Thx must've missed it. I don't see anything in my inbox and I still haven't gone through this whole thread. Sometimes it has me like![]()
It's all good fam hit me up if you have any questions
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Thx must've missed it. I don't see anything in my inbox and I still haven't gone through this whole thread. Sometimes it has me like![]()
what exchange is kyber hitting?
Thx must've missed it. I don't see anything in my inbox and I still haven't gone through this whole thread. Sometimes it has me like![]()
Would anyone happen to have the September issue.![]()
this.. asap
A fresh link in case you still wanted to read it and didn't get a chance before:
Xle?ya I was just thinking if it actually dips below ICO price I could make a respectable run @ racking up a mill...idk this current market has me panicking a little even tho I’m very sure on my holds...I’m just buy a few more XEL some NEBL then just bear down for a while and try not to do anything drastic as far as selling off shit goes
Yeah fam Fourthstbully called Ark @ .39 as the best buy in crypto and it shot up to over 4 bucks. Creatinesteve, Spectrum, Room Service and countless others are very helpful. Really good group of guys here that all want to make money and help you do it as well.
As for me, I'm in heavy on Lisk and Walton. I have a significant position in Blackmoon that I bought in the ICO but now it's trading below ICO price so I'm holding until it hits more exchanges.
Next coin I'm buying is Kyber. Vitalik Buterin (the creator of Ethereum) is an advisor on only two projects--OMG and Kyber. There are plans for OMG and Kyber to collaborate and ultimately they will all be integrated together. Might be Yuge
Kyber @2.40 and is onwhat exchange is kyber hitting?
Kyber @2.40 and is on
_ liqui
_ etherdelta
_ tidex
Elixer @.05 is on
_ coinexchange
Gas @16.46 and is on
_ poloniex
_binance
Neo @20.16 and is on
_ bittŕex
_ binance
_ cryptopia
Kyber is at 2.40 right now. How long before it rises and how high you predict?
Good look. I grabbed both kyber and elixir.Kyber @2.40 and is on
_ liqui
_ etherdelta
_ tidex
Elixer @.05 is on
_ coinexchange
Gas @16.46 and is on
_ poloniex
_binance
Neo @20.16 and is on
_ bittŕex
_ binance
_ cryptopia
Hey guys I bought in to a group buy to get the Palm Beach Report monthly subscription. I spent $300 on it to share with the Slack Group and this thread. If you're willing to contribute like some of the brothas in the slack are to the cost then send it to paypal.me/theycallmebe or BTC to 1DiBNgXkAHaPtFERUAs2XY5bKh2GJiZKvz
I'll post it when it drops like usual but we'll have the report as soon as it comes out so we can get in on the pumps.
![]()
Had we gotten in on the GAS pump, we could have doubled our money by now. I'll pitch in for October.
Exactly. The buy in is good until September 2018 so we won't miss out again
These are the wrong kinds of questions to ask. Not trying to be funny brother, but no one can give you great answers. It's going to run when it hits bigger exchanges but the how high and when is a crapshoot. It'll more than double that 2.70 for damn sureKyber is at 2.40 right now. How long before it rises and how high you predict?
You are correct. I'm watching / reading learning. After buying Kyber, BTC and Elix today .. I'm falling back on the trading and focusing on learning.These are the wrong kinds of questions to ask. Not trying to be funny brother, but no one can give you great answers. It's going to run when it hits bigger exchanges but the how high and when is a crapshoot. It'll more than double that 2.70 for damn sure
Security
CBS's Showtime caught mining crypto-coins in viewers' web browsers
Who placed the JavaScript code on two primetime dot-coms? So far, it's a mystery
By Kieren McCarthy in San Francisco 25 Sep 2017 at 20:33
33SHARE ▼
![]()
The websites of US telly giant CBS's Showtime contained JavaScript that secretly commandeered viewers' web browsers over the weekend to mine cryptocurrency.
The flagship Showtime.com and its instant-access ShowtimeAnytime.com sibling silently pulled in code that caused browsers to blow spare processor time calculating new Monero coins – a privacy-focused alternative to the ever-popular Bitcoin. The hidden software typically consumed as much as 60 per cent of CPU capacity on computers visiting the sites.
The scripts were written by Code Hive, a legit outfit that provides JavaScript to website owners: webmasters add the code to their pages so that they can earn slivers of cash from each visitor as an alternative to serving adverts to generate revenue. Over time, money mined by the Code-Hive-hosted scripts adds up and is transferred from Coin Hive to the site's administrators. One Monero coin, 1 XMR, is worth about $92 right now.
However, it's extremely unlikely that a large corporation like CBS would smuggle such a piece of mining code onto its dot-coms – especially since it charges subscribers to watch the hit TV shows online – suggesting someone hacked the websites' source code to insert the mining JavaScript and make a quick buck.
