Last update: 2026-03-30_Mon_16.00h (Amsterdam time)

Change your preferences in LoyceV's notification bot.
See Notifications for others.

Darker45 receives Notifications when he's quoted or mentioned

Ignore list:
Posts from these users are ignored:
1. Darker45
Posts in these topics are ignored:
none


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


1. 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.



2. 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...



3. 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).



4. 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





5. 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.



6. 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.



7. 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.



8. 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.



9. 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



10. 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.



11. 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.



12. Post 66554239 (unedited backup) (by lombok) (scraped on Fri Mar 27 23:08:55 CET 2026) in [NEWS]Roblox targeted in the Philippines for resembling gambling:

Quote from: acroman08 on Today at 09:59:05 PM
There's just too many complaints, suspicions, accusations, and whatnot against Roblox. Why can't the regulators just ban it once and for all?

But I guess the biggest problem with Roblox isn't the feature that resembles gambling. It's probably that there are old people in the game who are sexual predators to young children.

The problem with most parents is that they just allow their children to do whatever they want with their online gadgets so that they don't disturb them.
Yeah, after reading more articles about it, the Philippine government's main issue with Roblox isn't that there are games that resemble gambling, but the presence of pedophiles and drug traffickers targeting children and grooming them, and from the looks of it, this has been a long issue in Roblox, and they have faced lawsuits over it. What's more ridiculous is that I saw an article where a guy is hunting alleged pedophiles in Roblox, but Roblox banned him.
The fact that many legal cases have arisen due to the availability of criminal components in entertainment applications proves that innovation that lacks the aspect of security is an awful catastrophe. In my opinion, the Philippine government has a good case to act in order to secure the future of our youth. The blockage of criminal hunters is the irony, which proves that it is irrational to impose internal rules in the company. More transparency needs to be sought as any threats will be responded to immediately.



13. Post 66554202 (unedited backup) (by acroman08) (scraped on Fri Mar 27 22:59:07 CET 2026) in [NEWS]Roblox targeted in the Philippines for resembling gambling:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 04:41:56 AM
There's just too many complaints, suspicions, accusations, and whatnot against Roblox. Why can't the regulators just ban it once and for all?

But I guess the biggest problem with Roblox isn't the feature that resembles gambling. It's probably that there are old people in the game who are sexual predators to young children.

The problem with most parents is that they just allow their children to do whatever they want with their online gadgets so that they don't disturb them.
Yeah, after reading more articles about it, the Philippine government's main issue with Roblox isn't that there are games that resemble gambling, but the presence of pedophiles and drug traffickers targeting children and grooming them, and from the looks of it, this has been a long issue in Roblox, and they have faced lawsuits over it. What's more ridiculous is that I saw an article where a guy is hunting alleged pedophiles in Roblox, but Roblox banned him.



14. Post 66551408 (unedited backup) (by Oasisman) (scraped on Fri Mar 27 07:56:55 CET 2026) in [NEWS]Roblox targeted in the Philippines for resembling gambling:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 04:41:56 AM
There's just too many complaints, suspicions, accusations, and whatnot against Roblox. Why can't the regulators just ban it once and for all?

But I guess the biggest problem with Roblox isn't the feature that resembles gambling. It's probably that there are old people in the game who are sexual predators to young children.

The problem with most parents is that they just allow their children to do whatever they want with their online gadgets so that they don't disturb them.

Or maybe it's about damn time for Roblox to moderate the game strictly and thoroughly. Everything that are suspicious and inappropriate in-game should be moderated immediately.
There have been reports that illegal trades (drugs), groups of extremists, pedos, violent contents, as well as gambling, inside the game. Is Roblox tolerant to these activities? It's just impossible that they're being unaware of it, and did not take actions to prevent it.



15. Post 66550534 (unedited backup) (by UmerIdrees) (scraped on Thu Mar 26 23:54:38 CET 2026) in FTX Customer Claims Portal:

Quote from: Darker45 on March 23, 2026, 12:17:00 PM
You're from Pakistan, correct? I feel terribly sorry for you. My reply was posted more than a year ago. It reeks of incompetence and discrimination if the same concerns remain unaddressed until now when the 4th phase is incoming. What steps were you taking, by the way? And were they responsive? My goodness! Angry

Yup, you're correct, but what can I do in this case? There is no place to complain, and even if there is an email to contact, I am sure it wouldn't be responsive.

Also, it's not only about me or one country as I am also sure there would be many countries for which the refund process hasn't started and may not start at all. Every concerned authority knows about it and they are keeping their eyes shut. We should only assume that our funds are lost permanently.



