned: 1 Merit.
Full list* (10 MB)

Usernames machine readable
Sample
Code:
0: deMerit (Bitcoin Forum)
3: satoshi
4: sirius
10: Xunie
11: madhatter
12: nanaimogold
13: SmokeTooMuch
14: The Madhatter
21: AgoraMutual
23: 1 currency now
24: dwdollar
26: NewLibertyStandard
27: riX
28: Sabunir
29: giik
30: BitcoinFX
31: Suggester
33: m0mchil
34: BlueSky
35: theymos
37: soultcer
40: xc
42: ec
49: Cdecker
51: DannyM
97: dsg
101: Goldstein
143: laszlo
145: ducki2p
146: Brandon
163: Karmicads
182: Derrick
183: hugolp
198: allinvain
203: HostFat
206: teppy
217: SirArthur
224: Gavin Andresen
237: lachesis
241: QuantumMechanic
244: nixoid
251: wobber
262: chaord
267: virtualcoin
269: Bitcoiner
270: llama
271: Timo Y
274: limikael
284: joey.rich
288: Stone Man
.......
.......
.......
3747712: Mr intelligence
3747726: Spicoli
3747820: statumx
3747822: Amaro958
3747833: Chifather247
3747903: needsumhelp
3747917: billy.grabow
3747918: btchelp.io
3748112: ranswar
3748386: martschlo
3748434: alkalineph13
3748444: Skizakas
3748484: GemUtxo
3748490: luthen
3748492: CryptoLogixBot
3748579: Der_Gegenwert
3748655: deX001
3748702: Batractoxin
3748768: ghoulMAX
3748978: Meggie Leen
3749023: JetSeason
3749052: cezar1
3749110: PocketAurora
3749153: yowbow
3749316: Carl_DKJ
3749438: Zagal
3749590: Rex1971
3749597: Allicedreim123
3749642: Julienbxl
3749650: Wexler3K
3749790: Strixc2
3749819: Jzbond65
3749913: BowClawblaw
3749923: BobClawblaw
3749937: ostap1706
3749956: funinfo
3750034: (BTC)
3750208: BambooSynergy
3750258: burnchat
3750567: freddy_mujik
3750739: Aventas
3750779: Bitsolo.me
3751038: sats2usd
3751069: katzamit99
3751114: Cassius55
3751306: broccolo9
3751426: REAleksij
3751510: mike.io
3751516: IgnotusNemo
3751662: GFOXOG
Full list (2 MB)

UserIDs, sent Merit and earned Merit machine readable
Sample
Code:
0:569:0
3:0:8438
4:0:884
10:0:1
11:0:5
12:0:1
13:3:76
14:0:11
21:0:2
23:0:1
24:0:9
26:0:19
27:0:54
28:0:13
29:0:4
30:380:800
31:0:1
33:0:27
34:0:4
35:14338:14355
37:0:6
40:0:4
42:0:69
49:0:5
51:0:2
97:0:2
101:0:2
143:0:2483
145:0:1
146:0:4
163:0:21
182:1:0
183:9:1
198:2:83
203:68:305
206:0:14
217:3:36
224:0:1484
237:0:5
241:0:9
244:0:1
251:0:1
262:0:1
267:0:2
269:0:1
270:0:52
271:0:1
274:0:42
284:0:6
288:0:10
.......
.......
.......
3747712:0:1
3747726:0:1
3747820:0:3
3747822:0:13
3747833:0:2
3747903:0:1
3747917:0:2
3747918:0:1
3748112:0:1
3748386:0:3
3748434:0:1
3748444:0:1
3748484:0:16
3748490:0:7
3748492:0:1
3748579:0:2
3748655:0:1
3748702:0:1
3748768:0:1
3748978:0:4
3749023:0:1
3749052:0:2
3749110:0:3
3749153:0:1
3749316:0:1
3749438:0:3
3749590:0:9
3749597:0:7
3749642:0:1
3749650:0:3
3749790:0:1
3749819:0:1
3749913:0:2
3749923:0:4
3749937:0:1
3749956:0:1
3750034:6:15
3750208:0:1
3750258:0:1
3750567:0:1
3750739:0:2
3750779:0:1
3751038:0:2
3751069:0:1
3751114:0:2
3751306:0:1
3751426:0:3
3751510:0:1
3751516:0:3
3751662:0:1
Full list (1 MB)

