Hack a Bitcoin wallet

We are bitcoin skeptics here at BU, so we are not surprised at all to learn that another bitcoin “bank” shut down yesterday after a hack of its “hot wallet” resulted in the theft of some $600, 000 worth of the virtual currency. Customers who lost their bitcoins have no recourse to recover them:

People who paid Flexcoin a special fee to keep their bitcoins safe in an offline “cold storage” will be able to get their bitcoins back, as the thief wasn’t able to get to those coins. Flexcoin said it will contact anyone who had bitcoins in cold storage and give them their coins back free of charge.

Customers with bitcoins in the bank’s “hot wallet” won’t be so lucky: Flexcoin directed those customers to its Terms of Service page, which states that “Flexcoin Inc is not responsible for insuring any bitcoins stored in the Flexcoin system.” Anyone who used Flexcoin agreed “to not hold Flexcoin Inc, or Flexcoin Inc’s stakeholders, or Flexcoin Inc’s shareholders liable for any lost bitcoins, ” the Terms of Service page states

Flexcoin had marketed themselves as the website that “solved bitcoin’s problems, ” including security. But it is extremely difficult for any website to make up for the innate problems of a virtual currency that simply encourages criminal activity. Not only are bitcoins often created by stealing computer power, they are easily stolen once they have been mined, and then they are completely untraceable. Government regulation could help alleviate these issues and put a prop under the value of bitcoin, but the wealthy libertarians behind the bitcoin craze are not inclined to swallow that tonic. Warren Buffett dismissed the investment potential of bitcoins this weekend, and we see no reason to second-guess him.

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I'm sure glad bitcoin can't be hacked

2013-12-19 07:59:36 by PB-Strikes-Back

Hackers have allegedly stolen over a thousand bitcoins from the European payment processor BIPS in a theft that's now valued at over $1 million. BIPS tells Mashable that most of the bitcoins — 1,295 in total — came from the company's own holdings, but "several consumer wallets" were also compromised in the hack. The payment provider says that it was initially hit with a DDoS attack on November 15th, followed by a second attack on November 17th that managed to take the funds. Though BIPS disclosed some information on the attack just two days later, full details don't appear to have been given until last Friday

LOL @ Evan Williams

2014-03-06 20:19:47 by Avenue_C_Panda

My SO gets annoyed herself if I'm deep into the Evan Williams... LOLOLOLOLO!!!
She'd be a LOT more annoyed if I told her well... we made this fucking fortune on BITCOIN!!! So let's get our money out..
Hhhhmmm.... Mt Gox...Bitcoin exchanges...
You asshole, where the fuck is the money?
Well, it's in this blockchain, but it's SAFE!! NO ONE CAN HACK it or FUCK it UP!!
So, let's get our money... Well, I'm sorry baby, but we have to wait until all this other shit is cleared up, but I have a BTC WALLET!!
YOU ASSHOLE!! HOW MUCH is in BTC? You can sleep the fuck alone tonight

It wont let me post the link. Here's the article

2013-04-05 07:05:00 by -

Meanwhile, Bitcoin wallet company Instawallet announced today it has suspended its service "indefinitely" after being hacked.
"Our database was fraudulently accessed, due to the very nature of Instawallet it is impossible to reopen the service as-is," Instawallet said in a statement posted to its Web site. "In the next few days we are going to open the claim process for Instawallet balance holders to claim the funds they had stored before the service interruption."
While Instawallet did not indicate whether any funds were lost in the hack, the Bitcoin platform has been a frequent target for criminal activity including thefts, hacks, and scams

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