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1. Post 65441227 (unedited backup) (by Agbe) (scraped on Sun Jun 1 21:48:13 CEST 2025) in Bitcoin & your off-work life: Blending hobbies with cryptocurrencies?:

Quote from: Darker45 on May 05, 2025, 03:58:48 AM
Does gambling count? It's hobby and crypto in one, although whether it's profitable or not depends on lady luck.

Or if you are into a small past-time business, online or offline, you could integrate crypto with it, accepting Bitcoin payments, for example, or even offering a little discount to those who pay in Bitcoin.

Or how about small crypto or Bitcoin talks after work? Especially if you have a crypto circle of friends, you could assign one specific topic every session. That must be nice over a bottle of beer or a cup of coffee.

How about you share your specific hobbies and passions?
I think that crypto is now become an hobby for many because just like you have time for other activities that is the same way that those who have  interest in crypto currency is now crypto currency especially Bitcoin has become a big business by many so creating time for it is no longer a problem because people now prioritize creating time for crypto currency because they have seen the value and importance of crypto currency in this contemporary life especially in the areas of changing their financial life



2. Post 65434524 (unedited backup) (by Forsyth Jones) (scraped on Fri May 30 21:00:55 CEST 2025) in Malware Installs Fake Ledger Live App on macOS:

Quote from: Darker45 on May 29, 2025, 02:16:34 AM
The warning isn't rocket science. It's simply saying not to enter the seed phrase anywhere. What's so hard to understand that?
It's like a pretty woman falling for an ugly man's flattery, if a compromised site or software has an elegant enough UI or some basis that justifies the action without giving the user time to think about what they're doing,i.e, a call-to-action like: "your wallet has been compromised, do this or that to update your security, re-enter your recovery phrase here... etc".

At some point, if you trigger the user's fear and immediate action: users, especially the most inexperienced, tend to forget the basics, which is why it's extremely important that we continue to fight against phishing and make as many people who are just starting out aware of the need to take the necessary precautions.

Quote from: SFR10 on May 29, 2025, 06:04:24 AM
I'll try to simplify it:

On a compromised site, they'll use one of those fake CAPTCHA's that ask users to prove they're not a robot > users will click on the "I'm not a robot" box to complete it, but by doing that, it'll trigger a Binance smart contract that delivers a command to the clipboard [responsible for downloading & installing the malware] > On the next step [verification window], they'll ask users to run a certain command in terminal and by doing that, they'll be running the script for them.
- For more information, refer to this blog post: Over 2,800 hacked websites are infecting Macs with Atomic Stealer

Code:
[img]https://www.talkimg.com/images/2025/05/29/UXC9zj.jpeg[/img]
This new type of attack is scary and really innovative on the part of crackers, I myself have come across a site with this type of request, and obviously I didn't paste the command, and the worst thing is that the compromised site automatically copies the code to clipboard's user.



I've a question here, we know that Atomic macOS Stealer has as one of its functions to replace/tamper with a legitimate ledger live, and if there is the possibility of installing a compromised version of Ledger Live that installs a firmware compromised with Dark Skippy (which extracts the wallet's master seed secret slowly according to the number of signatures needed to complete the full extraction).

Ledger and other wallets like Trezor have firmware verification, where only firmwares signed by the manufacturers can be installed, right?

https://cointelegraph.com/learn/articles/dark-skippy-attack-how-to-protect-against-it



3. Post 65434283 (unedited backup) (by Upgrade00) (scraped on Fri May 30 19:42:13 CEST 2025) in Ledger Phishing Takes Another Form:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 01:33:19 AM
As a matter of fact, some users are still sharing their seed phrase with others despite repeated warnings never to. But a complete absence of proper warnings could make the company partly liable.
There is no harm from warnings, so there's no downside from it. Those who will fall victims will regardless of the warnings they receive, but someone who receives this type of mail and checks if it's legitimate will see a memo from the company saying they will never send physical mails and they'll be convinced it's a scam.

