Let me see what I can do, this may take some time...
Thank you, Staneslav! I'll appreciate it!
Hey Mark, what was the first rule of fight club, again?...
Don't make work for ferrix! No, wrong first rule.
1Pay attention to what users
do, not what they
say. No, that was first rule of program development.
1Keep it clean! Oops, that was first rule of home food preparation.
Above all else, do no harm. Nah, too medical.
1Understand your threat model!

that was for security analysis.
Don't insult the customer.

First rule of business.
1Maybe this is it: Do not discuss Fight Club!
I don't think I disclosed anything that wasn't already publicly available or publicly speculated, either on Prosper's site, or from the Securities and Exchange Commission, or had been speculated about on Prosper's now defunct original (SpreeBB) forums, or even here at .org in non-verified locations. For example, I remember posting shortly after Prosper's S-1 filing was discovered and posted in a public forum that I don't see how the current selling of notes to "Lenders" does
not make them a security but the trading of them
does.
Note 1: Prosper Marketplace, Inc., seems to have violated the tagged "First Rules":
- Created work for ferrix by complaining passwords were passed in clear text. (Reality: passwords are one-way hashed before transmission over the Internet and the bbs software doesn't provide a way to recover those passwords.)
- Prosper often seems to not pay attention to what we say or do, e.g., implementing community payments over overwhelming poll to not offer them, yet not offering flexible payment schedules to mesh with borrowers' (or lenders') pay cycles. Also, too many reports of self-confessed fraud seem to fall on deaf ears.
- Do no harm seems to be violated by the forum bannings, the suspended accounts, and purging of member pages, the latter in direct violation of the Lender Agreement, and using lies about this site as the excuse.
- In many cases, Prosper Marketplace, Inc., has practiced hostile customer relations, especially to the segment of their customers that bring cash to the table. Doctored screen shots to misrepresent the marketplace, miscalculating some fundamental metrics like default rates, data mining for coming up with "good" returns and comparing them to a non-equivalent index, all are received as insults by those of us who have been investing in stocks and other assets for some time. And how heart-warming is it to be told that lenders have helped detect fraud and then turn around and suspend a member that found a FBI news release of an impending indictment of loan fraud, and then immediately take away all information that can be used by lenders to help find fraud?
Sorry, but I think Prosper has violated several First Rules.