Total number of users who received 1 or more Merit: 51150
Sample
Code:
     1. 20477 Merit received by LoyceV (#459836) from 1106 unique users in 11833 transactions
     2. 20185 Merit received by fillippone (#1852120) from 745 unique users in 11071 transactions
     3. 18887 Merit received by o_e_l_e_o (#1188543) from 801 unique users in 9984 transactions
     4. 15286 Merit received by El duderino_ (#1067333) from 478 unique users in 8812 transactions
     5. 14355 Merit received by theymos (#35) from 1223 unique users in 5152 transactions
     6. 13184 Merit received by JayJuanGee (#252510) from 714 unique users in 8774 transactions
     7. 12074 Merit received by icopress (#1137579) from 582 unique users in 4612 transactions
     8. 11957 Merit received by Symmetrick (#2627711) from 773 unique users in 6854 transactions
     9. 11668 Merit received by LFC_Bitcoin (#379487) from 490 unique users in 6462 transactions
    10. 11286 Merit received by DdmrDdmr (#1582324) from 653 unique users in 6451 transactions
    11. 11278 Merit received by pooya87 (#379147) from 604 unique users in 6559 transactions
    12. 11043 Merit received by cygan (#27470) from 505 unique users in 5742 transactions
    13. 10682 Merit received by philipma1957 (#64507) from 580 unique users in 6122 transactions
    14. 9936 Merit received by xhomerx10 (#120694) from 330 unique users in 5109 transactions
    15. 9709 Merit received by nutildah (#317618) from 641 unique users in 5272 transactions
    16. 9590 Merit received by NotATether (#2739424) from 527 unique users in 4452 transactions
    17. 9571 Merit received by BlackHatCoiner (#2775483) from 457 unique users in 4779 transactions
    18. 9528 Merit received by GazetaBitcoin (#1285797) from 396 unique users in 3331 transactions
    19. 9491 Merit received by gmaxwell (#11425) from 335 unique users in 3420 transactions
    20. 9484 Merit received by d5000 (#85033) from 437 unique users in 5190 transactions
    21. 9428 Merit received by TryNinja (#557798) from 539 unique users in 4276 transactions
    22. 8871 Merit received by ABCbits (#359716) from 537 unique users in 4798 transactions
    23. 8601 Merit received by dkbit98 (#1410401) from 453 unique users in 5104 transactions
    24. 8574 Merit received by Pmalek (#112493) from 570 unique users in 5057 transactions
    25. 8527 Merit received by suchmoon (#234771) from 573 unique users in 4849 transactions
    26. 8520 Merit received by nc50lc (#1237156) from 403 unique users in 4428 transactions
    27. 8438 Merit received by satoshi (#3) from 407 unique users in 900 transactions
    28. 7815 Merit received by Rikafip (#2658890) from 456 unique users in 4321 transactions
    29. 7569 Merit received by 1miau (#2143453) from 490 unique users in 4117 transactions
    30. 7356 Merit received by bitmover (#1554927) from 581 unique users in 4378 transactions
    31. 7143 Merit received by mikeywith (#2033515) from 404 unique users in 3648 transactions
    32. 6987 Merit received by PowerGlove (#3486361) from 230 unique users in 1795 transactions
    33. 6698 Merit received by DaveF (#300014) from 376 unique users in 3378 transactions
    34. 6676 Merit received by achow101 (#290195) from 276 unique users in 3018 transactions
    35. 6631 Merit received by AlcoHoDL (#998490) from 198 unique users in 3851 transactions
    36. 6624 Merit received by hosemary (#995810) from 387 unique users in 3616 transactions
    37. 6610 Merit received by Hhampuz (#881377) from 940 unique users in 4282 transactions
    38. 6511 Merit received by stompix (#164749) from 482 unique users in 3615 transactions
    39. 6409 Merit received by cAPSLOCK (#35501) from 227 unique users in 3676 transactions
    40. 6313 Merit received by The Sceptical Chymist (#487418) from 625 unique users in 3548 transactions
    41. 6280 Merit received by Charles-Tim (#2776678) from 419 unique users in 3658 transactions
    42. 6278 Merit received by Lucius (#533583) from 525 unique users in 3657 transactions
    43. 6268 Merit received by joker_josue (#97582) from 334 unique users in 2959 transactions
    44. 6189 Merit received by jeremypwr (#137185) from 220 unique users in 3617 transactions
    45. 6188 Merit received by OmegaStarScream (#375981) from 415 unique users in 3392 transactions
    46. 6119 Merit received by NeuroticFish (#257071) from 458 unique users in 3431 transactions
    47. 6057 Merit received by n0nce (#3373858) from 195 unique users in 2634 transactions
    48. 5977 Merit received by Hueristic (#198573) from 204 unique users in 3453 transactions
    49. 5581 Merit received by DireWolfM14 (#2003859) from 387 unique users in 2641 transactions
    50. 5510 Merit received by zasad@ (#2654005) from 415 unique users in 2698 transactions
.......
.......
.......
 51101. 1 Merit received by 1ceStorm (#2342907) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51102. 1 Merit received by 1ce (#1019784) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51103. 1 Merit received by 1camtron (#1236351) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51104. 1 Merit received by 1apayment (#1855631) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51105. 1 Merit received by 1907KFY (#1935217) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51106. 1 Merit received by 16xypjnxlrew (#2705665) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51107. 1 Merit received by 16tonn (#3560052) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51108. 1 Merit received by 15horses1donkey (#560958) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51109. 1 Merit received by 15519028115Q (#3575647) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51110. 1 Merit received by 15262kk (#291561) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51111. 1 Merit received by 14z4rus (#3669471) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51112. 1 Merit received by 1453ist (#1431126) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51113. 1 Merit received by 1453eko (#1431103) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51114. 1 Merit received by 13Winter13 (#919666) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51115. 1 Merit received by 13ex07 (#1207068) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51116. 1 Merit received by 13dizel (#1208678) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51117. 1 Merit received by 1357924680 (#333305) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51118. 1 Merit received by 12tribes (#1221082) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51119. 1 Merit received by 12assa34 (#1729394) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51120. 1 Merit received by 123tm (#848549) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51121. 1 Merit received by 123pogi123 (#2252156) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51122. 1 Merit received by 123exo123 (#1919155) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51123. 1 Merit received by 112_blockchain (#2081987) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51124. 1 Merit received by 11:11pas (#1306783) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51125. 1 Merit received by 1083ivangod (#1952712) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51126. 1 Merit received by 101Crypta (#1287691) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51127. 1 Merit received by 100x (#80115) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51128. 1 Merit received by 100steeze (#3637720) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51129. 1 Merit received by 100%_Shared_FreeBitco.in (#2531436) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51130. 1 Merit received by 100monet (#323057) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51131. 1 Merit received by 1000x (#3509491) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51132. 1 Merit received by 1000usdforwife (#1547718) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51133. 1 Merit received by 1000alasan (#2458354) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51134. 1 Merit received by 0xMuted (#3713926) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51135. 1 Merit received by 0xBrian (#2625170) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51136. 1 Merit received by 0xb100d (#1342964) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51137. 1 Merit received by 0x77 (#3316521) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51138. 1 Merit received by 0x1Knowledge (#2000899) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51139. 1 Merit received by 0vx (#2805438) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51140. 1 Merit received by 0RajA0 (#1151527) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51141. 1 Merit received by 0nion (#3614135) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51142. 1 Merit received by 0bit (#493268) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51143. 1 Merit received by 063Myxa (#1432563) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51144. 1 Merit received by 05btc (#2050202) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51145. 1 Merit received by 00RedBlack00 (#2527578) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51146. 1 Merit received by 00hello (#2471124) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51147. 1 Merit received by $--Perfect. Exchange-$. (#1140007) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51148. 1 Merit received by $imple$imon (#2060672) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51149. 1 Merit received by $BitMakeR$ (#1166812) from 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 51150. 0 Merit received by gwsukabokepjepang (#2536607) from 2 unique users in 2 transactions
Full list (5 MB)