16. Post 66548838 (unedited backup) (by giammangiato) (scraped on Thu Mar 26 15:46:31 CET 2026) in Have you ever been discouraged on your bet, and it later turned successful? :

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 01:45:59 AM
I guess many of us have gone through a similar experience. I can't remember exactly how it happened or which games were those, but there were times in the past when I didn't finish watching the games because I thought the end was clearly in sight. I'd only surprisingly learn later on from friends that the result was the other way around, and then you'd be happily discussing how it happened.

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 experienced a complementary one, in the sense that I entered the room, a lady had dictated the numbers to play but the guy beat different numbers, the lady refused to pay the ticket.
The owner of the room had an angry and sad face in the same way, because he had to get the money out of his pocket and obviously he couldn't due to conflict of interest, he looks at me and says: friend, will you take this ticket? I didn't hesitate and took that ticket, the first numbers come out and I don't win anything, but we didn't realize that that ticket was for the next round (I was about to throw it away) when the holder stopped me and told me READ carefully before throwing it away it's for the next round, so I stayed another 20 minutes waiting for my turn and won a few hundred euros (I don't remember the exact amount) it was fun and I was incredulous.



17. Post 66547614 (unedited backup) (by BitMaxz) (scraped on Thu Mar 26 07:45:08 CET 2026) in Bistamp account frozen :

Consider the suggestion from Darker45 above. I think if you spread this and get more visibility by posting to social media accounts while linking BitStamp there is a big chance that BitStamp will solve your case because I think they don't want their business to be embarrassed. Just like other businesses, if someone posted something that can hurt their business, they immediately take some action to resolve the case.

So I suggest try to get more visibility about your case bring them to Facebook, X, Reddit, and other social media accounts. I hope that they respond immediately and solve your case.



18. Post 66547470 (unedited backup) (by nc50lc) (scraped on Thu Mar 26 05:55:43 CET 2026) in What actually happens when exchanges freeze wallets?:

Quote from: Darker45 on March 12, 2026, 02:26:43 AM
This webinar is focused on the legalities? The resource persons are therefore lawyers?
The additional Telegram link once a user register for the webinar did hint "Lawyer" but I didn't go past there even though I've accessed his link on a sandboxed environment.
I bet 0% of the users who replied here actually watched OP's webinar (registered or not), if not, about 1%.

@OP Since you're probably affiliated to the website, not just a link you stumbled upon since there's a reference link attached to it:
It would be best if it didn't require to register just to watch/listen, that alone stopped some of those who are slightly/actually interested in it.



19. Post 66547439 (unedited backup) (by Don Pedro Dinero) (scraped on Thu Mar 26 05:23:31 CET 2026) in Is there any innovation in online casinos?:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 03:43:09 AM
LOL! But why not, right? I don't know if you're aware of Pornhub Casino. Can't give you an honest review, though, because I'm not a user. Wink But I heard live dealers there have marvelous tits. And they accept Bitcoin and a number of altcoins, too. But, again, it's the same blackjack and baccarat and other typical casino games, only with porn themes.

It’s a bad idea to gamble in casinos like that. If you look at a lot of gambling adverts, they feature attractive women, and that’s because the part of the brain that controls sexual desire is the same one that controls risk-taking. So getting turned on doesn’t exactly help with responsible gambling. It’s better to keep the two things separate.



20. Post 66547299 (unedited backup) (by Abiky) (scraped on Thu Mar 26 02:42:49 CET 2026) in Benefits of Bitcoin over Fiat :

Quote from: Darker45 on March 25, 2026, 01:20:12 AM
If I may add another difference, Bitcoin appreciates while fiat depreciates. This isn't to say Bitcoin is going to be more expensive tomorrow or next week or next month; this is to say that the math necessitates such a consequence. A fixed supply and deflationary design mean the only way for Bitcoin to catch up with demand is its rising price. That's in contrast to the unlimited supply of fiat.

The problem with Bitcoin's deflationary mechanism, is that people will tend to hoard it more than they would use it for daily payments. That's why Fiat is inflationary by design (to help encourage spending by its holders). Minimal inflation will help prevent a currency from losing its value too quickly, while keeping it "spendable". When inflation rises too much, that's when it becomes a huge problem. For Fiat currencies with "hyperinflation", Bitcoin remains the ideal alternative.

At least, Bitcoin can't be "printed" at will. That's one of the few advantages it has over Fiat. Bitcoin only needs to improve scalability and become relatively-stable (as in market price) enough for mainstream use. Hopefully, it'll manage to achieve this in the long term.



