yogi (OP)
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Merit: 1042
Hamster ate my bitcoin
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November 20, 2012, 05:27:13 PM Last edit: November 03, 2015, 10:35:09 PM by yogi |
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[
] Business & Finance
'ACH' Automatic Clearing House. A network that processes large volumes of transactions.
'AML' Anti-Money Laundering. A legal control that requires financial services, such as bitcoin exchanges, to detect and report money laundering activities. (See - Wiki: Money Laundering)
'Arbitrage' The practice of taking advantage of a price difference between two or more exchanges. The aim is to profit from the difference between the market prices, by buying cheaper on one exchange and selling higher on the other. This also keeps the market price relatively similar across all the exchanges. (See - Wiki: Arbitrage)
'Ask' The price a seller is willing to accept for a bitcoin. Along with the price, the ask quote will generally also stipulate the amount of bitcoins willing to be sold at that price.
'ATH' All Time High. The highest historical value of an asset.
'Bank Wire' An electronic message system allowing major banks to communicate various actions or occurrences regarding client accounts. While the bank wire does not affect actual payments it will provide the financial institutions with knowledge of such events. It should be noted that 'Bank Wire' and 'ACH' are not the same thing as they use different transfer networks.
'Bear' Someone who thinks the market value will go down. A bear market is a prolonged period of falling prices.
'Bear Trap' The opposite of a bull trap, where the price goes downward and then sharply back up "trapping" bearish speculators who sold their positions.
'Bid' This is the opposite of 'Ask'. The price a buyer is willing to pay for a bitcoin and the quantity of bitcoins to be bought at that price.
'Bubble' A self fueled surge in market price, where prices rise above their true value. It will continue to rise until the bubble bursts and a massive selloff occurs.
'Bull' Opposite of bear, they think the market value will go up. A bull market is a prolonged period of rising prices.
'Bull Trap' An upward trend in price that invites bullish speculators to buy before reversing suddenly and "springing the trap."
'B2B' Business-to-business. Commerce transactions between businesses, such as between a manufacturer and a wholesaler, or between a wholesaler and a retailer. Contrasting terms are business-to-consumer (B2C) and business-to-government (B2G).
'CYA' & 'CYOA' Cover Your Ass Cover Your Own Ass. Describes a practices that serve to protect oneself from legal and administrative penalties, criticism, or other punitive measures.
'DCC' & 'CPC' Dynamic Currency Conversion Cardholder Preferred Currency. A financial service in which holders of credit cards have the cost of a transaction converted to their local currency when making a payment in a foreign currency. 'Deflation' & 'Deflationary' The opposite of inflation, deflation is defined as a sustained decrease in the general level of prices for goods and services relative to a certain measure. It is measured as an annual percentage decrease. Currencies which are subject to deflation are described as being deflationary.
'Demurrage' The expense incurred from carrying a currency over a period of time. Similar to inflation, demurrage deliberately diminishes the purchasing power of money, thereby discouraging hoarding. (See - Wiki: Demurrage)
'DMT' Digital Monetary Trust. A proposed financial trust providing private, anonymous accounts for individuals and entities within the DMT system, in order to securely store anonymous capital or to make anonymous monetary transactions. (See - Digital Monetary Trust) 'Double Spend' Double-spending is successfully spending the same money more than once. (See - Double-spending)
'EFT' Electronic Funds Transfer. A system for transferring money from one bank account directly to another. (See - Wiki: Electronic Funds Transfer)
'Elliot Wave' A form of technical analysis. It is use to analyse financial market cycles and forecast market trends by identifying extremes in investor psychology. (See - Wiki: Elliot Wave)
'Escrow Service' Holds payments made for a service and releases them to the intended recipient only after it has been verified that the recipient has kept his end of the deal. 'Fiat' Government issued currency.
'Fractional Reserve' A banking system in which only a fraction of the deposits are backed by actual cash-on-hand and are available for withdrawal. This is done to expand the economy by freeing up capital that can be loaned out to other parties. Fractional-reserve systems permit the money supply to grow to a multiple of the underlying reserves of base money.
'Fungibility' The property of a good or a commodity whose individual units are capable of mutual substitution, such as crude oil, shares in a company, bonds, precious metals, or currencies. Shoes are an example of a non-fungible good. You can't just wear someone else's, it's gross and they'll be the wrong size, so they are not mutually substitutable.
