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all 92 comments

[–]Andrej_ID[S] 16 points17 points18 points 2 months ago (11 children)

12VkDG5PSo5Qh6Lzjje72eCvVwrTwdiuFK is the main middle address used during the hack. On the BEFORE svg image you can see all transactions that involved this address before the attack took place. On AFTER svg you can see transactions higher than 10 BTC that were executed some hours after the hack. You can track the connected address and let us know if you recognise any of them.

[–]SyRoUK 4 points5 points6 points 2 months ago (4 children)

Was this wallet not a NiceHash wallet? If not, then I assume tracing the 9 BTC that entered and left it in the days before the attack is crucial?

[–]xanhugh 8 points9 points10 points 2 months ago (3 children)

Nicehash wallets arn't actual blockchain wallets, just a random hash assigned to each user like an account number. The hack was from a blockchain wallet which NH use to take payments from buyers, and to pay funds out to sellers. Why the hell they wern't using a hardware wallet is anyone's guess, which is making the community very suspicious that it's actually an inside job. The wallet was insured with BitGo, so unless there's been gross negligence somewhere along the lines they should get a payout. Do BitGo even have the funds to cover it? No idea. they may be waiting for the price of coins to drop before paying out?

[–]backwerdd 2 points3 points4 points 2 months ago (2 children)

i read elsewhere BitGo ended there insurance on wallets in 2016

[–]Alex-Crypto 4 points5 points6 points 2 months ago (1 child)

BitGo ended insurance in 2016, but even before they only offered 250K in insurance. Plenty for individual users, but tiny for such a large organization such as this one.

[–]ThiefMonkey 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (0 children)

Ah Uninsured Lawyers favorite

[–]UPSoft 4 points5 points6 points 2 months ago (3 children)

is that final picture? i mean is there a chance that my money wasnt stolen? https://i.imgur.com/I838o9s.png https://imgur.com/rrTuhla

[–]Alex-Crypto 2 points3 points4 points 2 months ago (1 child)

There are three dead ends larger than 10 BTC... two on NiceHash's side. But it seems the hacker, while having the final account with the 4,736.43159762 bitcoin, but there is still over 10 BTC unaccounted for in one address that did not translate to the final. Then again this account now holds 60BTC, but interesting nonetheless.

Again there were other transactions that we can't see from the image. Those equate to about 12 BTC, at least to what goes to the final address. More might go elsewhere.

Although, the final account magically has over 300BTC more than the initial collection account. Where is this coming from? That's what I'm currently trying to find...

[–]ArtDeco3 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (0 children)

I was wondering the same thing.

[–]horsetoothless 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (0 children)

can you confirm this wallet belongs to Nicehash operations please will give us all some peace of mind. https://blockchain.info/address/1NDyJtNTjmwk5xPNhjgAMu4HDHigtobu1s

[–]Blugputts 0 points1 point2 points 18 days ago (0 children)

Note the lack of response by Andrej. Guilty!

[–]targium 12 points13 points14 points 2 months ago (2 children)

This line of work I've heard from usually involves some level of secrecy from the public, so the culprit doesn't find out how to hide his tracks. The blockchain is also designed so a person or group of individuals can be anonimous, virtually impossible to be found. You can track Bitcoins all you want: once it goes cold it can be sold for fiat currency to whomever. Also, it would do some good to address the elephant in the room: Matjaž Škorjanc.

[–]rajib2k5 5 points6 points7 points 2 months ago (0 children)

I read articles about his hacking background and conviction. I'm open to giving others second chance if they are sincere about doing better. Bill Gates did some questionable stuff in the past, but, he turned around. Good old Bill got his karma back by facing monopoly lawsuits, while Matjaz may be getting his karma by getting hacked. Let's say you did something intentionally or accidentally and it cost you your position in society. Wouldn't you want an opportunity turn things around your life?

[–]AlexHimself 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (0 children)

So once bitcoin gets moved around, you can still track your stolen coin until the moment it is cashed out right? So doesn't a criminal need some sort of criminal institution to sell the bitcoin for them?

If they transferred to a coinbase wallet, I bet you could get some sort of financial records?

