Bitcoin Forum

Alternate cryptocurrencies => Altcoin Discussion => Topic started by: funsponge on March 28, 2016, 09:04:16 PM



Title: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: funsponge on March 28, 2016, 09:04:16 PM
Just seen this over at Bitbay;

-------------------------------

First Decentralised Market Release - APRIL 2016
Date:28th March 2016

April 2016 will see the official release of our first client. A faster and better version which will form the platform for all future templates and updates.

In addition to major enhancements the release will also fix all issues that have been reported by the users. The windows version is currently being tested by our core team.

Also, we have recently been in contact with Microsoft Azure and their requirements to join would delay the final release of the Bitbay client. We would rather complete the client and focus on its integration into other services. A more detailed post has already been made by David on Slack.


https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=890531.msg14345443#msg14345443


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: whale_shark on March 28, 2016, 09:49:06 PM
Interesting for sure!

I will keep an eye on Bitbay.

I could have stumbled upon a giant waiting to wake up!


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: Fuserleer on March 28, 2016, 10:26:23 PM
As I'm always short on time perhaps someone knows if this release of BitBay supports auctions?

Simple yes or no will do :)


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: pugman on March 28, 2016, 10:31:20 PM
I wouldn't have thought Zimbeck would have done that just yet. I know hes a wizard but that might take him a year or two


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: pugman on March 28, 2016, 10:32:24 PM
its not on the roadmap it seems

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=890531.msg14346521#msg14346521



Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: BellaBitBit on March 28, 2016, 10:33:43 PM
Good news, I have been watching this one and hope to be trying it out soon.  Also good to see they are trying to get on Azure because at this point it will come down to who is NOT on Azure.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: Fuserleer on March 28, 2016, 10:36:03 PM
its not on the roadmap it seems

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=890531.msg14346521#msg14346521


Thanks for the quick info! :)


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: funsponge on March 28, 2016, 10:58:11 PM
yes pugman you got in before me

Here's the new Bitbay roadmap

http://s8.postimg.org/v6ljg15r9/Picture14.jpg (http://postimage.org/)
 (http://postimage.org/)


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: TPTB_need_war on March 28, 2016, 11:27:32 PM
Here we go Ethereum Paradox again! BitBay is technobabble complexity (feature after unvetted feature being promised) without first explaining how they solve the scaling problem of a block chain.

PoShit consensus again.

Another child prodigy genius claim (Zimbeck redux of Vitalik).

None of these shitcoins are going to scale and remain decentralized.

These are just P&Ds.

The truth I am stating won't be vindicated until perhaps another year or two hence. So enjoy yourselves.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: Munti on March 28, 2016, 11:32:49 PM
Here we go Ethereum Paradox again! BitBay is technobabble complexity (feature after unvetted feature being promised) without first explaining how they solve the scaling problem of a block chain.

PoShit consensus again.

Another child prodigy genius claim (Zimbeck redux of Vitalik).

None of these shitcoins are going to scale and remain decentralized.

These are just P&Ds.

The truth I am stating won't be vindicated until perhaps another year or two hence. So enjoy yourselves.

Nice to finally see someone that cares about scaling issues. I almost thought David is the only person that cares about that.
And since he cares about that he doesn't bloat the blockchain with markets.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: funsponge on March 28, 2016, 11:34:28 PM
Here we go Ethereum Paradox again! BitBay is technobabble complexity (feature after unvetted feature being promised) without first explaining how they solve the scaling problem of a block chain.

PoShit consensus again.

Another child prodigy genius claim (Zimbeck redux of Vitalik).

None of these shitcoins are going to scale and remain decentralized.

These are just P&Ds.

The truth I am stating won't be vindicated until perhaps another year or two hence. So enjoy yourselves.

Bitbays Decentralized markets have worked in BitBay and Halo for over a year but were "in beta" to iron out bugs etc.
And its getting pegged so cant be pumped and dumped.

Why so negative.

If you want answers go to the Bitbay thread where David will answer your questions. How many crytpo's out there have an active full time dev willing to answer any question put to him?


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: TPTB_need_war on March 28, 2016, 11:34:32 PM
Nice to finally see someone that cares about scaling issues. I almost thought David is the only person that cares about that.
And since he cares about that he doesn't bloat the blockchain with markets.

No vetted white paper, means selling snake oil.

Bitbays Decentralized markets have worked in BitBay and Halo for over a year but were "in beta" to iron out bugs etc.

That isn't scaling.

When n00bs such as you don't even comprehend the meaning of the word 'scaling', then what is the point of me even trying to explain.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: Fuserleer on March 28, 2016, 11:41:13 PM
Here we go Ethereum Paradox again! BitBay is technobabble complexity (feature after unvetted feature being promised) without first explaining how they solve the scaling problem of a block chain.

PoShit consensus again.

Another child prodigy genius claim (Zimbeck redux of Vitalik).

None of these shitcoins are going to scale and remain decentralized.

These are just P&Ds.

The truth I am stating won't be vindicated until perhaps another year or two hence. So enjoy yourselves.

Nice to finally see someone that cares about scaling issues. I almost thought David is the only person that cares about that.
And since he cares about that he doesn't bloat the blockchain with markets.

There's a few of us that care about it, myself included and of course TPTB (but I see you've already awoken the beast there :) )

Which leads me to my question of what is the scaling solution for Bitbay?   I didn't know that scalability was a key area of focus in that project  ???


