As an experiment I sent 0.0005 BTC to the address corresponding to the private key in the documentation (L1uyy5qTuGrVXrmrsvHWHgVzW9kKdrp27wBC7Vs6nZDTF2BRUVwy -> 17XBj6iFEsf8kzDMGQk5ghZipxX49VXuaV). Within seconds someone had already transferred it out to 1ENnzep2ivWYqXjAodTueiZscT6kunAyYs.<p>[address] <a href="https://blockchain.info/address/17XBj6iFEsf8kzDMGQk5ghZipxX49VXuaV" rel="nofollow">https://blockchain.info/address/17XBj6iFEsf8kzDMGQk5ghZipxX4...</a><p>[thief?] <a href="https://blockchain.info/address/1ENnzep2ivWYqXjAodTueiZscT6kunAyYs" rel="nofollow">https://blockchain.info/address/1ENnzep2ivWYqXjAodTueiZscT6k...</a>
Hey guys!<p>Still not considering to use <a href="https://github.com/indutny/elliptic" rel="nofollow">https://github.com/indutny/elliptic</a> for your EC operations? It seems like Bitcore has moved to it, and are quite fine with the results: <a href="http://blog.bitpay.com/2014/07/22/bitcore-3000-is-three-times-faster-for-bitcoin-on-the-web.html" rel="nofollow">http://blog.bitpay.com/2014/07/22/bitcore-3000-is-three-time...</a>
It's been over a year since the team started with justmoon's bitcoinjs-lib and I'm very impressed with the result. Good work, kyle, wei, and everyone!