'Hording' The act of obtaining bitcoins without the intention of spending them. Some argue that there is no difference between hording and saving.
'IANAL' I Am Not A Lawyer. Used in discussions regarding legality of various activities, usually by people who have no business dispensing legal advice or opinions, e.g."IANAL, but it seems to me that the lawsuit was doomed to fail".
'Inflation' & 'Inflationary' The opposite of deflation, a general increase in prices of goods and services relative to a certain measure. Currencies which are subject to inflation are described as being inflationary.
'Keynesian' A school of economic thought inspired by the ideas of the economist John Maynard Keynes. Keynesian economics advocates a mixed economy, predominantly private sector, but with a role for government intervention during recessions. (See - Wiki: Keynesian Economics)
'KYC' Know Your Customer. A legal requirement to make a reasonable effort to confirm your costumers true identity. This policy helps to prevent things like money laundering. (See - Wiki: Know Your Customer)
'Leverage' In finance, leverage is a general term for any technique used to multiply gains and losses. A common way to attain leverage is by borrowing money.
'Limited Order' A limited order is an order that is place above or below current market price. It may or may not be filled depending on the movements of the market.
'Liquidity' Market liquidity is an asset's ability to be sold without causing a significant movement in the price and with minimum loss of value. Liquidity is characterized by a high level of trading activity. Assets that can be easily bought or sold are known as liquid assets. (See - Wiki: Market Liquidity)
'Long' The position of bulls, "It's going UP UP UP!". A long position means the holder of the position owns bitcoins and will profit if the price goes up.
'Margin' In margin trading the trader borrows money to trade with. The margin is a collateral deposit made to cover the credit risk of the lender.
'Margin Call' When the margin falls below the minimum required to cover the credit risk of the lender, the broker or exchange issues a margin call. At this point the position is automatically closed and the margin is lost.
'Market Order' A market order is an order to buy at market price. Market orders are always filled immediately.
'OTC' Over The Counter. Off-exchange trading that is done directly between two parties.
'PCI' Payment Card Industry. Denotes the debit, credit, prepaid, e-purse, ATM, POS cards and associated businesses.
'PCI DSS' Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard. A proprietary information security standard for organizations that handle cardholders information for the major PCI cards.
'Ponzi Scheme' A fraudulent investment operation that pays returns to its investors from their own money or the money paid by subsequent investors. (See - Wiki: Ponzi Scheme)
'PR' Public Relations. A strategic communication process that builds mutually beneficial relationships between organizations and their public.
'PSP' Payment Service Provider. A provider of online services for accepting electronic payments by a variety of payment methods, including bitcoin.
'Pump And Dump' A form of market manipulation where the price is artificially inflated, through false and misleading positive statements, so they can sell higher than they bought. (See - Wiki: Pump And Dump)
'ROI' Return On Investment. The actual or likely return on money invested.
'SEC' U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. A federal agency which is responsible for enforcing financial laws. (See - Wiki: U.S. Securities and Exchange Commision)
'SEPA' Single Euro Payments Area. A payment-integration initiative of the European Union for simplification and harmonization of bank transfers. (See - Wiki: Single Euro Payments Area)
'Short' The position of bears, "It's going to ZERO!". A short position means the holder of the position has borrowed bitcoins and sold them, hoping to buy them back again when they are cheaper. They will profit if the price goes down.
'Slippage' The difference between expected price and the price actually paid. Slippage often results when large trades are executed in a market with poor liquidity. (See - Wiki: Slippage)
'Speculation' The practice of trading in an attempt to profit from short or medium term fluctuations in the market value. Also refers to prediction of future market value. (See - Wiki: Speculation)
'Spread' The amount by which the 'Ask' price exceeds the 'Bid' price. This is essentially the difference in price between the highest price that a buyer is willing to pay for a bitcoin and the lowest price for which a seller is willing to sell it.
'Stop Loss' & 'Stop Order' A stop-loss order is designed to limit an investor's loss on a security position. Setting a stop-loss order for 10% below the price you paid will limit your loss to 10%. This strategy allows investors to determine their loss limit in advance.