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: Munti on March 28, 2016, 11:45:05 PM
Here we go Ethereum Paradox again! BitBay is technobabble complexity (feature after unvetted feature being promised) without first explaining how they solve the scaling problem of a block chain.

PoShit consensus again.

Another child prodigy genius claim (Zimbeck redux of Vitalik).

None of these shitcoins are going to scale and remain decentralized.

These are just P&Ds.

The truth I am stating won't be vindicated until perhaps another year or two hence. So enjoy yourselves.

Nice to finally see someone that cares about scaling issues. I almost thought David is the only person that cares about that.
And since he cares about that he doesn't bloat the blockchain with markets.

There's a few of us that care about it, myself included and of course TPTB (but I see you've already awoken the beast there :) )

Which leads me to my question of what is the scaling solution for Bitbay?   I didn't know that scalability was a key area of focus in that project  ???

You should ask David directly because I doubt I'm able to answer you at the level of detail you would like.
But basically making the decision to not run the contracts on the blockchain. He uses bitmessage instead.

While I'm at it, auctions will also come in BitBay. If you go to our thread there is a screenshot of a reverse auction


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: funsponge on March 28, 2016, 11:45:54 PM
As I'm always short on time perhaps someone knows if this release of BitBay supports auctions?

Simple yes or no will do :)

Seems these will be added in time. Here's a screenshot of a reverse auction template that i got from the Bitbay thread

https://i.imgur.com/virQBTY.jpg


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: Fuserleer on March 28, 2016, 11:49:04 PM
Here we go Ethereum Paradox again! BitBay is technobabble complexity (feature after unvetted feature being promised) without first explaining how they solve the scaling problem of a block chain.

PoShit consensus again.

Another child prodigy genius claim (Zimbeck redux of Vitalik).

None of these shitcoins are going to scale and remain decentralized.

These are just P&Ds.

The truth I am stating won't be vindicated until perhaps another year or two hence. So enjoy yourselves.

Nice to finally see someone that cares about scaling issues. I almost thought David is the only person that cares about that.
And since he cares about that he doesn't bloat the blockchain with markets.

There's a few of us that care about it, myself included and of course TPTB (but I see you've already awoken the beast there :) )

Which leads me to my question of what is the scaling solution for Bitbay?   I didn't know that scalability was a key area of focus in that project  ???

You should ask David directly because I doubt I'm able to answer you at the level of detail you would like.
But basically making the decision to not run the contracts on the blockchain. He uses bitmessage instead.

While I'm at it, auctions will also come in BitBay. If you go to our thread there is a screenshot of a reverse auction

I see...so hes using Bitmessage as a kind of side chain for contracts.  That's an interesting approach, I'll spend some time and check this project out in more detail.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: smooth on March 29, 2016, 12:13:26 AM
Here we go Ethereum Paradox again! BitBay is technobabble complexity (feature after unvetted feature being promised) without first explaining how they solve the scaling problem of a block chain.

PoShit consensus again.

Another child prodigy genius claim (Zimbeck redux of Vitalik).

None of these shitcoins are going to scale and remain decentralized.

These are just P&Ds.

The truth I am stating won't be vindicated until perhaps another year or two hence. So enjoy yourselves.

It's already vindicated if you care to pay attention. We're at the point where everything is a remake and we've seen it all before, including how the future plays out. Nxt, Bitshares, etc.



Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: TPTB_need_war on March 29, 2016, 12:15:41 AM
I see...so hes using Bitmessage as a kind of side chain for contracts.  That's an interesting approach, I'll spend some time and check this project out in more detail.

Interested to read your future analysis with citations.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: Munti on March 29, 2016, 11:12:01 AM
Here we go Ethereum Paradox again! BitBay is technobabble complexity (feature after unvetted feature being promised) without first explaining how they solve the scaling problem of a block chain.

PoShit consensus again.

Another child prodigy genius claim (Zimbeck redux of Vitalik).

None of these shitcoins are going to scale and remain decentralized.

These are just P&Ds.

The truth I am stating won't be vindicated until perhaps another year or two hence. So enjoy yourselves.

Nice to finally see someone that cares about scaling issues. I almost thought David is the only person that cares about that.
And since he cares about that he doesn't bloat the blockchain with markets.

There's a few of us that care about it, myself included and of course TPTB (but I see you've already awoken the beast there :) )

Which leads me to my question of what is the scaling solution for Bitbay?   I didn't know that scalability was a key area of focus in that project  ???

You should ask David directly because I doubt I'm able to answer you at the level of detail you would like.
But basically making the decision to not run the contracts on the blockchain. He uses bitmessage instead.

While I'm at it, auctions will also come in BitBay. If you go to our thread there is a screenshot of a reverse auction

I see...so hes using Bitmessage as a kind of side chain for contracts.  That's an interesting approach, I'll spend some time and check this project out in more detail.

Join our slack if you like http://bitbay.market/wp-login.php?action=slack-invitation
David is there almost every day, and he enjoys convos about the finer points in the tech. Would give him a chance to learn more about your project as well. I pointed him to it yesterday and he seems curious


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: 3r197 on March 29, 2016, 11:58:54 AM
What I like about Zimbeck's Halo tech is that it can be integrated with almost any coin. In fact, he plans on expanding it to other coins. Who knows... maybe one day Monero or Doge will have Halo tech built-in.