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 01:33:19 AM
However, I think these information should be completely removed from their end right after confirmation that the package is received by the buyer.
Data unfortunately is a big deal and many companies try to save up as much of it as they can.



4. Post 65432023 (unedited backup) (by Reatim) (scraped on Fri May 30 03:39:55 CEST 2025) in Could High Payouts Be Hurting Your Sports Betting Strategy? Here’s My Opinion!:

Quote from: Darker45 on May 29, 2025, 01:44:03 AM
My idea is to not only look at the payout but at the true probability behind a game. When the actual chance of winning is higher than the odds, know that you’ve found your perfect opportunity.
Only the greeds that will concentrate on the payout percent and are usually lost out of their minds because they literally don't consider the team strengths neither do they take time analysing the game before taking a final decision.

However, is there constantly a discrepancy between the odds and the probability of a team or player winning? After all, the odds are precisely the gauge of the player or the team's probabilities.

It's not like the odds don't reflect it. It's not like the odds suggest a team is most probably losing yet all analyses and opinions are saying it will most probably win.

The odds themselves are probabilities. They reflect analyses, statistics, strengths and weaknesses, and so on.
bookmakers make the odds but they make these odds based on data

they also make their own prediction in a way since they also have no idea who will win but they set up the odds in a way that the house can still benefit no matter who wins. only the fans are extremely biased and can ignore previous matches and still continue to support that one team they all love so much



5. Post 65431862 (unedited backup) (by Potato Chips) (scraped on Fri May 30 01:34:01 CEST 2025) in BigBanK exchanger:

Quote from: BigBankCASH on Today at 04:20:59 PM
I actually wonder why the suspicious activity algorithm should be triggered simply because a user withdraws to the same wallet more than 2 times. Isn't that normal?

Thank you for your interest. Suspicious activity resembles a wallet hack. Unfortunately, wallets are hacked often. This is just a precaution. If your wallet is hacked and there is a block on the third transaction, then part of the funds will be returned to you.

Sending to the same wallet address more than 2 times does not resemble a hack though. Such scheme is a normal day-to-day, and you'd be false flagging a ton of people this way which could lead to tons of bad rap as well.

Why not just base from known addresses connected to hacks?

Quote from: BigBankCASH on Today at 04:20:59 PM
Feel free to change with us. Everything that is written in the rules is a precaution. It is beneficial for us that users come and change. So that there are no blocks and bad mood.

Change what? or did you mean exchange/trade?



6. Post 65431526 (unedited backup) (by tabas) (scraped on Thu May 29 23:22:44 CEST 2025) in Ledger Phishing Takes Another Form:

Quote from: Darker45 on May 28, 2025, 03:14:59 AM
Someone who's not fond of these scam attempts will seriously believe it's a real thing. However, looking at the website provided by the letter, Ledger has always reminded people that they shouldn't give any details of their seed phrases to anyone else. While this is a clever scam, those who haven't encountered anything of the same are likely to fall for it. And by validating it, should require them to enter their seed phrases.

Beware of phishing attacks, Ledger will never ask for the 24 words of your recovery phrase. Never share them.

"But it's Ledger itself that's asking for it," some gullible users might say. You can't underestimate the gullibility of people. Have you read of the unbelievable incident involving a person who shared his backup phrase for engraving?
It's bad that these victims would put the blame to Ledger and not themselves. We can't also blame them for their mistakes but only themselves could do that realizing how gullible they were to become a victim of such scams.

Quote from: Darker45 on May 28, 2025, 03:14:59 AM
Anyway, with the spread of this kind of phishing attempt, perhaps it's wise for Ledger to also include in their warnings that they would never send physical mails to their users' addresses for verification or any other purpose. This should also be indicated in their website, device packaging, and official social media channels.
I agree, the campaign that they do in making people remember to not share their seed phrases should be done repetitively in all channels that they have. I think that they do this on their subreddit. But it should also be done mostly on their social media accounts since people won't visit a lot the website and subreddit.