Total number of users who gave away 1 or more sMerit: 26587
Sample
Code:
     1. 72989 Merit sent by El duderino_ (#1067333) to 901 unique users in 12700 transactions
     2. 67862 Merit sent by fillippone (#1852120) to 2197 unique users in 29316 transactions
     3. 66669 Merit sent by LoyceV (#459836) to 3322 unique users in 17628 transactions
     4. 59127 Merit sent by JayJuanGee (#252510) to 3590 unique users in 56924 transactions
     5. 58421 Merit sent by ABCbits (#359716) to 4616 unique users in 33465 transactions
     6. 50219 Merit sent by vapourminer (#33156) to 3681 unique users in 34745 transactions
     7. 43740 Merit sent by hugeblack (#1059082) to 2840 unique users in 15446 transactions
     8. 41808 Merit sent by suchmoon (#234771) to 2887 unique users in 9159 transactions
     9. 38213 Merit sent by DdmrDdmr (#1582324) to 2961 unique users in 30996 transactions
    10. 37622 Merit sent by xandry (#382413) to 2515 unique users in 13997 transactions
    11. 34428 Merit sent by LFC_Bitcoin (#379487) to 1583 unique users in 13876 transactions
    12. 33333 Merit sent by Symmetrick (#2627711) to 2254 unique users in 16803 transactions
    13. 32132 Merit sent by The Sceptical Chymist (#487418) to 1473 unique users in 10324 transactions
    14. 30279 Merit sent by klarki (#407174) to 2108 unique users in 10641 transactions
    15. 28706 Merit sent by EFS (#140584) to 1431 unique users in 7538 transactions
    16. 28011 Merit sent by Welsh (#84521) to 1686 unique users in 6611 transactions
    17. 26646 Merit sent by o_e_l_e_o (#1188543) to 2510 unique users in 9360 transactions
    18. 25819 Merit sent by 1miau (#2143453) to 1315 unique users in 11613 transactions
    19. 23572 Merit sent by qwk (#24140) to 603 unique users in 6457 transactions
    20. 22991 Merit sent by pooya87 (#379147) to 1377 unique users in 9491 transactions
    21. 22424 Merit sent by dbshck (#153634) to 1314 unique users in 6442 transactions
    22. 17463 Merit sent by NotATether (#2739424) to 1724 unique users in 3949 transactions
    23. 16182 Merit sent by Vispilio (#982288) to 745 unique users in 5987 transactions
    24. 16136 Merit sent by Halab (#1053119) to 1980 unique users in 6551 transactions
    25. 16015 Merit sent by nutildah (#317618) to 1724 unique users in 7371 transactions
    26. 15719 Merit sent by Julien_Olynpic (#1166480) to 535 unique users in 7394 transactions
    27. 15400 Merit sent by Pmalek (#112493) to 1173 unique users in 9041 transactions
    28. 15198 Merit sent by Foxpup (#55384) to 642 unique users in 5474 transactions
    29. 14497 Merit sent by bitmover (#1554927) to 1302 unique users in 8219 transactions
    30. 14338 Merit sent by theymos (#35) to 1103 unique users in 1754 transactions
    31. 14014 Merit sent by philipma1957 (#64507) to 1664 unique users in 7323 transactions
    32. 13296 Merit sent by krogothmanhattan (#1000199) to 660 unique users in 3607 transactions
    33. 13232 Merit sent by CryptopreneurBrainboss (#1052091) to 1337 unique users in 7364 transactions
    34. 13226 Merit sent by OgNasty (#18321) to 3024 unique users in 7074 transactions
    35. 13076 Merit sent by paxmao (#1192397) to 1303 unique users in 5844 transactions
    36. 13040 Merit sent by dkbit98 (#1410401) to 1133 unique users in 7957 transactions
    37. 12866 Merit sent by NeuroticFish (#257071) to 824 unique users in 6095 transactions
    38. 12849 Merit sent by BlackHatCoiner (#2775483) to 829 unique users in 4226 transactions
    39. 12114 Merit sent by chimk (#1202061) to 757 unique users in 4369 transactions
    40. 11320 Merit sent by d5000 (#85033) to 1159 unique users in 6255 transactions
    41. 10543 Merit sent by mikeywith (#2033515) to 545 unique users in 3954 transactions
    42. 8734 Merit sent by DarkStar_ (#507936) to 971 unique users in 2196 transactions
    43. 8712 Merit sent by bones261 (#452769) to 1032 unique users in 4239 transactions
    44. 8269 Merit sent by Coolcryptovator (#1980983) to 1042 unique users in 3595 transactions
    45. 8207 Merit sent by Buchi-88 (#204821) to 753 unique users in 7191 transactions
    46. 8089 Merit sent by BobLawblaw (#569455) to 329 unique users in 3303 transactions
    47. 8065 Merit sent by Hueristic (#198573) to 574 unique users in 6992 transactions
    48. 7952 Merit sent by OmegaStarScream (#375981) to 947 unique users in 3482 transactions
    49. 7606 Merit sent by babo (#65636) to 512 unique users in 6029 transactions
    50. 7133 Merit sent by hosemary (#995810) to 517 unique users in 4042 transactions
.......
.......
.......
 26538. 1 Merit sent by 3acaga (#1232502) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26539. 1 Merit sent by 360llqzc (#1300924) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26540. 1 Merit sent by 333btc (#3450760) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26541. 1 Merit sent by 3227jw (#2592839) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26542. 1 Merit sent by 2x2coindwarf (#2686612) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26543. 1 Merit sent by 2x25BT (#990097) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26544. 1 Merit sent by 2drive (#1304704) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26545. 1 Merit sent by 2andahalfBTC (#1142164) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26546. 1 Merit sent by 27QVUTZj8rgZP1 (#662730) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26547. 1 Merit sent by 27aume (#1001865) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26548. 1 Merit sent by 2342q6tegw (#1212678) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26549. 1 Merit sent by 214missy (#1285563) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26550. 1 Merit sent by 212fox (#1342293) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26551. 1 Merit sent by 1xbitpatnar (#3475604) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26552. 1 Merit sent by 1r0n (#1252002) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26553. 1 Merit sent by 1pool Ltd. (#2062862) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26554. 1 Merit sent by 1melyun (#543052) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26555. 1 Merit sent by 1cyrax00 (#964210) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26556. 1 Merit sent by 1CryptoSmurf (#1352746) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26557. 1 Merit sent by 1chempion123 (#1346880) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26558. 1 Merit sent by 1cak (#1136856) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26559. 1 Merit sent by 1amCrypt0 (#933826) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26560. 1 Merit sent by 19Nov16 (#921267) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26561. 1 Merit sent by 19nataliya12 (#1873934) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26562. 1 Merit sent by 19dimasik77 (#881779) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26563. 1 Merit sent by 1971ECPT (#3553473) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26564. 1 Merit sent by 17buratin (#1187494) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26565. 1 Merit sent by 13ex07 (#1207068) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26566. 1 Merit sent by 13Charlie (#76987) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26567. 1 Merit sent by 12retepnat34 (#1053271) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26568. 1 Merit sent by 10yearsolder (#1094878) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26569. 1 Merit sent by 10sat (#1162504) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26570. 1 Merit sent by 10casproj (#3515598) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26571. 1 Merit sent by 10BTCaDay (#396522) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26572. 1 Merit sent by 100kk (#1316426) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26573. 1 Merit sent by 100eth (#1324600) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26574. 1 Merit sent by 0xBitcoins (#2205183) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26575. 1 Merit sent by 0xBet (#3572636) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26576. 1 Merit sent by 0x0333 (#1913654) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26577. 1 Merit sent by 0vn1 (#1216048) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26578. 1 Merit sent by 0virtual (#1244555) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26579. 1 Merit sent by 0id1d (#3600764) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26580. 1 Merit sent by 0Alvaren0 (#2020991) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26581. 1 Merit sent by 01BTC (#1756786) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26582. 1 Merit sent by 01bits (#1629161) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26583. 1 Merit sent by 00HasH (#841746) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26584. 1 Merit sent by 00DKM@ (#1311705) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26585. 1 Merit sent by 00.00WIB (#3392171) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26586. 1 Merit sent by $@to$h! (#1183184) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
 26587. 1 Merit sent by $Talker (#1043705) to 1 unique users in 1 transactions
Full list (3 MB)

