The post Karpeles Did It and the Fine Art of Buttcoin appeared first on Buttcoin Foundation.
]]>Erenthal:
uncurable mlady:
Erenthal:
Furthermore, it seems that Karpeles and other Bitcoin superstars have been around much longer than anyone knew.
Erenthal:
Nenonen:
Sweevo:
Alan Smithee:
Nenonen:
Nenonen:
pylb:
triple sulk:
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]]>The post Blake Benthall and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day appeared first on Buttcoin Foundation.
]]>Poor Blake Benthall.
What’s a former SpaceX engineer to do when your favorite drug buying marketplace, Silk Road, goes under? Do you possibly risk going outside, into the real world,and interact with other people?No, of course not. You start a new drug empire and invite an FBI informant to be your number two on the very first day of operation.
And that wasn’t even the dumbest thing he did during the rise and fall of Silk Road 2.0.
Blake Benthall is software engineer living in San Francisco. He worked for SpaceX for a few weeks before quitting. He went to the University of Florida, bounced around a few startups, ran a tech incubator from his house, helped create a project to bring Linux to the iPod, was an eagle scout and took some awkward pictures with his very unfortunate forehead. By all accounts of what we can see, it was your average Silicon Valley engineer, fuckingaround and disrupting whatever industry he happened to bump into.
According to the FBI’s criminal complaint, Blake seemed rather upset that the original Silk Road has closed down and wanted to be part of the team that rebooted the old code into a new incarnation, dubbed Silk Road 2.0
Here are the timeline of events of how Blake came into power at Silk Road 2.0:
From this day on it’s Blake Benthall’s site to run. And he runs it terribly. The FBI document is light on details on how exactly the FBI gained control of the servers, but since the FBI informant was forum admin since the first day we can imagine it wouldn’t be terribly difficult to find where the servers are. In fact, there’s a lot to parse in this document but for this article we’re just going highlight just how bad a job Blake did of trying to cover his tracks.
When the server was ultimately located in another country the FBI had the local law enforcement make an image of the server. While the server was down for imaging, Blake posted a message in the forums noting that he was aware of the downtime.
After inspection of the server, they located chat logs between Blake and DPR2 that carefully explained the handoff of admin duties.
The interaction between Blake and his ISP that hosted the server seems to hold the majority of the evidence against him. Because he was a colossal idiot, he used Tor and hid his tracks quite well when interacting with the Silk Road 2 website, but when it came to any other interaction with the host or management activities he did zero to cover his tracks.
He didn’t use Tor to submit support tickets complaining about the server outages and alsoused an unusual combination of abeta browser and an out of date OS.This was easy to match up the site visitor information tohis laptop..
He accessed the customer support from ahotel wifi over clearnet. He also registered the room withhis real name.
And tweeted about being at the hotel the day before.
But the most idiotic, moronic, stupidest thing he could have done was register the server usinghis own vanity email address.
Not only that, he sent private messages from the Silk Road 2 administrator panel to his personal account, removing any doubt that the owner of email account also knowingly controlled Silk Road 2 servers
All this while he was urging the vendors and users to use stronger encryptionand the site adminswere helping to lower the risk of FBI honeypots
When they did eventually catch up to Blake the trailed him at his house and matched up “Defcon’s” available/away timeouts with his time spent at home.
BONUS: Remmeber that guy that bought a Tesla with Bitcoinslast year? It was probably him too.
At this pointyou would think that Blake Benthallis the dumbest drug kingpin you’ve ever seenbut in one last ditch effort to surprise everyonehe opens his mouth and throws away his only bargaining chip.
In court, federal prosecutor Kathryn Haun said that Benthall was likely to flee and should not be released. “He was found with over $100,000 in cash at home,” Haun told the court. “He has a passport. We’re not aware of whether that was secured. In addition to all of the detail, Mr. Benthall did admit to everything after receiving his Miranda rightsthat he was the administrator of Silk Road 2.0. Our principle basis is flight risk at this point.”
…
His attorney, Daniel Blank, a federal public defender, said that he only met his client for the first time in court on Thursday.”You could fill a large volume with what I don’t know,” Blank told reporters after the hearing.