What makes BitBay different from the rest will be the rolling peg, 'user value protection' tech.
So not everything has been done already as this is no "Nubits" failed design; it's not even in the same 'ballpark'.

David's shooting for the end of the year to have it implemented. Merchants will finally have the stability needed to guarantee their marketplace profits and their clientele will finally have the assurance that they received their goods at the most fair price possible!


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: DishwashingUnit on March 29, 2016, 12:53:43 PM
Does the peg mean it's pointless to speculate on BAY?

Will there be no way for people to buy in and own shares of the DAC's profits?


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: Munti on March 29, 2016, 01:04:08 PM
Does the peg mean it's pointless to speculate on BAY?

Will there be no way for people to buy in and own shares of the DAC's profits?

No, it's not pointless. Notice David uses the term rolling peg. Meaning it's not fixed at a specific value versus US$ forever. Think of it as a stabilizer. It will take some of the volatility out, but price will still be able to go up and down.
Actually it's a little like a modern peg in fiat. The hard peg like Swiss franc that broke in 2015 has a long tradition of failing because at some point circumstances have changed so much that the cost of maintaining the peg gets to high. The modern peg (often not announced as a peg) has a target corridor that allows some deviation from target price. Also that target is adjusted when necessary.
We expect the effect of the peg to be a price that moves more like bluechip stock or fiat as opposed to penny stock and crypto.

What is DAC?


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: toknormal on March 29, 2016, 01:40:18 PM

Does the peg mean it's pointless to speculate on BAY?

It means you can pump but not dump  ;)


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: DishwashingUnit on March 29, 2016, 01:41:21 PM
Does the peg mean it's pointless to speculate on BAY?

Will there be no way for people to buy in and own shares of the DAC's profits?

No, it's not pointless. Notice David uses the term rolling peg. Meaning it's not fixed at a specific value versus US$ forever. Think of it as a stabilizer. It will take some of the volatility out, but price will still be able to go up and down.
Actually it's a little like a modern peg in fiat. The hard peg like Swiss franc that broke in 2015 has a long tradition of failing because at some point circumstances have changed so much that the cost of maintaining the peg gets to high. The modern peg (often not announced as a peg) has a target corridor that allows some deviation from target price. Also that target is adjusted when necessary.
We expect the effect of the peg to be a price that moves more like bluechip stock or fiat as opposed to penny stock and crypto.

What is DAC?

thank you for the clarification. I think I understand now.

DAC = Decentralized Autonomous Company, or you call it a DAO, or however you want to phrase it, it's basically a way of saying a business on a blockchain. BitBay is a DAC, but if it offers its services for free it's not a profitable DAC. I'm asking if BAY will charge people for transactions, and if so, will part of that profit go towards increasing the price of BAY when the peg rolls?


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: whale_shark on March 29, 2016, 05:50:19 PM
have read up on this and seems genuine. Good work Bitbay!


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: Nxtblg on March 29, 2016, 07:17:34 PM
have read up on this and seems genuine. Good work Bitbay!

I have to say, David Zimbeck is one tenacious fellow. The way he got trashed last year over the ICO shenanigans, it took real staying power to stick with Bitbay. Props to him. :)


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: dzimbeck on March 29, 2016, 08:00:40 PM
Here we go Ethereum Paradox again! BitBay is technobabble complexity (feature after unvetted feature being promised) without first explaining how they solve the scaling problem of a block chain.

PoShit consensus again.

Another child prodigy genius claim (Zimbeck redux of Vitalik).

None of these shitcoins are going to scale and remain decentralized.

These are just P&Ds.

The truth I am stating won't be vindicated until perhaps another year or two hence. So enjoy yourselves.

You are wrong on all accounts here. The markets are PEER TO PEER. They leverage Bitmessage and don't use a blockchain. This can scale to any level since the contract data is only store about markets that you care about and Bitmessage only holds 2 days in memory and I've done a custom build to allow determined sellers to resubmit orders.

So yeah there is no bloat. Thats the POINT. I'm not pumping Bitbay, I've never even sold a single coin. I'm simply completing Halo/BlackHalo/BitHalo/Bitbay as promised. Maybe you don't realize this but I worked on BitHalo for free for almost 2 years before i was into the Bitbay project.

The pegging is a serious feature you should also read up more on before insulting people without a technical background.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: Munti on March 29, 2016, 08:09:07 PM
Does the peg mean it's pointless to speculate on BAY?

Will there be no way for people to buy in and own shares of the DAC's profits?

No, it's not pointless. Notice David uses the term rolling peg. Meaning it's not fixed at a specific value versus US$ forever. Think of it as a stabilizer. It will take some of the volatility out, but price will still be able to go up and down.
Actually it's a little like a modern peg in fiat. The hard peg like Swiss franc that broke in 2015 has a long tradition of failing because at some point circumstances have changed so much that the cost of maintaining the peg gets to high. The modern peg (often not announced as a peg) has a target corridor that allows some deviation from target price. Also that target is adjusted when necessary.
We expect the effect of the peg to be a price that moves more like bluechip stock or fiat as opposed to penny stock and crypto.

What is DAC?

thank you for the clarification. I think I understand now.

DAC = Decentralized Autonomous Company, or you call it a DAO, or however you want to phrase it, it's basically a way of saying a business on a blockchain. BitBay is a DAC, but if it offers its services for free it's not a profitable DAC. I'm asking if BAY will charge people for transactions, and if so, will part of that profit go towards increasing the price of BAY when the peg rolls?