Merit per day of the week
Monday 328563 (14.37%)
Tuesday 327553 (14.33%)
Wednesday 327674 (14.33%)
Thursday 348124 (15.23%)
Friday 346081 (15.14%)
Saturday 301971 (13.21%)
Sunday 305746 (13.37%)
Total: 2285712


* This file will be overwritten by newer versions



2. Post 66578954 (unedited backup) (by Glowy) (scraped on Sat Apr 4 00:00:32 CEST 2026) in Security Vs Convenience In Crypto:

Quote from: TypoTonic on March 30, 2026, 01:54:07 PM
[...] I often wonder what really makes managing your own seed phrase stressful. Do you even manage it? There's literally nothing you need to do about it except writing it down on a piece of paper and make sure you don't lose it. And it's pretty much simple.
I don't get it either. It's honestly more inconvenient having to submit your ID, along with other personal information, and then wait for approval just to register an account on a local CEX. And not only that, you will still need to verify every transaction you make due to regulatory requirements. It's no different than having to explain to the bank why you want to withdraw your own money, I've had enough of that which is why I prefer to have full control over my funds.

For crypto to reach mass adoption, do we need more convenience or should the focus remain on security and self-custody?
I don't think convenience is an issue when it comes to mass adoption, I believe it's more about the lack of awareness and education. The people should understand why self-custody matters, instead of using the traditional systems just because it's what they're familiar/comfortable with.
The lack of awareness is a valid reason, especially with the information that; if you loss your passkey you loose accept to your asset. There are also news of people who lost funds because they can't track their seed.
I have had same experience, I had switched phones and I was so confident that my seed phrase was sitting pretty with the other passwords. I parted with that phone, few months later i installed the app, picked up my seed-phrase holder and figured I couldn't find that particular wallets phrase. It took a while before I accepted my reality. Not too many want to deal with such occurences.



3. Post 66573238 (unedited backup) (by julerz12) (scraped on Thu Apr 2 13:46:50 CEST 2026) in [OPEN] Bet25.com ⚽ Smart Crypto Casino 🎰 Signature Campaign:

Additional funds have been received.
Kindly confirm in this thread if you guys want to retain your slots.
Officially resumes on: April 3, 2026

Courtesy tag:

odunybiz
rezakurnia66
shawonngp
JoyMarsha
Stormisover
barbara44
nimogsm
CryptoYar
Darker45
SquallLeonhart



4. Post 66572906 (unedited backup) (by lombok) (scraped on Thu Apr 2 11:37:13 CEST 2026) in Why are slots still your favorite even if the house edge is around 3 to 4%?:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 06:18:39 AM
So, why do you keep on playing yourself despite the high house edge?

I'm not a big fan of slots. But I have so many friends who are hooked on to it. I could even say that the current gambling pandemic here in my country is mainly focused on slots. A good number of gamblers who turned into criminals are addicted slots players.