'TA' & 'Technical Analysis' The arcane science of trying to predict future market value by drawing straight lines over top of squiggly lines. (See - Wiki: Technical Analysis) 'Tragedy Of The Commons' A market failure scenario where production and consumption are unbalanced due to conflicts of interest. In the future, when the only reward for miners is the transaction fee, people might only want to pay a small fee. This would leave the miners disincentivized, and lead to a dangerously underpowered network. (See - Wiki: Tragedy Of The Commons)
'Tulip Mania' A period in the Dutch Golden Age and the first major financial bubble. Investors began to madly purchase tulips, pushing their prices to unprecedented highs; the average price of a single flower exceeded the annual income of a skilled worker. Tulips sold for over 4000 florins, the currency of the Netherlands at the time. As prices drastically collapsed over the course of a week, many tulip holders instantly went bankrupt. (See - Wiki: Tulip Mania)
'Volatility' A measure of how unstable the market is, for example, frequent and large swings in market value would be described as a highly volatile market.
'Wall' A wall is a relatively large limited order which influences the current market price. Placing bid walls and ask walls is a common tactic of the manipulator.
'Wire Transfer' An international expedited bank-to-bank funds transfer. (See - Wiki: Wire Transfer)
'WOT' Web Of Trust. A system that firstly forces its users to prove their identity and secondly associate that identity with positive/negative feedback from other users. The purpose of a web of trust is to help users identify trustworthiness in other users. (See - Wiki: Web Of Trust)
'#bitcoin-otc' An over the counter market for bitcoins, with an open order book, and a web of trust based on GPG keys. (See - #bitcoin-otc)
Slang & Emoticons
'AFAIK' As Far As I Know.
'AKA' Also Known As.
'ATM' 1) At The Moment. 2) Automated Teller Machine. An automated cash dispensing machine. Also known as an automated banking machine 'ABM' in Canadian English, cash machine, cashpoint, cashline and sometimes a hole in the wall in British English.
'BOT' Back On Topic. Used when someone is going off the topic and posting stuff that isn't relevant to what is going on.
'Brony' Male, usually adult, with the inexplicable interests of a little girl. Can usually be spotted by their choice of avatar, My Little Pony. (ya I know... "haters gonna hate.")
'BTW' By The Way.
'CWOT' Complete Waste Of Time. e.g "Unfortunately it was a CWOT"
'DILLIGAF?' Do I Look Like I Give A Fuck?
'Dox', 'Doxed' & 'Doxxed' Documented. When a person is "doxxed", all their personal information is made available for all users to see. Names, addresses, phone numbers and school/work are not spared. This practice is sometimes used as a punishment for misdoings.
'FTFY' Fixed That For You. Appended to a modified quotation, as if the modification fixes a mistake in the original statement.
'FUD' Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt. A strategic attempt to influence people by spreading negative and false information.
'FWIW' For What It's Worth.
'FYI' For Your Information.
'GIYF' Google Is Your Friend. Implies that the information you seek, is easily found by searching the internet.
'IDGAF' I Don't Give A Fuck.
'IIRC' If I Recall Correctly.
'IMO' & 'IMHO' In My Opinion In My Humble Opinion.
'Jelly' Jealousy.
'LE' Law Enforcement.
'Libertard' A derogatory combination of 'Libertarian' and 'Retard'.
'LMAO' & 'LMFAO' Laughing My Ass Off Laughing My Fucking Ass Off.
'LOL' Laugh Out Loud. 'Moar' A combination of 'more' and 'roar'. An expression of interest and desire, indicating the poster wishes more of the same or similar type of content thus provided.
'NSFW' Not Safe For Work. Used to describe Internet content generally inappropriate for the typical workplace, as opposed to SFW, Safe For Work.
'Nym' Pseudonym. 'OMG', 'OMFG', 'zOMG', 'zOMFG', 'ZOMG' & 'ZOMFG' Oh My God Oh My Fucking God. The "z" was originally a mistake while attempting to hit the shift key.
'OTOH' On The Other Hand.
'o.o' & 'o_o' A face with a blank stare.
'o.O', 'O.O', 'o_O' & 'O_O' Shock, supprise or puzzlement.
'PPL' People.
'ROFL' Rolling On Floor Laughing.