No we will not charge for transactions other than an anti spam fee.  Not for the things that are on the road map now anyway.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: Fuserleer on March 29, 2016, 09:52:15 PM
have read up on this and seems genuine. Good work Bitbay!

I have to say, David Zimbeck is one tenacious fellow. The way he got trashed last year over the ICO shenanigans, it took real staying power to stick with Bitbay. Props to him. :)

I think every committed developer around here has been bashed, and bashed hard at some point, usually for events out of their control, or by others manipulating a desire to "do the right thing".

It takes a certain kind of person to continue regardless of all that kinda heat, so that kind of commitment alone should be enough for any peace of mind anyone may need.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: toknormal on March 29, 2016, 10:36:10 PM

The pegging is a serious feature you should also read up more on before insulting people without a technical background.

Ah, you didn't know. Insults and arrogance are actually TPTB_'s currency of choice since, unlike yourself, they're a lot more accessible to him than anything he's (not) capable of hammering out on a blockchain.

Your mistake was to have spent a year and a half knocking your pan in actually producing something when of course you should have been spending it traversing bitcointalk threads firefighting trolls and dishing out technical put-downs    ;)


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: dzimbeck on March 29, 2016, 11:33:33 PM
As I'm always short on time perhaps someone knows if this release of BitBay supports auctions?

Simple yes or no will do :)

Hey saw this a bit late, YES the Buy/Sell anything template has auctions, reverse auctions and multiple shipping options and billing styles

Currently you can still sell things with the "custom" template but this is way better and more user friendly

Also take note of the current existing coins for cash template which is like a decentralized localbitcoins with a low volume price tracker


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: TPTB_need_war on March 30, 2016, 12:00:44 AM
Here we go Ethereum Paradox again! BitBay is technobabble complexity (feature after unvetted feature being promised) without first explaining how they solve the scaling problem of a block chain.

PoShit consensus again.

Another child prodigy genius claim (Zimbeck redux of Vitalik).

None of these shitcoins are going to scale and remain decentralized.

These are just P&Ds.

The truth I am stating won't be vindicated until perhaps another year or two hence. So enjoy yourselves.

You are wrong on all accounts here. The markets are PEER TO PEER. They leverage Bitmessage and don't use a blockchain. This can scale to any level since the contract data is only store about markets that you care about and Bitmessage only holds 2 days in memory and I've done a custom build to allow determined sellers to resubmit orders.

So yeah there is no bloat. Thats the POINT. I'm not pumping Bitbay, I've never even sold a single coin. I'm simply completing Halo/BlackHalo/BitHalo/Bitbay as promised. Maybe you don't realize this but I worked on BitHalo for free for almost 2 years before i was into the Bitbay project.

The pegging is a serious feature you should also read up more on before insulting people without a technical background.

David unlike Vitalik, you are willing to come here and debate. Good! Please point me to the white paper so that I may peer review your technological claims in sufficient detail?

For example, I will want to see how you lock in commitments in a P2P consensus. And I expect to find a flaw.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: Fuserleer on March 30, 2016, 12:05:04 AM
As I'm always short on time perhaps someone knows if this release of BitBay supports auctions?

Simple yes or no will do :)

Hey saw this a bit late, YES the Buy/Sell anything template has auctions, reverse auctions and multiple shipping options and billing styles

Currently you can still sell things with the "custom" template but this is way better and more user friendly

Also take note of the current existing coins for cash template which is like a decentralized localbitcoins with a low volume price tracker

No worries, if you're anything like me you're busy as hell :)

If they are active now in the beta that may earn you the crown of the first marketplace platform with functional auctions.  I know its been on the road map for a number of projects for quite some time, but unless I'm mistaken, none have launched a functional solution at all yet....so well done :)


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: Nxtblg on March 30, 2016, 12:53:30 AM
have read up on this and seems genuine. Good work Bitbay!

I have to say, David Zimbeck is one tenacious fellow. The way he got trashed last year over the ICO shenanigans, it took real staying power to stick with Bitbay. Props to him. :)

I think every committed developer around here has been bashed, and bashed hard at some point, usually for events out of their control, or by others manipulating a desire to "do the right thing".

It takes a certain kind of person to continue regardless of all that kinda heat, so that kind of commitment alone should be enough for any peace of mind anyone may need.

I hear ya. Myself, I haven't gotten that trick down but that's not a big loss in my case.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: dzimbeck on March 30, 2016, 01:55:05 AM
have read up on this and seems genuine. Good work Bitbay!

I have to say, David Zimbeck is one tenacious fellow. The way he got trashed last year over the ICO shenanigans, it took real staying power to stick with Bitbay. Props to him. :)

I think every committed developer around here has been bashed, and bashed hard at some point, usually for events out of their control, or by others manipulating a desire to "do the right thing".

It takes a certain kind of person to continue regardless of all that kinda heat, so that kind of commitment alone should be enough for any peace of mind anyone may need.

I hear ya. Myself, I haven't gotten that trick down but that's not a big loss in my case.

All that matters are your actions, not your reputation. You are your own judge, whom you face daily.

It should be noted bitcointalk is (controlled opposition) ... there is more to those "fake profiles" on here than people think. They are pushing govt agenda... just sayin...