Prosecutors also reportedly found a laptop filled with customer and vendor information, stored unencrypted
After raiding his home, the FBI says Benthall’s PC (which was not encrypted in any way) had full “address lists for customers all over the world that will be of significant interest to many global law enforcement agencies.” Prior to the raid, the U.S. DEA made purchases from the Silk Road 2.0, including heroin, cocaine, LSD and Oxycodone. Each was then tested and all tested positive for illegal drugs.
Ladies and Gentlemen, Blake Benthall, chief dumbass.
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]]>The post Silk Road replacement “Project: Black Flag” closes up shop, owner thanks everyone for the free coins appeared first on Buttcoin Foundation.
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Launched on 14th October 2013 not much was known about this project only that its aim was to be a replacement for Silk Road and is run by a character known as �Metta Dread Pirate Roberts� who appears was not involved in the running of the old site but is building a new site in its image with same policy�s and features meaning no weapons, counterfeits or stolen goods. MettaDRP may have had access to Silk Road’s old DB or source code.
Well, our good pirate friend just made off with all the booty! Yarrrrrr!!
Thanks for the coins suckers! You’re on your own now.
I don’t know how these idiots keep falling for it again and again.
Don’t worry though, some anonymous internet tough guys are on the case!
This comment comes from the thread.
I know everything.
I know who you are. More specifically, I know your consumer IP address, your name, your age, and your place of birth. You have not configured your Tor correctly, by the way.
I was able to gain access to the server shortly after you put it up.
I know you used an Ubuntu machine running Apache 2.2.22 on port 4986, binded to 127.0.0.1. Binding to localhost doesn’t magically solve all your security problems, by the way.
I know you used an outdated version of phpMyAdmin to access the PBF database and perform searches and maintenance tasks. I know had set up a crontab to periodically curl�http://ajd4yqq7ngzmqo3p.onion/cron.php. I know you also set up testing scripts on multiple occasions, at�http://ajd4yqq7ngzmqo3p.onion/tt.php(PHPCoinAddress test) and�http://ajd4yqq7ngzmqo3p.onion/ttt.php�(pathetic code with a very insecure method of “tumbling” coins).
More importantly, I know you exported the “sr” database in phpMyAdmin right before the purge. And I know you backed up�www.tar.gz�to�http://ajd4yqq7ngzmqo3p.onion/www.tar.gz. Unfortunately for you, both of these dumps are in my possession.
I recorded all transfers you sent through the bitcoind RPC interface. I have not yet filtered these transactions but it should not be difficult.
Some of the addresses: – 1ABkVAMaLZZFZ4w4zWqTYZnLZBXTfYLKBh – 19YrMzTFJBBvDpv43Bi9nbTPewY7jLqdTK – 1PfDu6ki4XLd7TPBJjih6wY3yzyBaG1h6N – 15Bvuuzu4LtaDc5HKHzK4YCK8TqEftgRVR – 14YpbZ49oqq6pss28WJnjBvQDXhNSGrYXL – 1Ns3GvhgeP8uK6ht3xzZC64xUaZVwygX2y
The database dump I downloaded contains these tables: – orders – users – market – items – messages – navigation – wallets – feedback – bonds – bookmarks
You have 24 hours to respond to this post. If this post is deleted, I will take it personally.
I’m sure that IP will do a lot of good when you tell the cops that some dude stole your money from drug buying website. Chief Wiggum will get right on that!
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]]>The post The Silk Road shutdown and how its owner how Ross William Ulbricht, a.k.a “Dread Pirate Roberts”, is totally, completely, undeniably fucked. appeared first on Buttcoin Foundation.
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Here’s some facts about Silk Road and what charges this guy is facing!
http://www.scribd.com/doc/172768269/Ulbricht-Criminal-Complaint
Interesting things from the document so far:
- Cryptography was really good, and the complaint states that the TOR network makes it “practically impossible” to trace users.
- The tumbler worked. It “frustrates attempts to track transactions back to the blockchain and makes it practically impossible to trace users.”
- There were 9 MILLION bitcoins worth of transactions that passed through the system over time.
- The server was in a foreign country. The report does not say where.
- There were 957k registered silkroad accounts.
- 146k unique buyer accounts.
- It’s unstated from when the investigation started, but they received a complete copy of the Silk Road web server on the 23rd of July 2013. This was all done under the Mutual Legal Assistance Treaty, which implies that they had access to current site information up until the point they shut the site down.
- This included user account and transaction information. It’s unclear whether or not this covers addresses and other sensitive transaction information. **This also apparently covers at least 60 days worth of messages from the period where the site was copied. It seems from the information, PGP messages were probably ok given that the document said PGP makes it practically impossible to trace the users.