'STFU' Shut The Fuck Up!
'TANSTAAFL' There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch.
'TL:DR' Too Long, Didn't Read. Either used as a criticism or as a heading for a synopsis.
'Troll' Someone who posts inflammatory, extraneous, or off-topic messages.
'WTF' What The Fuck!
'xD' A laughing face.
'YMMV' Your Mileage May Vary. It is used as a disclaimer that "this claim for results will be different for every person".
':p' & ':b' A face sticking its tongue out, cheeky!
':/' & ':\' A face with a skeptical, annoyed, undecided, uneasy or hesitant expression.
Technology
'AES' Advanced Encryption Standard. An algorithm for encrypting data. (See - Wiki: Advanced Encryption Standard)
'ASIC' Application-Specific Integrated Circuit. An advanced type of hardware used for mining. (See - Wiki: Application-Specific Integrated Circuit)
'Bcrypt' Most of the time when people mention BCrypt, they are talking about the adaptive hash algorithm, but it is also the name of an unrelated file encryption utility. Both are based on the Blowfish cipher algorithm published by Bruce Schneier in 1993. (See - Wiki: Bcrypt)
'BFL' Butterfly Labs. ASIC developers.
'Bot' Bots or robots are software applications that run automated tasks, such as bitcoin trading, over the internet.
'Botnet' A collection of internet-connected computers whose security defences have been breached and control ceded to a malicious party.
'Brute Force' An attempt to gain access to something by trying all possible keys until the correct key is found.
'Cloud' & 'Cloud Computing' A collection of networked computers that share hardware and software resources.
'Cloud Mining' A scheme which allows people to buy shares in hashing power without having to deal with any hardware.
'Crack' Modification of software to remove or disable features which are considered undesirable by the person cracking the software.
'Cypherpunk' A cypherpunk is anyone who advocates the use of cryptography for the purposes of political change. A community of cyperpunks was established around the Cypherpunks mailing list, an informal group aimed at achieving privacy and security through proactive use of cryptography. It was into this community that Satoshi Nakamoto decided to release Bitcoin.
'Dark Web' A collection of websites that are only accessible over a Darknet. The Dark Web is actually a subset of the Deep Web, and as such is not indexed by standard search engines.
'Darknet' Any network where connections are made only between trusted peers using non-standard protocols and ports.
'Deep Web' & 'Deepnet' World Wide Web content that is not part of the Surface Web, and can not be found on any standard search engines.
'DES' Data Encryption Standard. An algorithm for encrypting data. (See - Wiki: Data Encryption Standard)
'DL' 1) Download. 2) Dead Link. A non-functional hyperlink.
'DoS' & 'DDoS' Denial-Of-Service Attack Distributed Denial-Of-Service Attack. An attempt to make a computer or internet resource, such as a web site, unavailable to its intended users. Usually the attacker will attempt to overload the systems resources. (See - Wiki: Denial-Of-Service-Attack)
'DSA' Digital Signature Algorithm. An algorithm for authenticating data. (See - Wiki: Digital Signature Algorithm)
'ECDSA' Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm. An algorithm for authenticating data. (See - Wiki: Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm)
'FPGA' Field-Programmable Gate Array. A type of hardware used for mining. (See - Wiki: Field-Programmable Gate Array)
'Git' & 'GIT' Git is a distributed revision control and source code management system with an emphasis on speed. It enables software developer to work together as a team remotely from anywhere in the world. Git is a free software distributed under the terms of 'GPL'. (See - Git)
'GitHub' A web-based hosting service for projects that use the Git revision control system. (See - GitHub)
'GPG' & 'GnuPG' Gnu Privacy Guard. A cryptographic software suite that incorporate both encryption and authentication. GPG is a part of the Free Software Foundation's GNU software project. (See - Gnu Privacy Guard)
'GPL' General Public License. The most widely used software license, which guarantees end users the freedoms to use, study, copy, and modify the software. (See - Wiki: General Public License)
'GPU' Graphics Processing Unit. Can be used to play games or mine bitcoins.
'Honey Pot' A honey pot is a "trap" expressly set up to attract people. Its purpose is to detect, deflect, or in some manner counteract attempts at unauthorized/illegal use of information or computer systems.