7. Post 65430582 (unedited backup) (by BigBankCASH) (scraped on Thu May 29 18:21:01 CEST 2025) in BigBanK exchanger:

Quote from: Darker45 on May 21, 2025, 02:35:38 AM
I actually wonder why the suspicious activity algorithm should be triggered simply because a user withdraws to the same wallet more than 2 times. Isn't that normal?

Thank you for your interest. Suspicious activity resembles a wallet hack. Unfortunately, wallets are hacked often. This is just a precaution. If your wallet is hacked and there is a block on the third transaction, then part of the funds will be returned to you.

Feel free to change with us. Everything that is written in the rules is a precaution. It is beneficial for us that users come and change. So that there are no blocks and bad mood.

Always with you BigBanK(you can click to open)

time-tested service!

Good luck and easy deals to everyone!



8. Post 65430045 (unedited backup) (by coyhasmon) (scraped on Thu May 29 15:13:20 CEST 2025) in Could High Payouts Be Hurting Your Sports Betting Strategy? Here’s My Opinion!:

Quote from: batang_bitcoin on Today at 12:36:41 PM
Yes, we have to be careful with the games that we're betting for. Because if you can afford to lose the amount that you are betting for, that's fine if you do it with caution. But not everyone can be on that state as they bet, they're letting their emotions do things on their own. And for those that are continuing to gamble that way, they're dragging themselves to the pit for them to fall and will hardly recover later. It's simple if you've been in the hardest times because you'll be careful with yourself and the bankroll you're setting.
There are at least two types of careless people in this case. Those that can afford to lose the money and dismiss it as not important, when it is important. Also those that get very upset at losing the money, which can trigger them to chase and try to recover it.

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 01:44:03 AM
Only the greeds that will concentrate on the payout percent and are usually lost out of their minds because they literally don't consider the team strengths neither do they take time analysing the game before taking a final decision.

However, is there constantly a discrepancy between the odds and the probability of a team or player winning? After all, the odds are precisely the gauge of the player or the team's probabilities.

It's not like the odds don't reflect it. It's not like the odds suggest a team is most probably losing yet all analyses and opinions are saying it will most probably win.

The odds themselves are probabilities. They reflect analyses, statistics, strengths and weaknesses, and so on.
[/quote]
Yes, but the odds can be wrong and they often are wrong. If odds were almost always right, you could get rich by following the odds all the time.



9. Post 65429847 (unedited backup) (by Upgrade00) (scraped on Thu May 29 13:56:37 CEST 2025) in Ledger Phishing Takes Another Form:

Quote from: Darker45 on May 28, 2025, 03:14:59 AM
Anyway, with the spread of this kind of phishing attempt, perhaps it's wise for Ledger to also include in their warnings that they would never send physical mails to their users' addresses for verification or any other purpose. This should also be indicated in their website, device packaging, and official social media channels.
No one should expect to get a letter from Ledger in their mail box and anyone who does and falls for the scam may not be helped even with a warning. The scammers can also just invent a new way to reach out to potential victims.

Shouldn't there be a limitation on what information is required from users? If postal addresses are not needed, they should not be provided. Same with other personal information, to reduce the levels of exposure in cases of data breaches.



10. Post 65429319 (unedited backup) (by shield132) (scraped on Thu May 29 10:26:56 CEST 2025) in Ledger Phishing Takes Another Form:

Quote from: Darker45 on May 26, 2025, 12:17:11 PM
I just stumbled upon a tweet yesterday by Mike Belshe, the CEO of BitGo. It seems he's a victim of a phishing attempt that's probably still related to the Ledger data breach that happened 5 years ago.

It's a bit amusing because this time around, the modus went a bit old-school. It was done via a letter through the US Post Office.