The JavaScript, which appeared on the sites at the start of the weekend and vanished by Monday, sits between HTML comment tags that appear to be an insert from web analytics biz New Relic. Again, it is unlikely that an analytics company would deliberately stash coin-mining scripts onto its customers' pages, so the code must have come from another source – or was injected by miscreants who had compromised Showtime's systems.
Here's a screenshot of the code on showtime.com, seen by El Reg before it was removed. The mining script was loaded early on the page, we note.
Click to enlarge
And on Showtime Anytime:
Click to enlarge
We contacted both Showtime and New Relic today asking for more details. Showtime refused to comment. New Relic told us it had nothing to do with the mystery code.
"We take the security of our browser agent extremely seriously and have multiple controls in place to detect malicious or unauthorized modification of its script at various points along its development and deployment pipeline," New Relic's Andrew Schmitt told us.
"Upon reviewing our products and code, the HTML comments shown in the screenshot that are referencing newrelic were not injected by New Relic's agents. It appears they were added to the website by its developers."
We also asked Code Hive for details on the user account the injected code was mining for. "We can't give out any specific information about the account owner as per our privacy terms," the outfit informed us. "We don't know much about these keys or the user they belong to anyway."
The outfit did confirm to us, however, that the email address used to set up the account was a personal one, and was not an official CBS email address, further suggesting malicious activity.
Pirate Bay
Coin Hive's mining code was at the center of some attention last week when file-sharing search engine The Pirate Bay admitted it had added the coin-gathering JavaScript on its pages in order to test its profitability in an effort to get rid of ads on its site.
The code was poorly configured – web admins are allowed to set the hashing rate – and resulted in people's machines slowing to a crawl, sparking complaints. Following the outcry, The Pirate Bay acknowledged the presence of the mining script, calling it "only a test" and promised to limit the CPU usage to make it less annoying. A few days later, the organization dropped the idea all together.
![]()
Pirate Bay digs itself a new hole: Mining alt-coin in slurper browsers
READ MORE
Code Hive not only offers in-page mining but also mining through URL shorteners and CAPTCHAs. The huge advantage to the website operator using the code is that not only does the script use someone else's processing power but also their electricity, meaning that you can make money with very little effort. So long as you are willing to annoy your visitors.
Coin Hive's pitch is that this script could allowed publishers to pull annoying ads from their website – which is something that could become more important as browsers increasingly block ads.
However, the code has already been inserted in browser extensions and on typosquatted websites. And now, it looks as though someone may have tried to hack Showtime's website in order to insert the code and make money while not having any direct impact on the website itself.
If Coin Hive wants to be seen as legitimate rather than a tool for hackers and malware authors, it is going to have to rapidly figure out a better authorization system for big websites and work on making itself less attractive to scammers. Meanwhile, ad blocking tools are now killing the JavaScript on sight. ®
Hat tip to Troy Mursch for alerting us to this myste
Yo, I get this prompt on WSHH also. What's up with that? I need to look at their source code.
Security
CBS's Showtime caught mining crypto-coins in viewers' web browsers
Who placed the JavaScript code on two primetime dot-coms? So far, it's a mystery
By Kieren McCarthy in San Francisco 25 Sep 2017 at 20:33
33SHARE ▼
![]()
The websites of US telly giant CBS's Showtime contained JavaScript that secretly commandeered viewers' web browsers over the weekend to mine cryptocurrency.
The flagship Showtime.com and its instant-access ShowtimeAnytime.com sibling silently pulled in code that caused browsers to blow spare processor time calculating new Monero coins – a privacy-focused alternative to the ever-popular Bitcoin. The hidden software typically consumed as much as 60 per cent of CPU capacity on computers visiting the sites.
The scripts were written by Code Hive, a legit outfit that provides JavaScript to website owners: webmasters add the code to their pages so that they can earn slivers of cash from each visitor as an alternative to serving adverts to generate revenue. Over time, money mined by the Code-Hive-hosted scripts adds up and is transferred from Coin Hive to the site's administrators. One Monero coin, 1 XMR, is worth about $92 right now.
However, it's extremely unlikely that a large corporation like CBS would smuggle such a piece of mining code onto its dot-coms – especially since it charges subscribers to watch the hit TV shows online – suggesting someone hacked the websites' source code to insert the mining JavaScript and make a quick buck.
The JavaScript, which appeared on the sites at the start of the weekend and vanished by Monday, sits between HTML comment tags that appear to be an insert from web analytics biz New Relic. Again, it is unlikely that an analytics company would deliberately stash coin-mining scripts onto its customers' pages, so the code must have come from another source – or was injected by miscreants who had compromised Showtime's systems.
Here's a screenshot of the code on showtime.com, seen by El Reg before it was removed. The mining script was loaded early on the page, we note.
Click to enlarge
And on Showtime Anytime:
Click to enlarge
We contacted both Showtime and New Relic today asking for more details. Showtime refused to comment. New Relic told us it had nothing to do with the mystery code.
"We take the security of our browser agent extremely seriously and have multiple controls in place to detect malicious or unauthorized modification of its script at various points along its development and deployment pipeline," New Relic's Andrew Schmitt told us.