'IRC' Internet Relay Chat. An internet base text messaging chat system that is designed to enable groups of people to communicate in real-time.
'Keylogger' A piece of software that logs all keystrokes on a keyboard. They are often used nefariously to gain access to secret information such as passwords.
'LGPL' Lesser General Public License. A software licence that is similar to GPL. The LGPL allows developers and companies to use and integrate LGPL software into their own (even proprietary) software without being required to release the source code of their own software-parts. (See - Wiki: Lesser General Public License)
'Merkle Tree' A data tree structure whose leafs contain the data and a hash is generated at each branch all the way down to the root. Changing the data at any leaf results in a change in the root hash.
'MIT' & 'MIT License' A free software license originating at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. It is a permissive free software license similar to GPL. The license is also GPL-compatible, meaning that the GPL permits combination and redistribution with software that uses the MIT License. (See - Wiki: MIT License)
'MITM Attack' A Man-In-The-Middle attack is a type of exploit where attackers intrude into an existing connection to intercept the exchanged data and inject false information. (See - Wiki: MITM Attack)
'Multi-sig' A system that requires multiple cryptographic authentication keys.
'Nonce' An extra bit of data provided to enforce uniqueness in a data set.
'PGP' Pretty Good Privacy. An encryption system that provides both data security and authentication.
'Public Key' & 'Private Key' 1) In the context of Bitcoin. A private key is a secret number that allows bitcoins to be spent. Because the private key is the "ticket" that allows someone to spend bitcoins, it is important that these are kept secure. (See - Wiki: Private Key) 2) In the context of Public Key Cryptography. A cryptographic system that requires two keys. The public key is used to encrypt the data, and the private key is used to decrypt it. (See - Wiki: Public Key Cryptography)
'P2P' Peer To Peer. A network architecture where all nodes cooperate on an equal basis, as opposed to the client server model. (See - Wiki: Peer-To-Peer)
'QR Code' A QR Code is the two dimensional equivalent of a bar code. Instead of lines a QR Code is a two dimensional array of squares. Often bitcoin addresses and private keys are displayed/printed as QR codes. (See - Wiki: QR Code)
'RIPEMD-160' RACE Integrity Primitives Evaluation Message Digest. An algorithm that generates a hash when provided with input data. (See - Wiki: RACE Integrity Primitives Evaluation Message Digest)
'SHA-256' Secure Hash Algorithm. An algorithm that generates a hash when provided with input data. (See - Wiki: SHA-2)
'Sig' & 'Signature' A cryptographic authentication key.
'Software Fork' Splitting an open-source software project into two projects by copying the original project and developing it independently from that point onwards. (See - Wiki: Fork (software development))
'Tor', 'TOR' & 'The Onion Router' A system that enables its users to communicate anonymously on the Internet. The routeing mechanism used by 'Tor' is a 'Darknet'. (See - The Tor Project)
'Trojan Horse' A type of malware that masquerades as a legitimate file or helpful program but whose real purpose is, for example, to grant a hacker unauthorized access to a computer. (See - Wiki: Trojan Horse)
'UL' Upload.
Other
'Laundry' See - 'Tumbler'.
'Martingale' A betting strategy of continually increasing your stake until you eventually win, so that your eventual winnings will be enough to exceed all of your previous losses. It would be a viable strategy except that you might have a long-enough losing streak that you can't afford the exponentially-increasing stakes. Then it's disastrous.
'OT' 1) Off Topic. 2) Open Transactions. An open source software application that allows users to issue and manipulate digital assets.
'PM' 1) Personal Message. 2) Perfect Money, an e-payment system that is very similar to Liberty Reserve. (See - Perfect Money)
'Randian' Follower of the views of Ayn Rand. Ayn Rand was a Russian-American novelist who developed a philosophical system she called Objectivism. Objectivism promotes an idea called rational self-interest, it states that the proper moral purpose of one's life is the pursuit of one's own happiness.
'Tumbler' A service that allows people to put their bitcoins in and then randomly hands them back and equal (perhaps minus a small fee) amount of bitcoins from someone else. These new bitcoins cannot be traced back to the old ones through the blockchain except by the tumbler operator themselves.