[–]IVIurkleMan 8 points9 points10 points 2 months ago (2 children)

Looking at the bitcoin blockchain the funds are @https://blockchain.info/address/1EnJHhq8Jq8vDuZA5ahVh6H4t6jh1mB4rq if i am not mistaken. Final Balance: 4,736.43148477 BTC

[–]IVIurkleMan 13 points14 points15 points 2 months ago (1 child)

Update Here are my findings that I think may help.

The bitcoins are located @ 1EnJHhq8Jq8vDuZA5ahVh6H4t6jh1mB4rq which on 2017-12-10 01:59:09 received a payment from address 13JkNT6bw2qn3FF3KgUk3LM9xo4RYREjhc, strange that just $7 was sent to the suspects bitcoin address from which they would only want to use.

Now looking at the address 13JkNT6bw2qn3FF3KgUk3LM9xo4RYREjhc, this had only received one payment from address 17A16QmavnUfCW11DAApiJxp7ARnxN5pGX on 2017-12-02 22:28:13 for an amount of $165 from which $7 was sent to the stolen funds account, the payment of $165 was from Poloniex.com in which some sort of trade that was made by the user.

If Poloniex.com was to supply the information about the registered trade for 13JkNT6bw2qn3FF3KgUk3LM9xo4RYREjhc they could advise why the $7 was sent to the address, what for and how did they get the address.

Hopefully this may help, to be honest I feel sorry more for all the miners who spent days mining to not receive the money, we all have bills to pay.

[–]stonedlemming 2 points3 points4 points 2 months ago (0 children)

$7

proof that the wallet had been taken, maybe a validation to someone that the account was under that persons control.

[–]TR1GG3RSW1TCH 6 points7 points8 points 2 months ago* (3 children)

12VkD sent 1080 BTC to 60f46, d656e, & 4b417 to pay other hackers. 1000 for payment and 80 for launder attempts/tests. They sent 1010 BTC to 26fe3 to pay themselves and 11 BTC was sent to 2f155 for their launder attempt/test. 60f46, d656e, & 4b417 sent 80 BTC laundered to 09cb2, but was still traceable. Failed launder attempts and payments collected to 1EnJH once hackers realize launder not untraceable/stolen BTC too hot? Just a guess.

[–]TR1GG3RSW1TCH 3 points4 points5 points 2 months ago (1 child)

If 12VkD was a lone hacker then the above 1080 BTC sent to 60f46, d656e, & 4b417 where to split the money for separate launder attempts with the remainder amount going to 26fe3. First launder method attempt would be the 11 BTC to 2f155. Second attempt would be with one of the 1080 BTC addresses. Hacker thinks it is sucessful for a minute or two and does it with the other two addresses. After realizing the second attempt had actually failed and the BTC too hot to move, consolidated to 1EnJH. Again, just a guess.

[–]TR1GG3RSW1TCH 2 points3 points4 points 2 months ago (0 children)

Assuming it's not a group, but just a single hacker, would NiceHash consider requesting a payment from 1EnJH for the stolen BTC less 10-20%? Hacker might be trying to prove a security flaw exists and get paid for their work exposing the hole... granted anything they keep would still be tracked by LEO even if NH drops the issue & man hunt.

[–]iptecivan 3 points4 points5 points 2 months ago (5 children)

It took several hours to move all accounts, my and most of them seem to be real Btc accounts. So each should have their corresponding blockchain (prove of ownership). So there must be a hardware (servers) associated. Why did Nicehash did NOT shut-down their computers, turning off the power switch takes a few seconds.

[–]jstefanop1 2 points3 points4 points 2 months ago (0 children)

Because it only takes 1 nano second for a btc wallet to be compromised. Don't forget bitcoin's and all of crypto's strength is its weakness when it comes to situations like this. All you need to do is steal the private key, and the funds are yours regardless of how many "servers" nicehash shuts down after the key is stolen. (if it was even stolen :p).

[–]iptecivan 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (1 child)

https://blockchain.info/address/39W3wTujxqpygVCnGrhKrndBFjPaFia6kA Btc movements to one of my accounts begun 4:07 and ended 5:35, perhaps he(they) has being downloading before all blockchain and Bitgo data, to replicate servers and have all the time to make the withdrawals. The strange thing is he(they) had enough time to take small Btc amounts like 0.005 btc.

