Even though I bought them and the balance in my wallet is correct...been 3 hours......
ut oh...blockchain saying no confirmed funds to spend
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#2Won't let me transfer to book....Comment -
#3keep us updated
I do not use bitcoinComment -
#4ill never forget the day i sent 500 btc to my account but the shit like double confirmed so i ended up getting credited for more. I always wished I would've bought more. BTC crazy. BOL duckshitComment -
#5Is this your first ever transaction from Blockchain? Possibly you've had no other confirmed transactions prior?
Also, are you trying to make a transfer paying no miner's fees? (Blockchain warns this can delay transactions)Comment -
#6Thanks guys......20th time......and I knew nothing about paying extra, I would have....Comment -
#7So you sent the btc to the book's address and there are no confirmations? Or blockchain just wont let you send btc?Comment -
#8I purchased the Bitcoin 4 hours ago from a bc atm....the transaction was successful and the balance of my blockchain wallet updated correctly.......then when I tried to send or spend my bc, blockchain message pops up....no confirmed funds to spend.Comment -
#9Nerve racking.Comment -
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#11Have you used this atm before? Did you pay a miners fee? It may just be taking a while to confirm.Comment -
#12Atm is the same I have used 20 times..
..it does say...
complete .....and has 25 confirmations and couting......still gives me the same message....
.I'll update. .....thanks for the helpComment -
#13Fuk! 4 hours and still Nothing, already missed my Cleveland tt....fukn shadey bitfuksComment -
#14F **....F **.....and F the Bitcoin ....they don't make it easy!Comment -
#15you mean nothing pops up when you search the btc address on blockchain.info?Comment -
#16Blockchain message no confirmed funds to spend. ....even though my wallet says confirmed 30 times and counting and my balance is correct.Comment -
#17This happens to me from time to time. But ususlly always fixes itself in about 15-30 minutes. I also agree u should go in the settings and increase the miners fee.Comment -
#18You sent 225000 dollars to a book? Dam I wish I had that kind of money. Do you trust them that much?Comment -
#19They are probably verifying that the loonies and twonies are in fact legal tender and not monopoly moneyComment -
#20I'm not an idiot and I've worked in finance for 17 years for a major company, but this Bitcoin stuff is like a foreign language to me. I realize the US dollar is only backed by confidence in the government at this point, but what Bitcoin backed by? And if something goes wrong who do you complain to? I don't see it being regulated and I know a million people will defend it but I don't see it catching on with legitimate businesses.Comment -
#21I'm not an idiot and I've worked in finance for 17 years for a major company, but this Bitcoin stuff is like a foreign language to me. I realize the US dollar is only backed by confidence in the government at this point, but what Bitcoin backed by? And if something goes wrong who do you complain to? I don't see it being regulated and I know a million people will defend it but I don't see it catching on with legitimate businesses.Comment -
#22
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#236th hour waiting, of course I missed my Cleveland tt, I emailed blockchain multiple times, even asking for a PHONE CALL....LOL but nothing. FFFFFFKComment -
#24Duck plug in your receiving BTC address after the last forward slash in this URL to see what time it is:
perhaps it can give you a more detailed view on where the things at with your transactionComment -
#25I'm not an idiot and I've worked in finance for 17 years for a major company, but this Bitcoin stuff is like a foreign language to me. I realize the US dollar is only backed by confidence in the government at this point, but what Bitcoin backed by? And if something goes wrong who do you complain to? I don't see it being regulated and I know a million people will defend it but I don't see it catching on with legitimate businesses.
If something goes wrong with a cash transaction, who do you complain to?
It's already caught on with legitimate businesses.Comment -
#26Hipp is one of the few here who can drop a gigantic blue ball like it's nothing
http://bitbonkers.com/Comment -
#27if you watch BTC transactions it's fukkin crazy how much money moves around. no wonder governments are nervous.Comment -
#28jaker i just want one purple ball.Comment -
#29Ghenghis how many purple balls would it take for you to retire pal?Comment -
#30Sasha might be the smartest guy aliveComment -
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#32
http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/500000-bali-villa-biggest-bitcoin-purchase-ever-1441101
$500,000 Bali Villa is Biggest Bitcoin Purchase Ever
By David Gilbert
<time class="time-format" itemprop="datePublished" datetime="2014-03-20T12:00:36+00:00" data-timestamp="1395316836">March 20, 2014 12:00 GMT</time>- 62
<figure class="imageBox" itemscope="" itemprop="associatedMedia image" itemtype="http://schema.org/ImageObject" style="width:660px;"><source media="(min-width: 1280px)"><source media="(min-width: 1024px)"><source media="(min-width: 768px)"><source media="(min-width: 480px)"><source media="(min-width: 0px)"><figcaption class="caption">The villa on the Indonesian island of Bali was sold for in excess of $500,000 worth of bitcoin, making it the single largest cryptocurrency purchase ever.deLMango Villa Estate</figcaption></figure>A villa on the Indonesian island of Bali has sold for over $500,000 worth of bitcoin in what is the largest purchase ever made with cryptocurrency.
Sold through the bitcoin-only BitPremier luxury marketplace, the fully-managed property in the deLMango Villa Estate sold for in excess of $500,000 though the exact price and identity of the buyer involved remain unknown.
BitPremier was founded by Alan Silbert, who is the brother of Barry Silbert, a major bitcoin investor and founder of the Bitcoin Investment Trust. Barry Silbert is also the founder of SecondMarket and has invested in his brother's BitPremier venture.
Alan Silbert told CoinDesk that the purchaser of the property in Bali was an early bitcoin adopter from the US and that the sale represented "by far the largest" sale to date on the marketplace, which launched 10 months ago.
"This definitely validates the business model. It shows that bitcoin users want to buy things that are unique, and that are above and beyond t-shirts and electronics," Silbert said.
Previously, the purchase of a Tesla Model S for around $103,000 worth of bitcoin last December was seen to be the largest ever single purchase using only bitcoin.
Interestingly, at today's bitcoin price, the buyer only paid a little over $53,000 for the electric car, indicating just how volatile the cryptocurrency's price is.
There have been however bigger bitcoin transactions, which we known about thanks to the bitcoin blockchain. The largest known is a $147m transaction, which was carried out by bitcoin exchange Bitstamp last November, and remains the largest single movement of bitcoin ever.
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#33Hi rocketman...thanks for the link.....
So I'm in the 9th hour and I get this lame msg from Blockchain that this issue is happening to a small % of Android users and there is NO time line for the Fix.....sorry they said.Comment -
#34WtfComment -
#35Seriously, after having a deposit stolen from the W, and now whatever the F this is, I've almost had it.....Comment
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