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Alternate cryptocurrencies => Altcoin Discussion => Topic started by: Namek on April 19, 2015, 02:34:01 PM



Title: What is the difference between whitepaper and threads ?
Post by: Namek on April 19, 2015, 02:34:01 PM
Hello :)

I always asked to myself what was the real purpose of whitepapers... How are they different from what it's written in coin's thread ?
Can someone explains me the difference ?

Thanks,
Best


Title: Re: What is the difference between whitepaper and threads ?
Post by: kelsey on April 19, 2015, 02:37:41 PM
a white paper simply tis a way to pretend it somehow has cred, talk a bit of tech pseudo science hogwash, ad a diagram....wham instant crypto street cred  :o


Title: Re: What is the difference between whitepaper and threads ?
Post by: muddafudda on April 19, 2015, 02:54:01 PM
About 5 minutes.


Title: Re: What is the difference between whitepaper and threads ?
Post by: MaxDZ8 on April 19, 2015, 05:19:41 PM
You probably know threads. Everyone is free to write whatever they want.

Whitepapers in general contain at least an overlook on what's going on, as well as the theory and eventually detailed looks at at the most interesting specifics.
When it comes to coins, whitepapers are usually way less informative. They range from "we copypasted the announce thread in a PDF and pretend it's a whitepaper" to "let's just assume everyone and his/her dog has a master degree in cryptography and applied mathematics".
As you might guess, both extremes produce useless "whitepapers".


Title: Re: What is the difference between whitepaper and threads ?
Post by: Namek on April 20, 2015, 05:41:00 PM
You probably know threads. Everyone is free to write whatever they want.

Whitepapers in general contain at least an overlook on what's going on, as well as the theory and eventually detailed looks at at the most interesting specifics.
When it comes to coins, whitepapers are usually way less informative. They range from "we copypasted the announce thread in a PDF and pretend it's a whitepaper" to "let's just assume everyone and his/her dog has a master degree in cryptography and applied mathematics".
As you might guess, both extremes produce useless "whitepapers".

Thanks you for reply.
But when you see at ziftrCOIN, what's the difference between the thread and the white paper ? What did they wrote in the whitepaper ?

Thread : https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=970363.0
Whitepaper : https://d19y4lldx7po3t.cloudfront.net/assets/docs/ziftrcoin-whitepaper-120614.pdf


Title: Re: What is the difference between whitepaper and threads ?
Post by: Hazard on April 20, 2015, 09:56:27 PM
All the "whitepapers" you'll find on here are rubbish.


Title: Re: What is the difference between whitepaper and threads ?
Post by: MaxDZ8 on April 21, 2015, 08:03:53 AM
Thanks you for reply.
But when you see at ziftrCOIN, what's the difference between the thread and the white paper ? What did they wrote in the whitepaper ?
This is a whitepaper just because they declared so. It's not quite the thread copypasted, but pretty much on that end of the spectrum. You get nice colors.


Title: Re: What is the difference between whitepaper and threads ?
Post by: pazor_true on April 21, 2015, 08:07:10 AM
whitepaper: one person talks about bullshit (sometimes)
thread: many persons talk about this bullshit (often)


Title: Re: What is the difference between whitepaper and threads ?
Post by: ed_teech on April 21, 2015, 08:59:35 AM
The whitepaper is the first thing to read, the thread is the next to question it.


Title: Re: What is the difference between whitepaper and threads ?
Post by: Namek on April 22, 2015, 04:31:00 PM
The whitepaper is the first thing to read, the thread is the next to question it.

What did you except to read inside it ?


Title: Re: What is the difference between whitepaper and threads ?
Post by: Lorenzo on April 25, 2015, 03:54:41 AM
I thought one of the goals of a technical whitepaper is that you should be able to read it and implement a roughly equivalent version from scratch using just the information given. The Bitcoin whitepaper, for example, provides a reasonably detailed explanation of how Bitcoin works so that it would be enough for someone to read it and implement their own version of Bitcoin using whatever programming language they're familiar with. (That isn't to say that I haven't seen many whitepapers fall far short of this standard however.)