And there is a little known secret in this world... the more hated the person the more likely they did something RIGHT (Stan Meyer, Royal Rife)

Let me leave you with this:
   
When you get what you want in your struggle for self
And the world makes you king for a day
Just go to the mirror and look at yourself
And see what that man has to say.

For it isn’t your father, or mother, or wife
Whose judgment upon you must pass
The fellow whose verdict counts most in your life
Is the one staring back from the glass.

He’s the fellow to please – never mind all the rest
For he’s with you, clear to the end
And you’ve passed your most difficult, dangerous test
If the man in the glass is your friend.

You may fool the whole world down the pathway of years
And get pats on the back as you pass
But your final reward will be heartache and tears
If you’ve cheated the man in the glass.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: TPTB_need_war on March 30, 2016, 04:52:18 AM
David directed me to the Help Desk at https://bithalo.org where I skimmed through the White paper and the section 2.10 of the Documentation.

I find it difficult to follow quickly due to the way it is not written with a concise explanation. And I am not really willing to expend the effort to attempt to reverse engineer the possibilities of what he attempting to describe. It appears he is proposing a protocol wherein the seller of for example BTC could escrow the BTC with the buyer such that the buyer risks double the BTC if the buyer doesn't pay the fiat or commodity to the seller. But I can't understand the protocol; for example he makes a statement in the white paper which I don't understand, "Perhaps Bob wishes to purchase bitcoins using cash from Alice".

I will await David to clarify.

Btw, ostensibly he is attempting a very steep learning curve at his age and the level of programming experience he had coming into this. So it is expected that at his age and level of experience, that his articulation would be somewhat difficult to follow, that is unless he is Eric S. Raymond who is a verbal and math genius.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: dzimbeck on March 30, 2016, 03:23:50 PM
David directed me to the Help Desk at https://bithalo.org where I skimmed through the White paper and the section 2.10 of the Documentation.

I find it difficult to follow quickly due to the way it is not written with a concise explanation. And I am not really willing to expend the effort to attempt to reverse engineer the possibilities of what he attempting to describe. It appears he is proposing a protocol wherein the seller of for example BTC could escrow the BTC with the buyer such that the buyer risks double the BTC if the buyer doesn't pay the fiat or commodity to the seller. But I can't understand the protocol; for example he makes a statement in the white paper which I don't understand, "Perhaps Bob wishes to purchase bitcoins using cash from Alice".

I will await David to clarify.

Btw, ostensibly he is attempting a very steep learning curve at his age and the level of programming experience he had coming into this. So it is expected that at his age and level of experience, that his articulation would be somewhat difficult to follow, that is unless he is Eric S. Raymond who is a verbal and math genius.

Whats not concise? The protocol was explained from many angles with diagrams as well.

Most crucially, the software exists, works and can be used. Actions speak louder than words. The code speaks for itself.

I think the writepaper could use an update however since its been 2 years and now that its fully coded i can speak from experience in retrograde.

The cash example refers to people who buy bitcoin. Traditionally Bitcoin is bought otc or through escrow. But otc is dangerous they can keep your cash and not send the bitcoins. And an escrow agent could steal funds. Furthermore, an escrow agent cannot truly calidate if deception took place or thr cash never arrived.

So bob wants to buy 100 usd of bitcoin from alice lets say.

So Bob deposits 100 usd in btc (to prevent himself from extorting from alice)
And Alice advances 100 usd in btc for the purchase plus 100 usd deposit

Now Alice is out 200 Bob is out 100 locked into an escrow that each of them has 50% control. They agreed that the time limit is 2 weeks. If this time limit expires they both destroy the escrow resulting in loss for both parties. Since that cant be prevented they must work together.

Now Bob sends 100 in cash via western union. Note this is the first time in history WU can be used trustless without an escrow agent or laws tacitly as a deterrent.

Once Alice gets the 100 she is still -100 because of her deposit and advanced payment. Bob is -200 because his deposit and cash advance.

Now they release escrow since they agree the deal is complete. Bob gets his deposit back and 100 usd in btc and Alice gets her deposit back so now she has 100 usd in cash in exchange for her btc. The sale of btcoins is complete. Both parties are happy and nobody needed a government or third party looming over the deal. And more importantly, at no point could Bob or Alice steal from this deal or try to lie to the other because if they had they both would have lost.

Lke ive said before as well deposits dont always have to be equal to the value. They can be 10% the value since any deposit in this deal would be a net loss for a thief. However make the deposits high is best when dealing with an untrusted party. You deposit thus reflects your level of trust.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: Nxtblg on March 30, 2016, 05:39:59 PM
So bob wants to buy 100 usd of bitcoin from alice lets say.

So Bob deposits 100 usd in btc (to prevent himself from extorting from alice)
And Alice advances 100 usd in btc for the purchase plus 100 usd deposit

Now Alice is out 200 Bob is out 100 locked into an escrow that each of them has 50% control. They agreed that the time limit is 2 weeks. If this time limit expires they both destroy the escrow resulting in loss for both parties. Since that cant be prevented they must work together.

Now Bob sends 100 in cash via western union. Note this is the first time in history WU can be used trustless without an escrow agent or laws tacitly as a deterrent.

Once Alice gets the 100 she is still -100 because of her deposit and advanced payment. Bob is -200 because his deposit and cash advance.