I think one of the reasons is that you could bet a minimal amount for it. Another is that there's excitement about multipliers. Your small amount could turn into several times bigger.
The bets in slot machines are very low, and therefore are affordable to a large number of people. The excitement of multipliers appears to us as one of the strongest attractions because even the modest gains can be converted into much greater gains. We find that slot machine addiction is something that usually arises during the gambling pandemic in a number of countries. This is one of the conditions that lead to behavior changes of some gamblers towards crime.



5. Post 66570549 (unedited backup) (by Rikafip) (scraped on Wed Apr 1 18:20:38 CEST 2026) in Lbank - A KYC-free exchange (CEX) that I appreciate:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 10:42:24 AM
It's interesting how you seem overzealous, though. You claimed the exchange is KYC-free even if it's not, opened threads with long posts glorifying Lbank, defended it against scam accusation, even going as far as necroposting to lavishly praise it. And all for just over a month of being here.
If it walks like a duck, swims like a duck, and quacks like a duck, then it probably is a duck.  Wink



6. Post 66564371 (unedited backup) (by Dogedegen) (scraped on Mon Mar 30 23:57:26 CEST 2026) in Security Vs Convenience In Crypto:

Quote from: Darker45 on March 27, 2026, 03:55:12 AM
No, I don't agree. Security and convenience aren't mutually exclusive. You don't have to sacrifice one in order to avail of the other.
I don't know why you received merit for this post, because this is in direct opposition to knowledge that is being taught in security at universities. They teach that and it is well known that convenience and security are at direct odds with each other. And most often what happens is that the more secure something is the harder it is to use it. The easier it is to use it, the less safe it is. How many cloud based wallets need to be hacked or how many multisignature hardware wallets fail to be hacked for you to understand that this is true?

Quote from: TastyChillySauce00 on March 27, 2026, 04:41:31 AM
Convenience in crypto as from my understanding is basically just a more refined UX flow and nothing more.

People choose exchange because people care about making profit more than actually holding their bitcoin, they just want a faster way to sell their bitcoin and treat it like holding stocks.
User convenience is a defined thing that applies to every activity that a human can do and because of that your claim does not make sense. Users are not choosing exchanges because they care about profit, that is not true because having your coin on an exchange does not make you more profit. You profit the same whether on the exchange or off the exchange. The reason here is convenience of use and the speed of use. You don't have to learn how to store Bitcoin securely, you don't have to make transactions to do something. You click buttons on an exchange, it is faster, that is what convenience is about. It is not about making more profit.

Quote from: X-ray on March 27, 2026, 05:58:44 AM
Many users prefer centralized platforms because they are easier to use than self-custody wallets.
Is it though?
Yes it is, you are wrong about this.

Quote from: CryptoVoyager24 on Today at 02:59:44 PM
Security and convenience are mutually exlusive.
Many people here wrote wrong things, but you understand it. I am happy to see that.  Smiley



7. Post 66563888 (unedited backup) (by DiMarxist) (scraped on Mon Mar 30 21:26:01 CEST 2026) in Bitcoin Still Fascinates Me:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 01:07:43 AM
Most people who own Bitcoin today are probably not into the technological aspect of it. Most are coming because of its potential to grow one's money faster. Bitcoin is largely treated as an investment. Others are joining because of Bitcoin's potential to protect their wealth from devaluation.

However, as to Bitcoin being a public storage of information, arbitrary data which could be freely accessed by anybody anytime, would you consider that part of Satoshi's original vision?
I agree with you looking at the use of Bitcoin and it's application in real life, the idea and reason for the creation of Bitcoin is been over looked in place of making money. Today most of the people going into Bitcoin adoption is doing that for the purpose of making profit and self custody which Bitcoin offers.



8. Post 66562622 (unedited backup) (by TypoTonic) (scraped on Mon Mar 30 15:54:08 CEST 2026) in Security Vs Convenience In Crypto:

Quote from: Darker45 on March 28, 2026, 02:34:40 PM
[...] I often wonder what really makes managing your own seed phrase stressful. Do you even manage it? There's literally nothing you need to do about it except writing it down on a piece of paper and make sure you don't lose it. And it's pretty much simple.
I don't get it either. It's honestly more inconvenient having to submit your ID, along with other personal information, and then wait for approval just to register an account on a local CEX. And not only that, you will still need to verify every transaction you make due to regulatory requirements. It's no different than having to explain to the bank why you want to withdraw your own money, I've had enough of that which is why I prefer to have full control over my funds.

Quote from: Glowy on March 11, 2026, 07:18:57 PM
For crypto to reach mass adoption, do we need more convenience or should the focus remain on security and self-custody?
I don't think convenience is an issue when it comes to mass adoption, I believe it's more about the lack of awareness and education. The people should understand why self-custody matters, instead of using the traditional systems just because it's what they're familiar/comfortable with.



9. Post 66561373 (unedited backup) (by AnisEverRise) (scraped on Mon Mar 30 07:20:43 CEST 2026) in AI Spam Report Reference Thread:

Quote from: Ultegra134 on March 29, 2026, 07:31:43 PM
Caught a bunch of spammers today, all posts reported and the accused users have been left a neutral tag.

User: DeFCoN Network

Post 1.
I get your point about not relying on Bitcoin only, i also see value in holding a few strong altcoins like ETH, BNB or SOL on a longer horizon.

For me the main difference is position size and expectations. I’ve held smaller altcoins in the past and it was a real rollercoaster, huge swings, some went up a lot, some never recovered. That taught me that "diversifying" inside crypto doesn’t automatically mean less risk, it often just means taking on different kinds of high risk.

That’s why I still keep Bitcoin as my main long‑term position and treat altcoins as a much smaller satellite part of the portfolio. If they perform well over time, great, but I’m not relying on them. I’d rather aim for more steady long‑term growth with BTC and a few large caps than chase quick gains in small caps again.
GPTZero: 100% AI
Stealthwriter: 86% AI
Undetectable: 99% AI

Post 2.
For the long term I still stick with Bitcoin as my main position. It has proven over many years that it can survive all the hype cycles and drama in this space.
Besides that I hold a few other coins that I’ve liked for a long time because of their ideas and tech, but I keep those much smaller than BTC. I see Bitcoin as my “hard money” base and the rest more like higher‑risk side bets that I’m willing to ride out over the long run.
GPTZero: 100% AI
Stealthwriter: 50% AI
Undetectable: 50% AI

Post 3.
It looks like several people in this thread over the years have asked what they can do with old PAC coins or existing masternode setups after development stopped.