21. Post 66544196 (unedited backup) (by unisushicake) (scraped on Wed Mar 25 05:52:25 CET 2026) in Benefits of Bitcoin over Fiat :

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 01:20:12 AM
If I may add another difference, Bitcoin appreciates while fiat depreciates. This isn't to say Bitcoin is going to be more expensive tomorrow or next week or next month; this is to say that the math necessitates such a consequence. A fixed supply and deflationary design mean the only way for Bitcoin to catch up with demand is its rising price. That's in contrast to the unlimited supply of fiat.
Bitcoin and fiat currencies are different and opposite in their supply models that already shown by their opposite purchasing powers over years. Fiat currencies has lost their purchasing power over years like an example of the US Dollar.
https://www.visualcapitalist.com/purchasing-power-of-the-u-s-dollar-over-time/

Bitcoin has its increasing purchasing power as we see with Bitcoin price or with the following chart for satoshi purchasing power.
https://charts.bitbo.io/satoshi-per-dollar/

Two charts are strongly and clearly show opposites between fiat currencies and Bitcoin in purchasing power changes over time.



22. Post 66544091 (unedited backup) (by Dave1) (scraped on Wed Mar 25 03:43:38 CET 2026) in Casimero - Nery April 18 Kyrgyzstan WBA Gold Super Bantamweight:

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 02:38:28 AM
This is Casimero's chance. I hope he'll finally walk his talk and back his loud mouth with explosive performance. This is his redemption fight. Time isn't in his favor, and he's chasing no other than the one at the top. He's still coming from the bottom. He should win more often in a truly amazing fashion. He needs to get noticed. Nery is a nice start.

He's the underdog, as expected. He lost to Kameda months ago. Kameda was knocked out by Nery earlier. I hope Casimero would be fired up for being the underdog. But that should reflect in his training. I hope he won't just throw haymakers hoping it ends the fight right there and then. If he shows this tendency against Nery, I'm afraid he'll once against drain his tank before the late rounds come.

I like how you put it that way, this should really be redemption fight for Casimero. And if we go further, we could say that this is really a must-win for him otherwise, it could be the end of his career and won't get any chance to fight quality boxers.

Yes, that triangle theory, but it could be that in boxing, this theory doesn't work. So Casimero still has a good chance to beat the man if he would just focus on training and avoid noises like his former trainer saying that he won't win against Nery.



23. Post 66544067 (unedited backup) (by Fivestar4everMVP) (scraped on Wed Mar 25 03:19:07 CET 2026) in Why you should avoid gambling in a Hurry :

Quote from: Darker45 on Today at 01:42:14 AM
It should be specified that this behavior is only applicable to sports betting or gambling that needs analysis, proper research, concentration, and so on.

On the other hand, if you're playing dice or roulette, for example, being in a hurry doesn't matter at all, as far as the outcome of the bet is concerned. The result of each roll is beyond any analysis, research, concentration, strategy, and whatnot. The result is random, independent from each other, can't be predicted.
You are absolutely right, though the thread subject or title said gambling specifically, the op in the thread focused on sports betting, of which I believe he specifically was created this thread with sports betting in mind but failed to title the thread accordingly, this is can pardoned😁

Now, speaking of games like dice, crash plinko, keno, blackjack and the rest of other casino games, all these games are games where the player or gambler solely is dependent on luck to win, you are absolutely correct that hurrying, being fast or slow does not matter here, and this also extends to slot games as well as this is also a game that is purely luck based, if a gambler will be carrying out any form of analysis for this type of games, it definitely should be on how to effectively manage bankroll to help the gambler spend longer time playing before they run out of balance, because anything other than this is simply a waste of time.



24. Post 66541532 (unedited backup) (by IjawMan) (scraped on Tue Mar 24 12:32:25 CET 2026) in FTX announces 4th phase distribution. :

Quote from: Darker45 on March 21, 2026, 03:22:37 AM
~snip~
I know a guy who had money on FTX, but he failed to complete all the necessary steps (iirc, he thought he wouldn't get his money back anyway so he didn't take it seriously), so he will end up getting nothing.

Worst of all, it wasn't a negligible amount either (~$10k).

That's a rather big price to pay. He must have a lot of money. If I had that amount, I would have persevered and hope against hope that I'd get it back. Unfortunately, now might be too late for him to try recovering his funds.
It not be that the guy has a lot of money, if we investigate it could be that the $10,000 it was part of his savings he had at the time. Many of the customers that will be illegible for this distribution may be those that did not trust the ability of the exchange "FTX" that the process will be successful eventually, cause at that point FTX has already destroyed the trust given them initially.

When trust is broken it's usually hard to resuscitate it in an instant, there must be trust issues and rigidity of the whole process for completion of forms filling could also be discouraging for many persons to neglect what has been lost.