"Upon reviewing our products and code, the HTML comments shown in the screenshot that are referencing newrelic were not injected by New Relic's agents. It appears they were added to the website by its developers."
We also asked Code Hive for details on the user account the injected code was mining for. "We can't give out any specific information about the account owner as per our privacy terms," the outfit informed us. "We don't know much about these keys or the user they belong to anyway."
The outfit did confirm to us, however, that the email address used to set up the account was a personal one, and was not an official CBS email address, further suggesting malicious activity.
Pirate Bay
Coin Hive's mining code was at the center of some attention last week when file-sharing search engine The Pirate Bay admitted it had added the coin-gathering JavaScript on its pages in order to test its profitability in an effort to get rid of ads on its site.
The code was poorly configured – web admins are allowed to set the hashing rate – and resulted in people's machines slowing to a crawl, sparking complaints. Following the outcry, The Pirate Bay acknowledged the presence of the mining script, calling it "only a test" and promised to limit the CPU usage to make it less annoying. A few days later, the organization dropped the idea all together.
![]()
Pirate Bay digs itself a new hole: Mining alt-coin in slurper browsers
READ MORE
Code Hive not only offers in-page mining but also mining through URL shorteners and CAPTCHAs. The huge advantage to the website operator using the code is that not only does the script use someone else's processing power but also their electricity, meaning that you can make money with very little effort. So long as you are willing to annoy your visitors.
Coin Hive's pitch is that this script could allowed publishers to pull annoying ads from their website – which is something that could become more important as browsers increasingly block ads.
However, the code has already been inserted in browser extensions and on typosquatted websites. And now, it looks as though someone may have tried to hack Showtime's website in order to insert the code and make money while not having any direct impact on the website itself.
If Coin Hive wants to be seen as legitimate rather than a tool for hackers and malware authors, it is going to have to rapidly figure out a better authorization system for big websites and work on making itself less attractive to scammers. Meanwhile, ad blocking tools are now killing the JavaScript on sight. ®
Hat tip to Troy Mursch for alerting us to this myste
Fam, did you read that link I sent you a couple weeks ago? mycrypto.guide
It breaks down everything. Only thing you can get on Coinbase is Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Litecoin. NEO is on Bittrex and NEBL is on Cryptopia. You can go to coinmarketcap.com, type in a coin, select "Markets" and it will show you which exchanges a coin is on. All that is in mycrypto.guide
Just got listed on Binancewhat exchange is kyber hitting?
May IOTA flourish. I feel like the industry has been trying to stifle the Tangle Technology man.The makers of the Solarin secure cellie are building a bitphone
by John Biggs (@johnbiggs)
![]()
Bitcoin-powered cellphones — basically phones that can securely hold and send cryptocurrencies — have long been a fascinating if undeveloped concept in the crypto community. When phones talk to each other using BTC or other currencies — whether it’s to pay bills or send money to friends — you open up an interesting world of commerce.
Finney is a new $999 phone by the makers of the Solarin secure phone that aims to offer a “ultra-secure blockchain-enabled environment, with the functionality and essentials of Android OS.” Further, the company intends to release a desktop computer for $799 with the same features. In short, this is the world’s first proper bitphone.
In order to maintain true crypto bona fides, Sirin Labs is holding a token sale that will allow only token holders to buy the phone, thus futzing with the phone’s demand curve and allowing users to trade in the Finney’s own currency.![]()
The phone will have a 5.2-inch display, 256GB of storage and 8GB RAM. It will have a 16-megapixel rear camera and a 12-megapixel front camera. Further, the phones “will form an independent blockchain network, a distributed ledger that is scalable and lightweight, powered by the IOTA’s Tangle technology.” The phone is named after Bitcoin pioneer Hal Finney, who died in 2014.
The built-in wallet will have physical authentication, including three factors of authentication and secure resource sharing among phones. There also will be an app store for decentralized apps.
Whether or not the Finney is a simple receptacle for crypto buzzwords or a real unique product remains to be seen, but it certainly seems like Sirin is pushing all the right buttons when it comes to making one of the first real bitphones. Hopefully things work out batter for the Finney than they did for Solarin.
Yo @TheyCallMeBe
I get this when I open the crypto guide in chrome.
![]()
At least they ask you. Of course I said cancel but how can I verify if it does it anyway whether I said yes or not?
It was at $34 less than 10 days agoI guess there was good news for NEO? It's almost back to $30.
Im holding too but gambling will be legalized soonI'm going to hold. Wagerr should be the shit in the future. Imagine being able to gamble without government interference. Governments are cracking down on gambling. But if you can do Monero to wagerr and back to Monero, no one will know wtf you doing.
China proved that something like Wagerr is truly needed. Says a lot about the project that it has to hide on decentralized exchanges, but such exchanges are the future.
where did you get that information? do you mean in the USA?Im holding too but gambling will be legalized soon
It was at $34 less than 10 days ago