From a purely technical and practical point of view, there are only a few options:
- keep the historical coins as they are,
- try to restore or maintain an old PAC chain yourself,
- or move on to a different masternode-based infrastructure if you still like that model.

Some former PAC users and masternode operators (including people who ran PAC masternodes for years) have started a new Dash-based L1 project that focuses on a clean codebase, long‑term masternode support and resource contribution (CPU/GPU/RAM/storage) instead of abandoning the chain. The idea is not to revive PAC or make any promises about old coins, but to provide a maintained alternative for people who still like the original masternode concept.

Out of respect for this original PAC thread I won’t post links or promotional material here. If anyone from the old PAC community is still active and wants to discuss masternode infrastructure or potential migration paths on a purely informational basis, feel free to PM me.
GPTZero: 100% AI
Stealthwriter: 89% AI
Undetectable: 99% AI

User: AnisEverRise

Post 1.
Excellent guide, @NotATether. It’s a very comprehensive and useful roadmap for anyone launching a service. As you mentioned, major hacks are fatal, and prevention is always cheaper than recovery.

I especially liked your focus on Origin server hardening. In my experience with risk management, people often focus so much on the frontend that they leave the back door (the origin IP) wide open to direct-to-IP attacks, bypassing Cloudflare or any other WAF.

To add even more value to your Section 2 (Web login / API brute force), I’d suggest implementing Fail2Ban with custom jails for specific application logs. It’s an automated way to let the server defend itselfµhile you sleep. Also, for Section 6 (Injection), moving towards Prepared Statements is non-negotiable in 2026.

Thanks for this high-quality contribution. It’s definitely a must-read for the community!

 Smiley
GPTZero: 100% AI
Stealthwriter: 100% AI
Undetectable: 70% AI

Post 2.
I really appreciate this perspective, @Darker45. You right regarding the blindness of the protocol to external chaos.

As the OP of this thread, I’ve been reflecting on this through the lens of my professional background in Resilience Management. In the corporate world (QHSE), we spend years building Business Continuity Plans that often fail during the first real crisis because they depend on human intervention or centralized infrastructure.

What you described is the perfect example of a self-healing system. My own life is a testament to this concept: Resilience isn't just surviving a hit it's having a structure that continues to function while the parts are being repaired.

Bitcoin is the only financial system that doesn't need a 'recovery phase' because it never actually stops. While traditional banks in conflict zones face 'Single Points of Failure (closed doors, cut wires), Bitcoin’s decentralization ensures that the Global Ledger is always alive.

The Middle East tensions are a tragic human reality, but technically, they prove that Bitcoin is antifragile: it doesn't just resist stress, it remains indifferent to it.
GPTZero: 100% AI
Stealthwriter: 80% AI
Undetectable: 70% AI

Post 3.
Great points on the portability of Bitcoin during times of crisis. While Bitcoin is indeed a pioneer in digital self-sovereignty, it's worth noting that even conventional gold has been evolving in that same direction for a long time.

Projects like BitGold (often cited as a precursor to Bitcoin) or Goldmoney have been bridging this gap for years, attempting to combine the scarcity of physical gold with the digital utility of e-rewards and global payment systems. This marks a significant evolution: gold is no longer just a heavy bar in a vault; it has become a digital resource that can be moved as easily as any other asset.

Whether it's Bitcoin's decentralization or Goldmoney's digital physical backing, we are seeing a massive shift where utility and  portability are becoming the ultimate metrics for survival assets.

What’s your take on these hybrid models do you think they offer a safer middle ground than pure crypto?
GPTZero: 100% AI
Stealthwriter: 83% AI
Undetectable: 100% AI






Is it illégal to use A.I  ?

It s a contributioin .... it reminds me my QHSE teacher who always says no A.I even it s 2026...



10. Post 66561236 (unedited backup) (by Paleus) (scraped on Mon Mar 30 04:51:01 CEST 2026) in Bitcoin Still Fascinates Me:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 01:07:43 AM
Most people who own Bitcoin today are probably not into the technological aspect of it. Most are coming because of its potential to grow one's money faster. Bitcoin is largely treated as an investment. Others are joining because of Bitcoin's potential to protect their wealth from devaluation.

However, as to Bitcoin being a public storage of information, arbitrary data which could be freely accessed by anybody anytime, would you consider that part of Satoshi's original vision?
That's a fair question. Satoshi didn't talk extensively about their personal motivations for the project aside form a peer-to-peer payment system that has no single point of failure.

I can only assume that his intention was to create something that could store value without a centralized point of failure. In order for that to happen, the protocol must be useful for exchanging some sort of information. If information could not be timestamped by the network, then bitcoin would not be as valuable as it is today. However, as I have been saying for many years now, bitcoin is destined to become a natural duopoly. In the long run, there will only be room for 2 competing mining pools (black/white, good/evil, day/night).



11. Post 66560080 (unedited backup) (by Ultegra134) (scraped on Sun Mar 29 21:31:43 CEST 2026) in AI Spam Report Reference Thread:

Caught a bunch of spammers today, all posts reported and the accused users have been left a neutral tag.

User: DeFCoN Network

Post 1.
Quote from: DeFCoN Network on Today at 03:44:11 PM
I get your point about not relying on Bitcoin only, i also see value in holding a few strong altcoins like ETH, BNB or SOL on a longer horizon.

For me the main difference is position size and expectations. I’ve held smaller altcoins in the past and it was a real rollercoaster, huge swings, some went up a lot, some never recovered. That taught me that "diversifying" inside crypto doesn’t automatically mean less risk, it often just means taking on different kinds of high risk.