~snip~

I wonder what form phishing attempts take next. What's certain is that scammers trying to make the most out of the stolen data aren't done yet. Apart from the million email addresses that were compromised, there were also hundreds of thousands of names and postal addresses that were stolen. One of them might be yours. Be warned!
I became a victim of similar scam when I was a kid. I wanted to hack facebook account and there was a website like hack-facebook.com, it was like this and I thought it was the official facebook hack, then typed my login credentials and submitted. Consider that I was 11-12 years old kid and it was one of my first interaction with computer. When I look at elder people, like above 40, I see how unfamiliar they are with technology and how they believe everything they see on internet, so such people will easily fall into this scam, especially when the domain looks so original and legit.

Btw the strangest scam that I've ever seen was how a phishing website managed to get ranked above the official website in Google search engine and scammed thousands of customers of a crypto website.

Quote from: Rikafip on May 27, 2025, 05:44:44 AM
but they are also making it easy to get caught, they are leaving a paper trail sending all that mail.
if the police get a report and actually look into it, i would imagine whoever is sending those could get arrested pretty quickly.
their fingerprints are probably all over those letters.

It ain't that hard to use fake names when sending all that mail, and also use gloves not to leave fingerprint.

Considering that this is more elaborate scam, I don't think that scammers behind it are total newbs.
How can you send mail via fake names? In my country, you need to provide an ID at the postal office to send a parcel and you also need to provide your ID when you receive a parcel from the postal office.



11. Post 65428804 (unedited backup) (by Rustam Meraj) (scraped on Thu May 29 05:30:13 CEST 2025) in Self exposure to insecurities :

Quote from: Darker45 on May 28, 2025, 01:55:14 AM
We probably have friends we believe are worth trusting even with our savings and life.

Also, it may not be a big deal if somebody shares with a friend that he/she has savings in Bitcoin, except if it's a really huge amount. But if it's only a moderate amount, it's like sharing that you're keeping a piggy bank for years and it probably has thousands in it already.

What's risky for me is to appear to strangers as if you have large crypto holdings.
That is right that we do not trust everyone same amount. We have different levels of trust for different people. There are those rare friends we even trust with all our money. That shows very deep connection and belief in that person.
Your comparison of Bitcoin savings to piggy bank is perfect. It clearly shows that telling someone about normal amount of crypto is not big deal just like mentioning we have good amount saved up in regular bank account.
Online this kind of information can attract bad attention and scams or even physical dangers. It is good reminder that we should share some details with close friends it is smart to keep quiet about large amounts of money from people we do not know well.



12. Post 65428744 (unedited backup) (by tvbcof) (scraped on Thu May 29 04:39:37 CEST 2025) in El Salvador Ignores IMF, Buys More Bitcoin Anyway:

Quote from: d5000 on Today at 02:06:28 AM
El Salvador is just taking advantage of certain conditions in the loan agreement that were ambiguous or perhaps flexible. Somehow, the country is able to skirt the condition that prohibited its public sector to further purchase Bitcoin.
As I'm interested how exactly El Salvador does this, I googled around a bit (AIs weren't helpful in this case).

I found this Spanish article which lists several ways the government can buy Bitcoin without using taxpayers' money, citing an X thread by "Bitcoin Beach":

1) Transaction fees and "donations" which could go to the Bitcoin Office. I guess they refer to fees in Chivo (the article unfortunately isn't that clear here, and the X thread also doesn't help, instead confusing me more - it mentions help by the US government ...).

Yeah, 'donations' in the same way as when one is 'volenteered' for doing some task.  A friend of mine 'donated' about $1k or so before he gave up on using vendors who used Chivo's payment platform service.  Or more accurately, went crawling back to Visa/Mastercard.

I don't want to piss in anyone's cheerios, but it's not hard to understand why uptake of Bitcoin remained low.  That said, more people are more aware and more interested in the concept of a deflationary currency and self-custody.  Things may be moving under the surface, and exposure to people who have done well with the asset class year after years is mostly a positive thing.  This is even more the case as legacy banks become less and less functional and performant due to the demands that they perform monetary surveillance and enforcement roles.