[–]iptecivan 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (0 children)

Important: The amounts of the withdrawals in this account are the same amounts as deposits made several days before. It was a kind of balance operation he(they) where using, to bypass internal controls to account 12VkDG5PSo5Qh6Lzjje72eCvVwrTwdiuFK , after that get the ownership of 12VkDG5PSo5Qh6Lzjje72eCvVwrTwdiuFK and voilá !

[–]Alex-Crypto 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (1 child)

Fair point... they likely had safeguards in place for system crashes so people wouldn't lose earnings, not much anyways.

[–]horsetoothless 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (0 children)

Safeguard, "shutdown", occurs days after this hack was clearly running thru my account balance!

[–]djoe595 2 points3 points4 points 2 months ago (1 child)

i added a comment 2 days ago on facebook showing how the transaction happened it was first going to one newly created account and from there it goes to another one that involve this wallet, its so clear how the btc got stollen , if anyone got any IP that was using that address share it please so we can trace the VPN user

[–]Tony4678 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (0 children)

They told that was hacked via VPN. I think they can send request to trace that VPN to company who provided this IP protected by VPN.

[–]TyHuffman 2 points3 points4 points 2 months ago (6 children)

Once the system is back up and running can NH create a fund that would allow we miners to donate a range of % of our earnings to make it right? I may have not been robbed because I didn't have enough in my account to bother with. It appears there were 71 wallets involved or 71 transactions to the dirty wallet. My guess they missed many wallets due to lack of time. But I would be willing to donate some of my earnings to a Make It Right fund to reimburse those who lost funds. Hey we may come out of this better and stronger.

[–][deleted] 2 months ago (5 children)

[deleted]

    [–]TyHuffman 1 point2 points3 points 2 months ago* (1 child)

    No, it appears you're in the clear. I don't see your address on the diagram. Maybe I missed it though. We can't see our balances because the NH servers are down. NH wallets are not on the blockchain so they would reflect no balance until the servers are back up and running. Unless you had 10 Bitcoin or more in your wallet it appears you were spared. I don't see an amount lower than 10.0 on the diagram so I would be way in the clear.

    [–]ArtDeco3 2 points3 points4 points 2 months ago (0 children)

    So if our address is not in the diagram, we are in the clear? That's very interesting. Is it possible that only accounts with at least .1 BTC were taken from? I saw that as the minimum in the diagrams. Or, is it that there were so many accounts with less than .1 BTC that they weren't displayed?

    [–]zzzSETHzzz 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (1 child)

    the address u give says Total Received 0 BTC and there is no in or outgoing traffic . https://blockchain.info/address/173UCYWDh5o5TiGofqC5CcdnygbGFCuUoe

    [–]frankhj 2 points3 points4 points 2 months ago (0 children)

    Because nicehash wallets arent apparently blockchain wallets.

    [–]Maginian 1 point2 points3 points 2 months ago (0 children)

    Just an opinion..

    I think the right way to do this is to set up a community for this and not discuss this here in the forum and share what information you have..

    The hackers might be here and see what information you got and can quickly cover up.. Make it more difficult to trace them..

    [–]gastell 2 points3 points4 points 2 months ago (0 children)

    People forget about NiceHash. It was formed by people from HashProfit. Again they all cheated and just stole your money. This service will never work.

    [–]GoreGlass 1 point2 points3 points 2 months ago (3 children)

    So one address has 1000 seperate from the larger chunk? Kinda weird.

    [–]SyRoUK 1 point2 points3 points 2 months ago* (2 children)

    No it only has 10 BTC separate from the rest. The 1000 belongs to the line passing by that wallet to the final wallet with all the coins. 19R84 is odd though, the 90 BTC coming from it hasn't been traced yet?

    [–]GoreGlass 1 point2 points3 points 2 months ago (1 child)

    So clarification; 10btc from the Red wallet was transfered to 1A5Kk? Which already had 990 btc in it? Or am i read it wrong.

    [–]GoreGlass 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (0 children)

    Thanks I just needed to go full screen!

    [–]TyHuffman 1 point2 points3 points 2 months ago (5 children)

    My Account isn't one that got hacked! It appears that the accounts that were hacked were the ones with multiple bitcoins in them. Is anyone else not on the list?

    [–]cyfi4074 2 points3 points4 points 2 months ago (2 children)

    How are you seeing your NH "wallet" balances with NH still offline?