That’s why I still keep Bitcoin as my main long‑term position and treat altcoins as a much smaller satellite part of the portfolio. If they perform well over time, great, but I’m not relying on them. I’d rather aim for more steady long‑term growth with BTC and a few large caps than chase quick gains in small caps again.
GPTZero: 100% AI
Stealthwriter: 86% AI
Undetectable: 99% AI

Post 2.
Quote from: DeFCoN Network on Today at 08:30:07 AM
For the long term I still stick with Bitcoin as my main position. It has proven over many years that it can survive all the hype cycles and drama in this space.
Besides that I hold a few other coins that I’ve liked for a long time because of their ideas and tech, but I keep those much smaller than BTC. I see Bitcoin as my “hard money” base and the rest more like higher‑risk side bets that I’m willing to ride out over the long run.
GPTZero: 100% AI
Stealthwriter: 50% AI
Undetectable: 50% AI

Post 3.
Quote from: DeFCoN Network on March 28, 2026, 06:14:11 PM
It looks like several people in this thread over the years have asked what they can do with old PAC coins or existing masternode setups after development stopped.

From a purely technical and practical point of view, there are only a few options:
- keep the historical coins as they are,
- try to restore or maintain an old PAC chain yourself,
- or move on to a different masternode-based infrastructure if you still like that model.

Some former PAC users and masternode operators (including people who ran PAC masternodes for years) have started a new Dash-based L1 project that focuses on a clean codebase, long‑term masternode support and resource contribution (CPU/GPU/RAM/storage) instead of abandoning the chain. The idea is not to revive PAC or make any promises about old coins, but to provide a maintained alternative for people who still like the original masternode concept.

Out of respect for this original PAC thread I won’t post links or promotional material here. If anyone from the old PAC community is still active and wants to discuss masternode infrastructure or potential migration paths on a purely informational basis, feel free to PM me.
GPTZero: 100% AI
Stealthwriter: 89% AI
Undetectable: 99% AI

User: AnisEverRise

Post 1.
Quote from: AnisEverRise on Today at 05:15:11 PM
Excellent guide, @NotATether. It’s a very comprehensive and useful roadmap for anyone launching a service. As you mentioned, major hacks are fatal, and prevention is always cheaper than recovery.

I especially liked your focus on Origin server hardening. In my experience with risk management, people often focus so much on the frontend that they leave the back door (the origin IP) wide open to direct-to-IP attacks, bypassing Cloudflare or any other WAF.

To add even more value to your Section 2 (Web login / API brute force), I’d suggest implementing Fail2Ban with custom jails for specific application logs. It’s an automated way to let the server defend itselfµhile you sleep. Also, for Section 6 (Injection), moving towards Prepared Statements is non-negotiable in 2026.

Thanks for this high-quality contribution. It’s definitely a must-read for the community!

 Smiley
GPTZero: 100% AI
Stealthwriter: 100% AI
Undetectable: 70% AI

Post 2.
Quote from: AnisEverRise on Today at 12:45:38 PM
I really appreciate this perspective, @Darker45. You right regarding the blindness of the protocol to external chaos.

As the OP of this thread, I’ve been reflecting on this through the lens of my professional background in Resilience Management. In the corporate world (QHSE), we spend years building Business Continuity Plans that often fail during the first real crisis because they depend on human intervention or centralized infrastructure.

What you described is the perfect example of a self-healing system. My own life is a testament to this concept: Resilience isn't just surviving a hit it's having a structure that continues to function while the parts are being repaired.

Bitcoin is the only financial system that doesn't need a 'recovery phase' because it never actually stops. While traditional banks in conflict zones face 'Single Points of Failure (closed doors, cut wires), Bitcoin’s decentralization ensures that the Global Ledger is always alive.

The Middle East tensions are a tragic human reality, but technically, they prove that Bitcoin is antifragile: it doesn't just resist stress, it remains indifferent to it.
GPTZero: 100% AI
Stealthwriter: 80% AI
Undetectable: 70% AI

Post 3.
Quote from: AnisEverRise on Today at 08:06:48 AM
Great points on the portability of Bitcoin during times of crisis. While Bitcoin is indeed a pioneer in digital self-sovereignty, it's worth noting that even conventional gold has been evolving in that same direction for a long time.

Projects like BitGold (often cited as a precursor to Bitcoin) or Goldmoney have been bridging this gap for years, attempting to combine the scarcity of physical gold with the digital utility of e-rewards and global payment systems. This marks a significant evolution: gold is no longer just a heavy bar in a vault; it has become a digital resource that can be moved as easily as any other asset.

Whether it's Bitcoin's decentralization or Goldmoney's digital physical backing, we are seeing a massive shift where utility and  portability are becoming the ultimate metrics for survival assets.

What’s your take on these hybrid models do you think they offer a safer middle ground than pure crypto?
GPTZero: 100% AI
Stealthwriter: 83% AI
Undetectable: 100% AI





12. Post 66559476 (unedited backup) (by CryptoYar) (scraped on Sun Mar 29 18:28:25 CEST 2026) in D-Day for Bitcoin:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 09:20:26 AM
[...]
World is divided between the fight of military war and Middle East as well as hard time of Bitcoin to keep its value. Although U.S has huge force of up to 67,000 soldiers in its plan Epic Fury, it is known by experts that this is strong air and sea plan to protect Strait of Hormuz and not total land takeover of Iran.

These price drops can be so short that such old ways as DCA might be less helpful than limit orders to grab fast falls. I believe that at now, Bitcoin is acting as both safe spot and risky item, climbing when money systems are in their first steps of mess but then dropping as buyers need money to buy high oil prices. Though, it will stay above $60,000 unless there is total world money scare.