Quote from: d5000 on Today at 02:06:28 AM
2) Mining. The government could support private mining facilities in the country, which as a compensation would return Bitcoins to the Bukele government. Unfortunately the article is also not detailed here, but I guess this "support" could be done for example with tax exemptions.

3) Adquisitions by the private sector. This would be a similar "loop", e.g. the government "supporting" companies (e.g. via tax exemptions) and these companies also would transfer the coins to the government's or the Bitcoin Office's wallets.

4) Maintain a certain opaque element as to exactly who owns what, how and where it came from, and how and to whom it might be distributed in the event of what set of events.  Allow people to decide the answers to these questions for themselves based on what makes them feel good, and gently 'nudge' them in a favorable direction by use of social media influences.  'People' would include IMF people, although they do have their hands on the spigot.  Supposedly.




13. Post 65428700 (unedited backup) (by d5000) (scraped on Thu May 29 04:06:31 CEST 2025) in El Salvador Ignores IMF, Buys More Bitcoin Anyway:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 12:48:45 AM
El Salvador is just taking advantage of certain conditions in the loan agreement that were ambiguous or perhaps flexible. Somehow, the country is able to skirt the condition that prohibited its public sector to further purchase Bitcoin.
As I'm interested how exactly El Salvador does this, I googled around a bit (AIs weren't helpful in this case).

I found this Spanish article which lists several ways the government can buy Bitcoin without using taxpayers' money, citing an X thread by "Bitcoin Beach":

1) Transaction fees and "donations" which could go to the Bitcoin Office. I guess they refer to fees in Chivo (the article unfortunately isn't that clear here, and the X thread also doesn't help, instead confusing me more - it mentions help by the US government ...).

2) Mining. The government could support private mining facilities in the country, which as a compensation would return Bitcoins to the Bukele government. Unfortunately the article is also not detailed here, but I guess this "support" could be done for example with tax exemptions.

3) Adquisitions by the private sector. This would be a similar "loop", e.g. the government "supporting" companies (e.g. via tax exemptions) and these companies also would transfer the coins to the government's or the Bitcoin Office's wallets.



14. Post 65425333 (unedited backup) (by yhiaali3) (scraped on Wed May 28 06:06:13 CEST 2025) in I ask for your support to lift the exchange ban on Syria:

Quote from: Upgrade00 on May 27, 2025, 05:16:09 AM
From articles I am seeing, despite the fact the the announcement was made about 2 weeks ago, not until 2 or 3 days did they actively begin lifting the sanctions and it is still an ongoing process. We may need to wait until the sanctions are fully lifted and then check which exchanges are not compliant with it

For reference, this was reported just 3 days ago; US lifts first sanctions on Syria following Trump’s surprise announcement
You're right, Trump's announcement was two weeks ago during his visit to Saudi Arabia, but the decision was made only three days ago. It takes some time to actually start.

Quote from: EarnOnVictor on May 27, 2025, 02:39:11 PM
Let me first commend you as a patriotic citizen of your nation.

However, this is not about exchanges alone, but about many financial institutions, I wish you guys a healthy financial recovery. But what has happened for decades can't immediately go away. I tell you, even exchanges would have known by now, and I believe they are always ready for business, still, they would want to calm down and study the situation.

The awareness is good, but the postive result may not happen in a year but years, unless we are deceiving ourselves. Also, opening this thread is good, but you guys need a persistent social media attention to eventually achieve your wish.
Thank you for your sympathy. You're right. There are also many financial services that Syria bans other than exchanges, such as PayPal, Visa, MasterCard, and other services essential for cross-border financial transactions. Of course, we need some time to lift the sanctions, but we are trying to form a team to pressure these services to begin lifting the sanctions.

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 02:39:28 AM
This is a great initiative. However, I think it will take a little more time. I'm sure it isn't as simple as major centralized exchanges unilaterally deciding to lift their bans on certain countries. In the first place, I'm certain they're not deciding on their own which specific jurisdictions they want or don't want to deal with. Also, it's probably not just the US and its decisions these exchanges are cautiously complying with.