Now they release escrow since they agree the deal is complete. Bob gets his deposit back and 100 usd in btc and Alice gets her deposit back so now she has 100 usd in cash in exchange for her btc. The sale of btcoins is complete. Both parties are happy and nobody needed a government or third party looming over the deal. And more importantly, at no point could Bob or Alice steal from this deal or try to lie to the other because if they had they both would have lost.

Lke ive said before as well deposits dont always have to be equal to the value. They can be 10% the value since any deposit in this deal would be a net loss for a thief. However make the deposits high is best when dealing with an untrusted party. You deposit thus reflects your level of trust.

It certainly is a neat solution to the problem of trust-free exchange. But it does leave open the question, "why would a seller and a buyer agree to making security deposits? What's wrong with eBay's Trust and Safety?"

After mulling this question over, I've got a somewhat gloomy but realistic answer: dark markets. Markets where neither the buyer nor the seller have recourse to the law to assure that the other fulfills the contract.

Interestingly, with the dark-market option you've got a real use case even if it seems silly.

Quote
So tyler wants to buy 100 usd of cocaine from de'tasho lets say.

So tyler deposits 100 usd in btc (to prevent himself from extorting from de'tasho)
And de'tasho advances 100 usd in btc for the purchase plus 100 usd deposit

Now de'tasho is out 200 tyler is out 100 locked into an escrow that each of them has 50% control. They agreed that the time limit for the deal goin' down is 2 weeks. If this time limit expires they both destroy the escrow resulting in loss for both parties. Since that cant be prevented they must work together.

Now tyler sends 100 in cash via western union. Note this is the first time in history WU can be used trustless without an escrow agent or laws tacitly as a deterrent.

Once de'tasho gets the 100 he is still -100 because of his deposit and advanced payment. tyler is -200 because his deposit and cash advance.

Now they release escrow since they agree the deal is complete. tyler gets his deposit back and 100 usd in btc and de'tasho gets his deposit back so now he has 100 usd in cash in exchange for his cocaine. The sale of the happy dust is complete. Both parties are happy and nobody needed a government, third party or a posse of drive-by shooters looming over the deal. And more importantly, at no point could tyler or de'tasho steal from this deal or try to lie to the other because if they had they both would have lost.


There's actually a humanitarian argument to be made for this use case. From a humanist standpoint, mutual escrow is a helluva lot better than a drive-by shooting. The trouble with this specific use case is that inner-city-type drug dealers take a lot of pride in retaliating physically against someone who they feel has cheated them. Up to and including murder, for the hard-core. Getting them to shift to compulsory two-sided escrow would be as difficult as convincing a 19th-century frontier vigilante that the rule of law is in his best interest. He'd be quite resistant to giving up his frontier right to "Hang 'Em High", even if leaving it to the law is in his best interest.

A more promising dark-market option is otherwise-legitimate transactions that have to occur without legal protection because of associated illegalities. Case in point: buying (say) shoes from a black-market stall or pop-up shop run by an illegal immigrant. There's nothing illegal in this transaction in itself, provided the shoes were't stolen, but an illegal immigrant is not someone who's going to call in the cops if cheated - at least, not without a lot of reluctance. Double escrow could work in this clime, tho' you'd have to have some evangelists that were legitimate members of that subculture prior to evangelizing for Bitbay.

-----

But for here, I can't think of any better use case than an altcoin ICO!


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: dzimbeck on March 30, 2016, 07:52:26 PM
So bob wants to buy 100 usd of bitcoin from alice lets say.

So Bob deposits 100 usd in btc (to prevent himself from extorting from alice)
And Alice advances 100 usd in btc for the purchase plus 100 usd deposit

Now Alice is out 200 Bob is out 100 locked into an escrow that each of them has 50% control. They agreed that the time limit is 2 weeks. If this time limit expires they both destroy the escrow resulting in loss for both parties. Since that cant be prevented they must work together.

Now Bob sends 100 in cash via western union. Note this is the first time in history WU can be used trustless without an escrow agent or laws tacitly as a deterrent.

Once Alice gets the 100 she is still -100 because of her deposit and advanced payment. Bob is -200 because his deposit and cash advance.

Now they release escrow since they agree the deal is complete. Bob gets his deposit back and 100 usd in btc and Alice gets her deposit back so now she has 100 usd in cash in exchange for her btc. The sale of btcoins is complete. Both parties are happy and nobody needed a government or third party looming over the deal. And more importantly, at no point could Bob or Alice steal from this deal or try to lie to the other because if they had they both would have lost.

Lke ive said before as well deposits dont always have to be equal to the value. They can be 10% the value since any deposit in this deal would be a net loss for a thief. However make the deposits high is best when dealing with an untrusted party. You deposit thus reflects your level of trust.

It certainly is a neat solution to the problem of trust-free exchange. But it does leave open the question, "why would a seller and a buyer agree to making security deposits? What's wrong with eBay's Trust and Safety?"

After mulling this question over, I've got a somewhat gloomy but realistic answer: dark markets. Markets where neither the buyer nor the seller have recourse to the law to assure that the other fulfills the contract.

Interestingly, with the dark-market option you've got a real use case even if it seems silly.

Quote
So tyler wants to buy 100 usd of cocaine from de'tasho lets say.

So tyler deposits 100 usd in btc (to prevent himself from extorting from de'tasho)
And de'tasho advances 100 usd in btc for the purchase plus 100 usd deposit

Now de'tasho is out 200 tyler is out 100 locked into an escrow that each of them has 50% control. They agreed that the time limit for the deal goin' down is 2 weeks. If this time limit expires they both destroy the escrow resulting in loss for both parties. Since that cant be prevented they must work together.