'UTC' Coordinated Universal Time. A time standard by which the world regulates its clocks, it is the same as Greenwich Mean Time. As this is an international forum, dates and times should be expressed unambiguously. For example, the first block reward halving occurred on 28th Nov 2012 at 15:24 UTC.
Index
'ACH' | 'Address' | 'AES' | 'AFAIK' | 'AKA' | 'Alex Green Ryan Kennedy' | 'Alt' | 'ANN' | 'Andreas Antonopoulos' | 'AML' | 'Arbitrage' | 'Armory' | 'ASIC' | 'Ask' | 'ATH' | 'Atlas' | 'ATM' | 'Bank Wire' | 'Bcrypt' | 'Bear' | 'Bear Trap' | 'BFL' | 'Bid' | 'BIP' | 'Bitcoin Foundation' | 'Bitcoind' | 'Block' | 'Blockchain' | 'Block Party' | 'Block Reward' | 'Bot' | 'BOT' | 'Botnet' | 'Bounty' | 'Brain Wallet' | 'Brony' | 'Browser Based Wallet' | 'Bruce Wagner' | 'Brute Force' | 'BT' | 'BTC' | 'BTW' | 'Bubble' | 'Bull' | 'Bull Trap' | 'Bump' & 'Bumping' | 'B2B' | 'Casascius' | 'Change' & 'Change Address' | 'CLAG' | 'Client' | 'Cloud' & 'Cloud Computing' | 'Cloud Mining' | 'Coinbase' | 'Cold Wallet' & 'Cold Storage' | 'Confirmations' | 'Cosbycoin' | 'Crack' | 'CWOT' | 'CYA' & 'CYOA' | 'Cypherpunk' | 'Dark Web' | 'Darknet' | 'DCAO' | 'DCC' & 'CPC' | 'Deep Web' & 'Deepnet' | 'Deflation' & 'Deflationary' | 'Demurrage' | 'DES' | 'Deterministic Wallet' | 'Difficulty' & 'Difficulty Adjustment' | 'DILLIGAF?' | 'DL' | 'DMT' | 'Dorian Nakamoto' | 'Double Spend' | 'DoS' & 'DDoS' | 'Dox', 'Doxed' & 'Doxxed' | 'Dread Pirate Roberts' aka 'Ross Ulbricht' | 'DSA' | 'DVC' | 'Dwolla' | 'DWUSD' | 'Early Adopter Envy' | 'ECDSA' | 'Edit', '/edit:' & '[Edit]' | 'EFF' | 'EFT' | 'Electrum' | 'Elliot Wave' | 'Escrow Service' | 'Faucet' | 'Fiat' | 'Finney Attack' | 'Fork' | 'FPGA' | 'Fractional Reserve' | 'FRC' & 'Freicoin' | 'FSF' | 'FTFY' | 'FUD' | 'Fungibility' | 'FWIW' | 'FYI' | 'Gavin Andresen' | 'Genesis Block' | 'Git' & 'GIT' | 'GitHub' | 'GIYF' | 'GLBSE' | 'Goxxed' | 'GPG' & 'GnuPG' | 'GPL' | 'GPU' | 'Group Buy' | 'Hal Finney' | 'Hard Fork' | 'Hash' | 'Hash Rate' | 'Honey Pot' | 'Hop', 'Hopping' & 'Hop Proof' | 'Hording' | 'Hot Wallet' | 'IANAL' | 'IDGAF' | 'IIRC' | 'IMO' & 'IMHO' | 'Inflation' & 'Inflationary' | 'Instamine' | 'IRC' | 'IXC' & 'Ixcoin' | 'Jelly' | 'kBTC' | 'Keylogger' | 'Keynesian' | 'Krugman Fallacy' | 'KYC' | 'Laundry' | 'LE' | 'Leverage' | 'LGPL' | 'Libertard' | 'Liberty Dollar' | 'Limited Order' | 'Linden Dollar' & 'L$' | 'Liquidity' | 'LMAO' & 'LMFAO' | 'LOL' | 'Long' | 'LQC' & 'Liquidcoin' | 'LR', 'LRUSD' & 'LREUR' | 'LTC' & 'Litecoin' | 'M', 'Mr M' & 'The Manipulator' | 'Margin' | 'Margin Call' | 'Market Order' | 'Martingale' | 'mBTC' & 'BTM' | 'Merged Mining' | 'Merkle