Perhaps it would help if communications are sent directly to these exchanges requesting a consideration on the ban, citing Trump's decision to lift the sanctions. At the very least, it would remind them that Syria is now under a new government and that the US has withdrawn the sanctions.
Thank you. Yes, you're absolutely right. This will take some time. That's why we, the Syrians working in the cryptocurrency space, are trying to form a large team and make our voices heard by these major exchanges so they can begin implementing the decision to lift the ban.

In addition, I, for my part, have begun directly contacting the major exchanges via support or social media to draw their attention to President Trump's lifting of the ban, so there is no longer a reason for the ban.



15. Post 65423930 (unedited backup) (by slapper) (scraped on Tue May 27 18:58:19 CEST 2025) in Is the World Ready for Life After “Safe Havens”?:

Quote from: Darker45 on May 24, 2025, 02:43:35 AM
Well, the US might not be losing its "safe haven" status after all. If you argue that people, even governments and companies, are starting to look for alternative assets like gold and Bitcoin, the US has the most of them. So, if the abused fiat system crumbles down and the world order either shifts back to gold or moves to digital gold-- Bitcoin-- then the US still remains the richest, therefore the most powerful country. The country has the most gold and the most Bitcoin. The next country that has the most of these two assets doesn't even have half of what the US has.
How much of the world’s “hard money” (gold, Bitcoin) is still concentrated in the U.S.? Even when we talk about the fall of the dollar as the global backstop, it’s true that the U.S. isn’t just going to vanish from the stage. If anything, the resources for the next version of “safe haven” are already in their vaults (physical or digital)

However, does owning the most gold or Bitcoin automatically guarantee the same type of global influence that came with dollar dominance? I’m not so sure it translates one-for-one. With fiat, the U.S. set the rules for the entire global system. With gold or Bitcoin, maybe they have more, but everyone’s playing a slightly different game. Gold can’t be printed, and Bitcoin can’t be easily seized or sanctioned, at least in the way fiat assets can

Also, as you said, no one else comes close in terms of holdings, but these assets aren’t as tightly controlled as dollars in the traditional system. For example, if China, Russia, or even private citizens globally decide to “go their own way” with Bitcoin, it can’t be frozen or recalled by the U.S. Treasury. That introduces a real wildcard in terms of how much “control” even the biggest holder can exert


Quote from: Hydrogen on May 24, 2025, 10:38:59 AM
I'm not certain financial "safe havens" existed before or after the Great Depression.

Doomsday preppers recommend buying bars of gold and burying them in locations where they can be retrieved later.

Aside from that, there isn't much of a handbook.
Fair point. No formula, just habits and what feels less risky at any given time. Even after the Great Depression, folks went with what made sense in their own circumstances, sometimes that meant gold under the mattress, sometimes it meant trusting a new kind of institution



16. Post 65423341 (unedited backup) (by AbuBhakar) (scraped on Tue May 27 15:42:01 CEST 2025) in Which of the BTC wallet should I choose?:

Quote from: henry_of_skalitz on Today at 08:01:31 AM
I prefer hardware wallet.

However, it's necessary to point out that if it's a lifetime of hodling, intergenerational even, the most important thing to consider is how to safekeep your seed phrase. I mean physically because your seed phrase shouldn't be stored in any other form.

Your hardware wallet won't last a lifetime. Your children won't inherit the device. Most likely, it dies before all of you in the family. The buttons, display, batteries if applicable, even the cryptographic chips don't last a lifetime even if handled perfectly.

So we need to buy a new wallet each generation, so to speak?

Same as any hardware device, it doesn't last for many decades. What's important to it is its secret recovery phrase so you will just import that everytime you buy or change a hardware wallet to access the bitcoin again.

Keeping it is the most challenging part as your next generation need to know how important it is to not get lost and make it secure from unwanted persons that will try to get hold of your inherited bitcoin.