    [–]TyHuffman 1 point2 points3 points 2 months ago* (1 child)

    When you look at the diagram you can see the wallets that were being dumped into other wallets and finally into one wallet. My assumption, so check me, is that unless there were thousands of other wallet dumps then only the wallets involved are on the diagram. When you look at the diagram you will see wallet addresses with numbers beside them, those are the wallet addressed of teh wallets involved and beside the address is the amount of Bitcoin in each wallet. The numbers arriving into the final wallet appear to check with 4,7xx bitcoin.

    [–]vannex79 2 points3 points4 points 2 months ago (0 children)

    wallet

    [–]zzzSETHzzz 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (0 children)

    Yeah im out of it also , i had only like 10 euros worth of btc in there right before the hack

    [–]kulibih 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (0 children)

    Only buyers were hacked since they had real addresses. Sales, in turn, do not have real-world addresses on the site if they are not registered in the system to purchase the power they have just a record in the database how much they should be paid by the buyers. https://blockchain.info/address/3N6CGPz1g3DCX4i8kxH51iqzsvv3Ghsm1k 3N6CG is indicated in the diagram 0.13 in fact from this address was stolen 3.44424211 About 2.3-2.5 of them expected payment to the sellers. The part belonged to me about 1.15-0.9 In fact, funds were stolen not only in the main chain. Sales kept funds and in the moments of numerous hardcochs bitcoin cash gold diamond About these means naisheesh holds back.

    [–]ozmomac 1 point2 points3 points 2 months ago (1 child)

    Maybe this is where the bitcoins are gonna end up since its only receiving them https://blockchain.info/address/1AdyNzoY6jYQszF6finfrhnLZ3yATnFnae

    [–]ScottRTL 1 point2 points3 points 2 months ago (1 child)

    So, can they:

    1.) Get the money onto an exchange

    2.) Trade for an 'anonymous' currency

    3.) Send that to all different exchanges

    4.) Trade back for BTC on clean wallet addresses...

    ???

    Or would that still somehow be trackable?

    [–]Alex-Crypto 1 point2 points3 points 2 months ago (0 children)

    If they were quick to go to XMR maybe.. but at this point I do not think it is possible or easy with everyone watching the addresses. However I don't think the address with the 80mil is what the hacker cares about. It's the side address that was left with 60BTC (about 1mil currently) that the hacker is keeping for himself, or the person he paid off. Address is 1A5Kk. It is the only link 10BTC or above that did not end up at the final address. Another interesting factor is that the final address has about 300 BTC more than the red link, where it came from exactly I'm not sure, but it must've been all small transactions since we don't see it in the visualization.

    [–]Alex-Crypto 1 point2 points3 points 2 months ago* (0 children)

    Perhaps I'm missing something, but I traced from the 1A5Kk address that gets 10BTC left in it but has 60, and a payment of about 9BTC came through to it from this address: 3DLRBj8bqGMgB6vcKgWeQLqSV4eDUMvDGw

    Is this just an exchange?

    But the address also receives many transactions from other areas, with many containing at their max either a part of a bitcoin or a couple hundred bitcoins. The fact there is a separate account that does not touch the final 1EnJH makes me wonder if the hacker is trying to distract from the main or was paying someone else off... by giving them a decent share. 60 BTC (the current account balance) is about ~1mil, 800k at the time of the hack. If a payoff it would be a good enough payout to the engineer who's computer was breeched... Why so little? Insignificant to the hacker but the hacker could've gotten through either way, just easier possibly with access to an engineer's computer. Now this last part is all conspiracy theory, but I wonder what's going on with this separate account. Given time I'll be looking into other transactions and where BTC has gone separate from the final address. Or perhaps the hacker wanted that 60BTC for himself and the 3k+ BTC was meant to cripple NiceHash. I think that's the more likely solution. The hacker was told to take down nicehash, did so but wanted a payout, whether the contractor told him to take cash for himself or not. That would also fit into the theory of why the BTC wasn't put into XMR quickly...

    I'm going to look into some more of the addresses sending bitcoin to the 1A5Kk address.... perhaps there are leads somewhere there.

    [–]jpmiguel 1 point2 points3 points 2 months ago (0 children)

    Have you checked the first transaction to 1EnJHhq8Jq8vDuZA5ahVh6H4t6jh1mB4rq?

    It's a test transaction of 0.01 BTC to check if the wallet is ok. That transaction must have been sent from the owner of the wallet containing the loot.