13. Post 66559307 (unedited backup) (by HONDACD125) (scraped on Sun Mar 29 17:32:01 CEST 2026) in How do you know if games are rigged :

Quote from: Darker45 on March 28, 2026, 02:13:16 PM
But provable fairness doesn't apply to sports betting. It isn't as if results of sports games could be proven fair or not by the use of seed or the blockchain.

But, yeah, I agree that sports games are hard to get fixed because there'd be many eyes to notice if there's something not right in the way the games are played or in the results. If the results or the games themselves don't seem right, they could be replayed over and over again and get investigated for being too questionable.

You probably didn't understand the question or the topic of the discussion from OP. It is not about the matches being fixed or not, it's about the sportsbooks rigging the bets of their bettors and somehow making them lose even when they have or are winning, and obviously, it's not that easy because anything that happens in a sports game on the ground will be known by everyone, so a sportsbook can't change anything, unlike a casino game where they can make changes in it and decrease the winning chances for the players so that they lose more than they win.

If a game is fixed either from the management or the players, the sportsbook is in no way responsible for anything, like if you have chosen one side to win, but the other side wins, and later they find out that the team that have won actually won because the other team had fixed the match, but since the side you chose have lost already, I don't think the sportsbook is going to compensate you and all other bettors for that. It's not their responsibility because they also didn't have any idea about what is going to happen.



14. Post 66558874 (unedited backup) (by AnisEverRise) (scraped on Sun Mar 29 14:45:43 CEST 2026) in Middle East tensions: The ultimate resilience test for the network?:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 10:13:10 AM
If it's about the resiliency of the network, I don't think the regional conflict in the middle east will even test its real strength. This is peanuts for Bitcoin.

If bombs drop all over that region, banks will close, payment systems go offline, remittance centers stop operating, ATMs stay unreplenished, and so on, but Bitcoin will continue creating one block after another oblivious to the world outside.

Bitcoin is decentralized internet money. War may turn the entire middle east into one big rubble, but Bitcoin remains unaffected. The price may rise and fall but the network remains intact. That's how resilient it is.

Quote
Bitcoin is decentralized internet money.

I really appreciate this perspective, @Darker45. You right regarding the blindness of the protocol to external chaos.

As the OP of this thread, I’ve been reflecting on this through the lens of my professional background in Resilience Management. In the corporate world (QHSE), we spend years building Business Continuity Plans that often fail during the first real crisis because they depend on human intervention or centralized infrastructure.

What you described is the perfect example of a self-healing system. My own life is a testament to this concept: Resilience isn't just surviving a hit it's having a structure that continues to function while the parts are being repaired.

Bitcoin is the only financial system that doesn't need a 'recovery phase' because it never actually stops. While traditional banks in conflict zones face 'Single Points of Failure (closed doors, cut wires), Bitcoin’s decentralization ensures that the Global Ledger is always alive.

The Middle East tensions are a tragic human reality, but technically, they prove that Bitcoin is antifragile: it doesn't just resist stress, it remains indifferent to it.



15. Post 66558721 (unedited backup) (by silpersurfer) (scraped on Sun Mar 29 13:19:25 CEST 2026) in D-Day for Bitcoin:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 09:20:26 AM
I don't see the US forces occupying Iran. So far, it seems there's no build up for such purpose. If it happens, it would mean the war would drag on for months and months and other countries might also take part in the conflict. I don't believe the US would commit such careless mistake.

On the other hand, I also don't expect Bitcoin to fall below $60,000. Although that's just $6,000 away, I assume big money will take advantage of the situation even before the price hits that low. If it does, it will be quick. DCA style might not be the best strategy for such a fleeting situation.
At present it is quite difficult for the US to do such a thing, it needs a very large preparation if you want to occupy Iran because Iran is very vigilant, unlike Venezuela, the presidency can be taken and the people are not angry, while if it is Iran, will the people and the government react the same? Of course there are no major consequences if you do that to Iran, failure can be a big threat if you do the operation again, and other countries must be involved, especially their allies.
Couldn't it drop below $60k if the conflict escalates? Closing the strait of hormuz for too long will create a much bigger chaos because many countries will be affected and they will be angry.



16. Post 66557844 (unedited backup) (by UmerIdrees) (scraped on Sun Mar 29 00:57:02 CET 2026) in FTX Customer Claims Portal:

Quote from: Darker45 on March 27, 2026, 03:34:26 AM
Did you at least try contact them? Or did you finish your claim process, KYC and all?

I haven't contacted them via email or any other means, in fact, I do not know if they can even be reached? I don't think so.

As far as my application is concerned, i have complete the KYC and all other steps but in the end, there needs to be a processer assigned that will process your refund and for my country they do not have any processor yet and i just keep waiting.  Sad



17. Post 66556434 (unedited backup) (by Webetcoins) (scraped on Sat Mar 28 17:53:25 CET 2026) in Have you ever been discouraged on your bet, and it later turned successful? :

Quote from: Darker45 on March 26, 2026, 01:45:59 AM
Sometimes, I'm also the one narrating to a friend how the losing team managed to turn it around in the dying minutes or even seconds. 

But I'm not the kind of loser that tear bet slips. Whenever I place a bet I already accepted that it could lose.
I bet, you are not betting this time because you have more guts to watch the whole game. And then you could be bored too. But this is great because what you experienced before, could also happened on them and imagine if none tells them that they win?

Maybe their winning would be forfeited. But this is why we should not tear our bet slip apart too early, as shit can happen sometimes.



18. Post 66556354 (unedited backup) (by Joy_learns_crypto) (scraped on Sat Mar 28 17:29:08 CET 2026) in im new to Bitcoin why is decentralization important for the economy?:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 03:05:50 PM
Simple; it's because you can't risk putting the fate of the entire nation, which is pretty much what an economy is about, in the hands of a few fallible, unreliable, greedy, abusive personalities.

The personalities compounding to being greedy and egoistic they also
Have personality disorder and times they have abused their power to manipulate for who they know to gain. They have policies and strategies that have already created a big paradox in the global economy.
I won’t trust the centralized system that’s why decentralization is important.