Now tyler sends 100 in cash via western union. Note this is the first time in history WU can be used trustless without an escrow agent or laws tacitly as a deterrent.

Once de'tasho gets the 100 he is still -100 because of his deposit and advanced payment. tyler is -200 because his deposit and cash advance.

Now they release escrow since they agree the deal is complete. tyler gets his deposit back and 100 usd in btc and de'tasho gets his deposit back so now he has 100 usd in cash in exchange for his cocaine. The sale of the happy dust is complete. Both parties are happy and nobody needed a government, third party or a posse of drive-by shooters looming over the deal. And more importantly, at no point could tyler or de'tasho steal from this deal or try to lie to the other because if they had they both would have lost.


There's actually a humanitarian argument to be made for this use case. From a humanist standpoint, mutual escrow is a helluva lot better than a drive-by shooting. The trouble with this specific use case is that inner-city-type drug dealers take a lot of pride in retaliating physically against someone who they feel has cheated them. Up to and including murder, for the hard-core. Getting them to shift to compulsory two-sided escrow would be as difficult as convincing a 19th-century frontier vigilante that the rule of law is in his best interest. He'd be quite resistant to giving up his frontier right to "Hang 'Em High", even if leaving it to the law is in his best interest.

A more promising dark-market option is otherwise-legitimate transactions that have to occur without legal protection because of associated illegalities. Case in point: buying (say) shoes from a black-market stall or pop-up shop run by an illegal immigrant. There's nothing illegal in this transaction in itself, provided the shoes were't stolen, but an illegal immigrant is not someone who's going to call in the cops if cheated - at least, not without a lot of reluctance. Double escrow could work in this clime, tho' you'd have to have some evangelists that were legitimate members of that subculture prior to evangelizing for Bitbay.

-----

But for here, I can't think of any better use case than an altcoin ICO!

Well there is so many things I could say in response to this.

What you say is true. But consider the fact on E-bay people constantly get empty boxes and still are
forced to pay. Paypal payments get reversed and how can Ebay know who is telling the truth?

They GUESS thats how.

Notice in USA they hold 25% of the worlds prison population, 85% in the prison for victimless crimes
(collecting rainwater, selling weed, not paying taxes, permit violations the list goes on)

So i think there is a major confusion here about what is legal and what is MORAL. Two totally separate
things. I can make the argument that jail is barbaric, disgusting and immoral.

Regardless, you are right. Society will not adopt new ideas so easily and in the case of your criminals
they do seem to prefer violence, it makes them feel important or something.

You have the oxycotin scumbag billionaires who are basically just legalized heroin pushers.
For people who think the line is grey its not, the world is just run by the self righteous.
Im sorry for injecting "idealism" into this but its true.


With that said, lets look at ways double deposit solves the problem of DECEPTION which is societies
biggest problem. NOTE: It only solves the problem of deception if adopted and like you said
human psychology makes this a very low probability since propaganda comes first.


Two parties involved, victim and perpetrator. The victim goes to court and cries that they
were harmed. The perp has a good lawyer and wins. Judges, juries, hell even 1000s of people can
be wrong in a good frame job! I can think of a good frame job that happened in the month of September
*cough* *cough* and more than half the world would accuse the wrong party.

In essence the ONLY people who know the truth behind a crime is
TWO people. The victim and assialant. Nobody else knows.

So why not reduce commerce to that? They make deposits to prevent lying and cheating. Both parties
deposit to avoid extortion. The network itself can raise or lower deposit levels. And someone
who abuses that system will eventually become poor.

Here you switch society upside down. The rich people are no longer the liars and self-righteous.
No the rich people would be the HONEST hard workers. The liars would be poor because they
keep blowing up escrows and losing funds for themselves. Basic math.

There are many use cases besides "Dark markets" where Halo is instantly valuable, maybe in the tune
of billions of dollars. Here are a few:

International Trade and Shipping (no more expensive insurance, deposits cover daily volume, no more
lost shippments, no more tricks)

Telcom (no more finding escrows, making complicated wire routes, finding banks, dealing between countries)

Outsourcing (no more procrastinating workers, lies about credentials, poor performance... all gone thanks to the fear of loss)

Cash for Coins (no more local bitcoins, countries that cant get BTC now CAN and with low fees P2P)

Barter (impovershed countries with no trust can use deposits at kiosks and trade commodities instead of cash)

International Business (countries with bad legal system, opposing laws, can find middle ground do trusted business)

So i think we should realize those industries need this, but they don't know how bad they need it.


When the tree is rotting at the root, you don't clip the leaves you CURE THE ROOT. Even if the people
resist this change, it must happen even if not 100 years from now because things cannot stay broken forever.
If we don't use the best protocols then who will?


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: Nxtblg on March 30, 2016, 09:18:56 PM
Well there is so many things I could say in response to this.

What you say is true. But consider the fact on E-bay people constantly get empty boxes and still are
forced to pay. Paypal payments get reversed and how can Ebay know who is telling the truth?

They GUESS thats how.

Now, we're talking!

But, I can tell you from sad experience that folks who set up marketplaces in competition with eBay have almost always struck out. There was even a team of three Power Sellers who banded together to do so; nothing came of their plan. eBay's network effect is too strong to crack, at least by a grassroots team.