- Silkroad maintained a small staff of admins, it wasn’t just DPR.
- It is not certain that PGP worked for DPR, they have messages between the staff and DPR from “forensic analysis of the server.” Unless he was not using PGP.
- DPR solicited murder for hire. Someone was able to obtain thousands of usernames, passwords, and personal info of silkroad users. It is assumed the feds have this, because they speak about the sample messages of names that the hacker sent. As a result, DPR attempted to have him killed. It is not known if the guy ever was indeed killed.
- The silk road was basically made from the shroomery.com, it was the first place he visited. They traced him by finding his old posts on various forums where he advertised it, not as the owner, just saying “I found this site, what do you think about it?”
- They caught Ross Ulbricht through simple web sleuthing and a few subpoenas.
- He did his web administrating from an internet cafe on Laguna Street in San Fransisco.
- Canada intercepted fake ID’s going to his home. This was used to match with fake ID requests.
- For all the money he made, he lived in a small apartment with room mates for under 1000 a month.
- Here is the blockchain transaction for the “hit”:http://blockchain.info/en/tx/4a0a5b6036c0da84c3eb9c2a884b6ad72416d1758470e19fb1d2fa2a145b5601
- youtube URL:�http://www.youtube.com/user/ohyeaross
- Interview between him and a friend:�https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Olib3jnvSmw
- The site where he made his first mistake and gave out his email address in PMs with his name.https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?PHPSESSID=tt9mt8nqt3lfm0ff1reoduo8j6&topic=47811.msg568744#msg568744
Amazing stuff.
So how did they track him down? This buffoon decided to solicit for help building his site posting his�[email protected]�address! Used an insecure internet cafe … 500 feet from his house! He even�told the feds about Silk Road�during an earlier altercation with zero provocation!
I didn’t compile this, direct quote from the SR forums. (Which are still working)
DPRs Fuckups
- Posted Gmail address containing his real name using same forum account handle used to advertise for SR when it started.
- Logged into the VPN used to access SR and his gmail address from the same IP. I repeat, he did NOT use Tor to administer SR.
- Use same public wifi to access internet 500ft from his house.
- Disclosed that his timezone was PST in a message.
- Wrote in his linkden profile that he had left his field to focus on “creating an economic stimulation designed to give people a first-hand experience of what it would be like to live in a world without systemic use of force by institutions and government”.
- Ordered fake ID’s internationally to his home address (to setup more SR servers). The fake id’s contained his picture, which considering what they were to be used for doesnt make any sense.
- Told the DHS when they showed up at his door for the fake IDs that “anyone can go onto SILK ROAD and order fake ids”.
- Solicited the hitman “redandwhite” for fake ID’s using his DPR account. Hitman obviously FED/RAT.
- Asked on clearnet helpsite Stackoverflow for help with programming for a hidden service.
- Changed his real name to a pseudonym a minute before asking.
- Used code that he posted on Stackoverflow in SR’s code.
- Increased ire of LEO by doing a Forbes interview. Revealed too much about his character.
Also here is a link to the transaction to hire the hitman:http://blockchain.info/en/tx/4a0a5b6036c0da84c3eb9c2a884b6ad72416d1758470e19fb1d2fa2a145b5601
Edit: Link to supposed conversation with hitman�http://oi39.tinypic.com/jizyah.jpg
Unreal.
I guess the only piece of advice I can offer is this:
(Summary pulled from Reddit)
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]]>The post Bitcoins crashing towards a 50%+ loss today appeared first on Buttcoin Foundation.
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Volume is at an all time high on these exchanges as well. There’s nothing more to do than sit back, relax, and Listen to the sounds of Buttcoin.
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]]>The post The Silk Road is closed appeared first on Buttcoin Foundation.
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ETA: According to some dude on reddit, “It looks like they sniffed him out by looking back at old Internet records (forum posts, IPs etc) around the times of SRs appearance. The first person to ever advertise SR was DPR himself, and he used an email account attached to his natural born identity. No NSA or technical hack.”
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]]>The post Silk Road fumbles and reveals its IP address appeared first on Buttcoin Foundation.