Tree' | 'Mine' | 'Miner' | 'Mining Rig' | 'MIT' & 'MIT License' | 'MITM Attack' | 'MNW' & 'Matthew N. Wright' | 'Moar' | 'MoneyPak' | 'Multi-sig' | 'NMC' & 'Namecoin' | 'Node' & 'Full Node' | 'Nonce' | 'NSFW' | 'Nym' | 'OBO' | 'OMG', 'OMFG', 'zOMG', 'zOMFG', 'ZOMG' & 'ZOMFG' | 'Online Wallet' | 'OP' | 'Orphaned Blocks' | 'OT' | 'OTC' | 'OTOH' | 'o.o' & 'o_o' | 'o.O', 'O.O', 'o_O' & 'O_O' | 'Paper Wallet' | 'PCI' | 'PCI DSS' | 'PGP' | 'Pirate', 'Pirateat40' & 'Trendon Shavers' | 'Pizza' | 'PM' | 'Ponzi Scheme' | 'Pool' | 'POS' | 'POT' | 'POW' | 'PP', 'PPUSD', 'PPEUR' & 'PPGBP' | 'PPC' & 'PPCoin' | 'PPL' | 'PPS' & 'Pay Per Share' | 'PPT' | 'Premine' | 'PR' | 'Proof Of Stake' | 'Proof Of Work' | 'PSP' | 'Public Key' & 'Private Key' | 'Pump And Dump' | 'P2P' | 'QR Code' | 'Randian' | 'Reward Halving' | 'RIPEMD-160' | 'Ripple' | 'ROFL' | 'ROI' | 'SA' & 'Something Awful' | 'SAT' & 'Satoshi' | 'Satoshi Client' | 'Satoshi Nakamoto' | 'SC' & 'Solidcoin' | 'Scamcoin' | 'Scammer Tag' | 'SEC' | 'SEPA' | 'Share' | 'SHA-256' | 'Shitlist' | 'Short' | 'Shut Up And Take My Money!' | 'Sig' & 'Signature' | 'Slippage' | 'SLL' | 'Sockpuppet' | 'Soft Fork' | 'Software Fork' | 'Sounds Legit' & 'Seems Legit' | 'Speculation' | 'Spread' | 'SPV Client' | 'SR' & 'SilkRoad' | 'Stale' & 'Stale Share' | 'STFU' | 'Sticky' | 'Stop Loss' & 'Stop Order' | 'TA' & 'Technical Analysis' | 'Taint' | 'TANSTAAFL' | 'Thin Client' | 'Three-pronged Attack' | 'TL:DR' | 'TNBTC' | 'Tor', 'TOR' & 'The Onion Router' | 'Tragedy Of The Commons' | 'Transaction Fee' | 'TRC' & 'Terracoin' | 'Trojan Horse' | 'Troll' | 'Tulip Mania' | 'Tumbler' | 'TX' | 'uBTC' & 'μBTC' | 'UL' | 'USD', 'EUR', 'GBP', 'CAD' & 'AUD' | 'UTC' | 'Vanity Address' & 'Vanity Generator' | 'Volatility' | 'Wall' | 'Wallet' | 'Web Wallet' | 'We're Going To Pattaya!' | 'Wire Transfer' | 'WOT' | 'WTB', 'WTS' & 'WTT' | 'WTF' | 'xD' | 'XRP' | 'YABC' | 'YMMV' | 'Zhoutonged' | '1) Start bitcoin business. 2) 3) Profit!' | '51% Attack' | '+1' & '-1' | '<*>tags</*>' | ':p' & ':b' | ':/' & ':\' | '#bitcoin-otc' | '@' | 'BTC'
Acknowledgements
This list is a collaborative effort and I would like to thank the following forum members for their contributions;
knight22, greyhawk, uk1, littlebit, J3nc, mufa23, Portnoy, MoonShadow, Phinnaeus Gage, Aahzman, slardar, live627, bengina, crazyates, Grecoin, TooCasual, TangibleCryptography, User25, ribuck, gevær, tobobit, Ivanhoe, CRkfx1, mittbitterson, neoranga, Equus & freedomno1.
If you have any comments, suggestions or requests then please post below. Thank you, yogi.
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