    The wallet that sent 0.01 BTC (1HJuSWKSMUo98eaZCrmPtQuvATXqrbMN7K) received two transactions.

    One of them from 1KvHoiwhu3RjmsVE5J621oji8ZrPnXHRTV. This wallet received some transactions from some scam sites (Bitcoin Multiplier x100 http://www.bitcoinmultiplierx100.com/) ex: 3D6B7xyV4Q3LT9mE5FNqDzhRPMBY1yRi9S

    The route can be scanned in here. http://bitcoinwhoswho.com/address/3D6B7xyV4Q3LT9mE5FNqDzhRPMBY1yRi9S/urlid/0

    [–]007of9 1 point2 points3 points 2 months ago (0 children)

    I'm so impressed by all of you chipping in on this. 2008 pissed me off. Jamie Dimon pisses me off. J.P. Morgan and Goldman Sachs running the world economy into the ground pisses me off. Bitcoin is the inevitable grass roots response to all that corruption. So, a history making crypto theft followed up by a history making community effort to solve it totally restores my faith in humanity. Wish I had the tech savvy to help. Keep up the good work! Thanks.

    [–]asgardcfr 1 point2 points3 points 2 months ago (0 children)

    Mmmm i see a new breach with TLS protocol with RSA cypher Hacker probably known this breach for a few day and use it

    https://eprint.iacr.org/2017/1189.pdf (12/12/17)

    [–]ser777striker 1 point2 points3 points 1 month ago (0 children)

    вывод для внешних кошельков доступен только для балансов от 0.1 btc и выше. Перевод невыплаченного баланса с одного адреса на другой невозможен, по технически причинам.

    С наилучшими пожеланиями, Команда NiceHash the output for external wallets is available only for balances from 0.1 btc and higher. Translation of an unpaid balance from one address to another is impossible, for technical reasons.

    Regards, NiceHash Team These are scammers, run away from them withdrawal in 2019 0.1, accumulate again the mass for abduction

    [–]cryptoqueen7 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (0 children)

    Its all here: 1EnJHhq8Jq8vDuZA5ahVh6H4t6jh1mB4rq

    [–]mali_zeus 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (8 children)

    Can someone please explain how to read transactions visualization. For example, the account [ede56] receives 28.11 BTC from [3BeKw] and 23.46 BTC from [3K7N8], but it sends 90.0 BTC to [12VkD]. Since input transactions only add to 51.57 BTC, the difference probably comes from the [ede56] account itself and other smaller transactions not shown in the visualization? Also, someone has mentioned that probably only buyers are affected by the attack - is there anything to support this theory?

    [–]Alex-Crypto 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (7 children)

    What do you mean by only buyers are affected by the attack?

    [–]mali_zeus 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (6 children)

    User kulibih posted in this thread that "only buyers of power were hacked since they had real addresses". But his post is a little bit messy, I don't fully understand it.

    [–]kulibih 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (5 children)

    real coins only for buyers and site. The miners only record how much they have to pay off the buyers' bills sorry google translator

    [–]Alex-Crypto 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (4 children)

    Well yeah I know that much. I still don't get what is meant by buyers are affected by the attack. I mean it was just Nicehash's wallets that were affected, not other users'

    [–]kulibih 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (0 children)

    Я покупатель перевожу монеты на кошелек найсхеша и они там лежат. Когда я беру мощность, то в базу данных пишут кто и сколько работал на меня ( кому сколько платить) . До выплаты работникам монеты лежат на моём адресе. Только в базе данных записано что я должен заплатить тем кто на меня работал определённую сумму и сколько монет ещё мне доступны для покупки мощности. Тоесть фактически работники не имеют реальных адресов биткоин это всего лишь запись в базе данных сколько покупатели им должны выплатить.

    [–]GalenAbsalom 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (2 children)

    Buyers had money stored in nicehashes wallets.

    [–]Alex-Crypto 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (0 children)

    which buyers? You could only buy hashing power. So same shit goes for those selling hashing power. They stored paper profits in nicehash, not real money but value.

    [–]mali_zeus 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (0 children)

    So it is something like this: sellers ask for BTC from buyers, and all BTC from buyers is stollen. I would say sellers are f-c-ed as well, as there is no BTC left to pay their demand. The only question is - is everyone affected by the attack, or only those users with more BTC? This is not clear from the transactions visualization, since only transactions with > 10 BTC are shown.