]]>EDIT: Don’t go into freak-out mode here! This is potentially serious, but is fixable and I disclosed to DPR alone about 15 hours ago. He’s good, skilled, and this will be investigated and fixed in no time, I am sure. In the interim, if you need to use Silk Road BE SURE TO USE GPG. The beauty of Bitcoin and Tor is that even if the server were to be seized, if your messages are GPGed, it’s near-impossible to get anything valuable. I just know that not everyone uses GPG.
I am a penetration tester by trade, and while I do not use SR, I do occasionally conduct informal tests of the security of various Tor Hidden Services.
I debated for hours whether to post this, but I need to alert the community in case no actions are taken:
Last night, while SR was down for maintenance, a brief few moments allowed a certain set of circumstances that caused me to be able to view the public IP of the httpd server of Silk Road. This isn’t an obvious flaw, but it is extremely simple if you know where to look – the server basically will publish a page containing all of the configuration data of the httpd server including the public IP address.
For the sake of the site’s security, that’s all the information I’m going to reveal.
I have messaged Dread Pirate Roberts and am currently waiting a response. I do have a SHA512 hash of the public IP which I have retained as evidence if DPR needs proof.
I will keep this updated with any news received.
With such information, authorities may be able to locate and shut down Silk Road and apprehend its operator, or more. What does this mean for Bitcoin? If the Silk Road gets busted, the only thing left to prop up the price of butts is the Magic: the Gathering Online Exchange’s creaky servers and meddling hands.
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]]>The post Reason for today’s selloff appeared first on Buttcoin Foundation.
]]>ST. LOUIS (Thomson Reuters Accelus) – Two senators are pressing federal authorities to crack down on an online black market and “untraceable” digital currency known as Bitcoins after reports that they are used to buy illegal drugs anonymously.
Democratic Senators Charles Schumer of New York and Joe Manchin of West Virginia wrote to Attorney General Eric Holder and Drug Enforcement Administration head Michele Leonhart in a letter that expressed concerns about the underground website “Silk Road” and the use of Bitcoins to make purchases there.
The letter prompted a discussion among Bitcoin enthusiasts about whether the government was capable of closing related bank accounts and thereby stifling the currency.
The senators released a copy of their letter on Monday. It cites recent media reports that some tech-savvy individuals were using an “anonymizing network” known as Tor to gain clandestine access to Silk Road and buy illegal drugs.
Silk Road buyers pay with Bitcoins and sellers mail the drugs, the Gawker blog reported. The transactions leave no traditional money trail for investigators to follow, and leave it hard to prove a package recipient knew in advance what was in a shipment.
“The only method of payment for these illegal purchases is an untraceable peer-to-peer currency known as Bitcoins. After purchasing Bitcoins through an exchange, a user can create an account on Silk Road and start purchasing illegal drugs from individuals around the world and have them delivered to their homes within days,” the senators’ letter states. “We urge you to take immediate action and shut down the Silk Road network.”
The DEA is “absolutely” concerned about Bitcoins and other anonymous digital currencies, agency spokeswoman Dawn Dearden said when asked for a response to the senators’ concerns.
“The DEA is constantly evaluating and analyzing new technologies and schemes perpetrated by drug trafficking networks. While we won’t confirm or deny the existence of specific investigations, DEA is well aware of these emerging threats and we will act accordingly,” she said.
Silk Road may be hard to close. It could easily move from server to server around the globe and change its Web address and name at will, while remaining accessible through Tor.
However, Bitcoins must be purchased with real money; of late, they have been selling for roughly $10 each.
Therefore, there are exchanges with bank accounts, such as the Mt. Gox Bitcoin Exchange, that the Justice Department and other law enforcement agencies may be able to target. It is this weak link that worries the currency’s enthusiasts.
A discussion thread this week on the primary Bitcoin forum was titled “Will Mt. Gox US Bank accounts eventually get frozen?” Some speculated that if the government bans transactions involving Bitcoin exchanges, a layer of shell companies might allow them to continue.
One user described this process as simply “growing pains” and asserted that the government “can’t stop a peer-to-peer service.”
U.S. law enforcers might have difficulty stopping Bitcoins without help from their peers in other countries.
While little information about Bitcoin exchanges is publicly available, an item posted on a website called Bitcoin Watch states that Mt. Gox’s bank account is in Japan, and anecdotal evidence suggests many other exchanges operate outside of the US.
Mt. Gox’s website does not list a phone number, representatives could not be reached via email.
Anyone else here remember the e-Gold fiasco?
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