--On Sunday, March 09, 2014 7:33 PM -0700 coderman <coderman@gmail.com> wrote:
it seems the answer is here:
lol! (See how evil top posting is? =P - It took me a couple of minutes to figure out that my question was finally being answered =) )
http://blog.magicaltux.net/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/MtGox2014Leak.zip http://89.248.171.30/MtGox2014Leak.zip https://mega.co.nz/#!0VliDQBA!4Ontdi2MsLD4J5dV1-sr7pAgEYTSMi8rNeEMBikEhAs http://burnbit.com/download/280433/MtGox2014Leak_zip
let me know if you're still short a mirror...
On Thu, Feb 27, 2014 at 10:16 PM, Juan Garofalo <juan.g71@gmail.com> wrote:
--On Thursday, February 27, 2014 11:12 PM -0600 Troy Benjegerdes <hozer@hozed.org> wrote:
I'd argue that centralized systems provide, on averge, a larger anonymity set and privacy in the majority of cases than decentralized ones. In particular exchanges that everyone believes are 'incompetent' are a wonderful place to get a lot of cheap plausible deniability by making everyone else that uses it pay for it when the house of cards falls down.
In the case of something like mtgox, how did it provide privacy? Or plausible deniality? Users have to send IDs, bank account details, everything is logged, etc etc. What am I missing?
-- ----------------------------------------------------------------------- -- --- Troy Benjegerdes 'da hozer' hozer@hozed.org 7 elements earth::water::air::fire::mind::spirit::soul grid.coop
Never pick a fight with someone who buys ink by the barrel, nor try buy a hacker who makes money by the megahash