17. Post 65422511 (unedited backup) (by henry_of_skalitz) (scraped on Tue May 27 10:01:31 CEST 2025) in Which of the BTC wallet should I choose?:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 02:33:11 AM
I prefer hardware wallet.

However, it's necessary to point out that if it's a lifetime of hodling, intergenerational even, the most important thing to consider is how to safekeep your seed phrase. I mean physically because your seed phrase shouldn't be stored in any other form.

Your hardware wallet won't last a lifetime. Your children won't inherit the device. Most likely, it dies before all of you in the family. The buttons, display, batteries if applicable, even the cryptographic chips don't last a lifetime even if handled perfectly.

So we need to buy a new wallet each generation, so to speak?



18. Post 65422428 (unedited backup) (by fikrett) (scraped on Tue May 27 09:22:55 CEST 2025) in When a Food Company Buys Bitcoin:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 01:38:33 AM
Is there a necessary cause-and-effect connection? Was their decision to buy Bitcoin the real reason their stock is down? Companies maintain assets, right? Is it necessarily bad for a food company to keep reserve assets not directly related to their business? I don't think so.

Metaplanet's stock price growth is in the thousands in percentage since they adopted the Bitcoin standard. Prior to that, the company's main business focus is hospitality, operating hotels and related services.

Semler Scientific is another case. Its focus is healthcare. Although still in the wide world of technology, they're primarily into developing diagnostic products, not banking, wealth management, fintech, and the like. After adopting Bitcoin as a company treasury asset, their stock value has experienced significant progress.

I do hope the dip they experienced was awaited by them: and overall, the situation became better for them after they got their heads and hands on BTC.

More analysis is needed on that matter.



19. Post 65421952 (unedited backup) (by examplens) (scraped on Tue May 27 03:19:13 CEST 2025) in Ledger Phishing Takes Another Form:

Quote from: bitmover on May 26, 2025, 03:25:13 PM
I just stumbled upon a tweet yesterday by Mike Belshe, the CEO of BitGo. It seems he's a victim of a phishing attempt that's probably still related to the Ledger data breach that happened 5 years ago.


I don't think this is related to the data leak of ledger years ago.

The CEO of bitgo is a public figure. The attacker  could easily get his personal information from other places
You never know with Ledger, there are so many potential failures related to them that any given leak case is suspect. It is certainly not a coincidence that such phishing scams happen under their name

As a potential risky event, I would not rule out the possibility that the kidnappers got something more than money here
On 21 January 2025, David Balland, co-founder of Ledger, and his wife are kidnapped from their home by an armed commando.



20. Post 65420319 (unedited backup) (by bitmover) (scraped on Mon May 26 17:25:13 CEST 2025) in Ledger Phishing Takes Another Form:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 12:17:11 PM
I just stumbled upon a tweet yesterday by Mike Belshe, the CEO of BitGo. It seems he's a victim of a phishing attempt that's probably still related to the Ledger data breach that happened 5 years ago.


I don't think this is related to the data leak of ledger years ago.

The CEO of bitgo is a public figure. The attacker  could easily get his personal information from other places



21. Post 65419685 (unedited backup) (by ABCbits) (scraped on Mon May 26 14:05:38 CEST 2025) in Constant hum angering locals:

Quote from: Lida93 on May 24, 2025, 10:42:15 PM
--snip--
Maybe laws should be penned down about mining rigs and the designated areas they should be situated and how many miles from residential area. This could help eliminate this menace before it gets out of hands.

As stated by @franky1, noise pollution laws is exist. Rather than creating specific laws, it's better to ask whether it's properly enforced or make petition to update noise pollution laws to be more strict.

Quote from: Darker45 on May 24, 2025, 02:02:48 AM
Why isn't the article focused on blaming Biden's government and warning Trump's new administration?

FWIW, they've started mining on Dresden before Biden administration. https://greenidge.com/greenidge-generation-announces-groundbreaking-sale-of-first-bitcoin-hashpower-contract-aimed-at-us-institutional-investors/ leads to their official announcement on 2020.