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Someone paid $2.6 million in fees to move $134 worth of crypto and oops


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2020 Jun 11, 7:07am   792 views  5 comments

by RWSGFY   ➕follow (4)   💰tip   ignore  

There are typos, and then there are typos.
Someone appears to have made a mistake this morning when transferring the cryptocurrency ether (ETH), the younger sibling to bitcoin, from one digital wallet to another. After all, when moving around $134 dollars worth of digital currency, it hardly seems like anyone would intentionally pay a $2.6 million fee — and yet that's exactly what happened.
That's right. Someone paid 10,668.73185 ETH, worth approximately $2.6 million at the time, to move 0.55 ETH from one wallet to another. The transaction, in all its painful glory, is visible on Etherscan — a tool for viewing and searching ETH transactions.

While the internet loves a good conspiracy, and many on Twitter are speculating that this is evidence of some elaborate form of money laundering, a much simpler explanation is likely: a mistake.
Ethereum users can dictate the terms of their transactions, setting both the amount of ETH they want to send and the amount of fees they are willing to pay. The higher the fee, the thinking goes, the more likely their transaction will be included on the next block — i.e. it will go through more quickly. It's possible, therefore, that someone attempted to send $2.6 million worth of ETH with $134 in fees and simply reversed the two fields.

Of course, we are talking about cryptocurrency, so some kind of convoluted scam is always a possibility. However, this wouldn't be the first time that an unusually large fee has been paid on an otherwise small transaction. In February of 2019, someone accidentally paid 2,100 ETH in fees to move .1 ETH.
Coindesk reported at the time that the South Korean blockchain firm behind the error admitted to the mistake, contacted the mining pool that had benefitted, and worked out a deal where the firm got half of the accidentally sent ETH returned. Notably, that partial happy ending 100 percent relied on the goodwill of the mining pool, as ETH transactions are non-reversible by design.

https://apple.news/Ag0YVyaRJRvSrMoVbRao1YQ

Comments 1 - 5 of 5        Search these comments

1   RWSGFY   2020 Jun 11, 7:07am  

Crypto is idiotic.
2   Tenpoundbass   2020 Jun 11, 7:09am  

FuckCCP89 says
Crypto is idiotic.


One of the brightest, and most truthful, post ever made on Patnet.

Every aspect about Bitcoin screams Scam. Yet people are all in like a Cult Religion.

Take my money and fuck me please!
3   WookieMan   2020 Jun 11, 8:07am  

Tenpoundbass says
Every aspect about Bitcoin screams Scam. Yet people are all in like a Cult Religion.

It's fucking weird. You ask them to explain what the value of crypto is and they come up with a bunch of nonsensical, copy and pasted bull shit. Just admit you have a spreadsheet that people are trading. Congrats.

The problem is one or a handful of people have most the numbers in that spreadsheet and can pull the puppet strings at a moments notice. Stocks have their risk, but I know the real estate, the brands, they have to report relatively accurate numbers to shareholders and insider trading is illegal with penalties. None of that exists with crypto. If you want to play mind fuck games, crypto technically doesn't even exist yet has value (to some morons)
4   Onvacation   2020 Jun 11, 9:54am  

APOCALYPSEFUCKisShostakovitch says
I know a couple of start-ups in the space and they all have the same focus: AML. It's clear that blockchain's real virtues in applying cryptographically secured, publically interrogable ledgers will go nowhere unless it's evil twin, cryptocurrencies, are disciplined or disconnected from the conventional banking system to prevent economies to subject to the violence of vast money laundering operations animated by CC schemes. One report not long ago found that 80 percent of transactions through exchanges - except for COINBASE - were some kind of washing scheme orchestrated to pump a specific CC's face value at a given time.

Playing with this stuff is in the same league as buying scratch cards.

More wisdom from our, often ignored, savant.
5   MisdemeanorRebel   2020 Jun 11, 10:42am  

The currency that trades like OTC stocks in an unregulated exchange!

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