    [–]Anonymous_blaze 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (2 children)

    How do I read this????? Just trying to learn tho I don’t think it’s the best timing

    [–]he-ho 1 point2 points3 points 2 months ago (0 children)

    Every bubble is a Bitcoin Adress. The lines between this addresses are transactions. So this picture show the way of the bitcoins after the hackers steal the them from Nicehash. They all go to the last adress. But this picture is now outdated the bitcoins move again. https://twitter.com/NiceHashMining/status/940961482388283393

    [–]eaglesomme 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (0 children)

    So from what I see any decimal BTC payment is stolen funds and anything rounded is an automated process to attempt proxy funds.

    [–]Poki4 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (2 children)

    Мне кажется, что зря вы огласили информацию о передвижении средств. Лучше все делать по тихому, что бы хакеры думали что на них забили и в конечном итоге на них можно было бы выйти.

    [–]Tony4678 1 point2 points3 points 2 months ago (1 child)

    I think vast majority do not understand what you are talking about)))

    [–]Kogotok 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (0 children)

    haha try to use google translate, it's really useless to write comment in Russian:)

    [–]horsetoothless 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (1 child)

    would like to see any updated big picture coins moved yesterday and before hack displayed in graph. Keep us up to DATE, Give me a Birthday present please.

    [–]Poki4 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (0 children)

    Все хотят подарок) У них и так 5к биткоинов украли)

    [–]cryptmount 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (0 children)

    we go on black road, but still find end point yet. but now time im sure that was no north korean hackers (their hacking behavior and the manner of the code is in no way juxtaposed with what we managed to get)

    PS nicehash you have a problem with the main server. this does not threaten a critical threat, but most likely to crack the scale of the gap was greater. at least, we were able to get traffic history requests from the head server. If you want to contact, write.

    [–]Encore_O5 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (1 child)

    Return money to those who have not been stolen. Why can not the bitcoins be returned to those people who have not been abducted? I was not robbed, so return my money please! My mail is wotopgan@gmail.com I was on the account was somewhere 760-770 $ Here is the address of my NiceHash wallet: 33J9qdyReG6YBjvFS98rCgvRAN1s8cSET8 Thanks in advance.

    [–]mali_zeus 1 point2 points3 points 2 months ago (0 children)

    Sorry to inform you, but your account has been hacked..

    [–]HighK11 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (0 children)

    found a collection adress 1KkvzgeFTkPnibxB5HaMBitEz5VAaVjs2M

    currently 15 BTC from the weird transactions

    [–]horsetoothless 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (2 children)

    And who has the big bitcoin pot here "stolen" coins made it back to yesterday? Niceha$h? https://blockchain.info/address/1NDyJtNTjmwk5xPNhjgAMu4HDHigtobu1s

    [–]SKP_trades 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (1 child)

    Hi, were you able to unearth anything further? I lost 2 BTCs, which also seem to have ended up with this address, through a conduit. Not sure if I could get them back… thanks!

    [–]horsetoothless 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (0 children)

    1FQwzBR6XpzCmULZHZ16NUBHi5W9cHA7u2 586.404btc calling it a Birthday present if it goes anywhere from my stolen coin made on my B-day

    [–]SkyNetLive 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (2 children)

    This does not make sense. I only mined Equihash while nhm was running so I would have no BTC in any NHM stuff anyway. - Why does nicehash claim everything is gone, BTC stolen. - Why shutdown the entire site and not be able to restore any partial service in 10 days. - Where are the altcoins

    This is starting to smell like Bait-and-switch to me.

    [–]horsetoothless 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (0 children)

    look at link above this post that is where everybody's coins are or most of them, got to round up the rest that were scattered by the hack.

    [–]mkosto 0 points1 point2 points 2 months ago (0 children)

    The Altcoins are in the pockets of those who payed Nicehash Bitcoin to contract users to mine altcoins.

    [–]ser777striker 0 points1 point2 points 1 month ago (0 children)

    как добиться ответа от найс хаш, по выплатам ??? тех поддержка более 3 дней молчит, как партизаны, тут также отвентов не получил, вывод будет на внешние кошельки 0.01 или вы решили планку поднять до 0.1 и получить средства можно только через год майнинга ?