Notice in USA they hold 25% of the worlds prison population, 85% in the prison for victimless crimes
(collecting rainwater, selling weed, not paying taxes, permit violations the list goes on)

So i think there is a major confusion here about what is legal and what is MORAL. Two totally separate
things. I can make the argument that jail is barbaric, disgusting and immoral....

I really should clarify. I wrote my earlier post from the perspective of a "hard-nosed realist" that was looking for viable use cases. To be honest, I didn't know you were more of the idealist type.

There are many use cases besides "Dark markets" where Halo is instantly valuable, maybe in the tune
of billions of dollars. Here are a few:

International Trade and Shipping (no more expensive insurance, deposits cover daily volume, no more
lost shippments, no more tricks)

Telcom (no more finding escrows, making complicated wire routes, finding banks, dealing between countries)

Outsourcing (no more procrastinating workers, lies about credentials, poor performance... all gone thanks to the fear of loss)

Cash for Coins (no more local bitcoins, countries that cant get BTC now CAN and with low fees P2P)

Barter (impovershed countries with no trust can use deposits at kiosks and trade commodities instead of cash)

International Business (countries with bad legal system, opposing laws, can find middle ground do trusted business)

So i think we should realize those industries need this, but they don't know how bad they need it.

There we go. Places where legal protections are iffy or non-existent: these are the target markets for Bitbay and/or Bithalo. But the trouble is, sectors like that naturally breed a low-trust mentality that inculcates suspicion of strangers. The low trust and wariness serves as a substitute for legal protection. That requires an evangelist to have "roots" in one of these communities, else it'll be enormously difficult to break through that suspicion barrier.

When the tree is rotting at the root, you don't clip the leaves you CURE THE ROOT. Even if the people
resist this change, it must happen even if not 100 years from now because things cannot stay broken forever.
If we don't use the best protocols then who will?

Well, a Bithalo-escrowed altcoin ICO would help...


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: dzimbeck on March 30, 2016, 10:32:14 PM
Well there is so many things I could say in response to this.

What you say is true. But consider the fact on E-bay people constantly get empty boxes and still are
forced to pay. Paypal payments get reversed and how can Ebay know who is telling the truth?

They GUESS thats how.

Now, we're talking!

But, I can tell you from sad experience that folks who set up marketplaces in competition with eBay have almost always struck out. There was even a team of three Power Sellers who banded together to do so; nothing came of their plan. eBay's network effect is too strong to crack, at least by a grassroots team.

Notice in USA they hold 25% of the worlds prison population, 85% in the prison for victimless crimes
(collecting rainwater, selling weed, not paying taxes, permit violations the list goes on)

So i think there is a major confusion here about what is legal and what is MORAL. Two totally separate
things. I can make the argument that jail is barbaric, disgusting and immoral....

I really should clarify. I wrote my earlier post from the perspective of a "hard-nosed realist" that was looking for viable use cases. To be honest, I didn't know you were more of the idealist type.

There are many use cases besides "Dark markets" where Halo is instantly valuable, maybe in the tune
of billions of dollars. Here are a few:

International Trade and Shipping (no more expensive insurance, deposits cover daily volume, no more
lost shippments, no more tricks)

Telcom (no more finding escrows, making complicated wire routes, finding banks, dealing between countries)

Outsourcing (no more procrastinating workers, lies about credentials, poor performance... all gone thanks to the fear of loss)

Cash for Coins (no more local bitcoins, countries that cant get BTC now CAN and with low fees P2P)

Barter (impovershed countries with no trust can use deposits at kiosks and trade commodities instead of cash)

International Business (countries with bad legal system, opposing laws, can find middle ground do trusted business)

So i think we should realize those industries need this, but they don't know how bad they need it.

There we go. Places where legal protections are iffy or non-existent: these are the target markets for Bitbay and/or Bithalo. But the trouble is, sectors like that naturally breed a low-trust mentality that inculcates suspicion of strangers. The low trust and wariness serves as a substitute for legal protection. That requires an evangelist to have "roots" in one of these communities, else it'll be enormously difficult to break through that suspicion barrier.

When the tree is rotting at the root, you don't clip the leaves you CURE THE ROOT. Even if the people
resist this change, it must happen even if not 100 years from now because things cannot stay broken forever.
If we don't use the best protocols then who will?

Well, a Bithalo-escrowed altcoin ICO would help...

Man i agree so much on all accounts. Im aware of the reality of the world. Too much. But when i have to be passionate about something money is not the prime motivator. So im an idealist at heart but am completely a realist in my objective knowledge.

I know that 3rd world wont adopt high tech and i know that 1st world will go to whatever is popular.

They dont call them sheeple for nothing! No offense to the sheeple of course, the media has an iron grip on their balls!! In a vice grip. Their minds are dominated by journalism... even fake science.

So can anyone compete with Ebay? No of course not. But things change something will take its place.

What i would like to see is a gateway for Ebay resellers so you can buy through Halo from a person willing to transact on their behalf on Ebay.

But even if that existed its true the masses wont want that. Eventually the masses will get tired of breathing and robots will do that for them too. Its not enough that the tv does your thinking for you. It must eat our food for us and breathe for us. Sad but true.

An ico would be nice but not unless im done with these projects.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: TPTB_need_war on March 30, 2016, 11:17:38 PM
David directed me to the Help Desk at https://bithalo.org where I skimmed through the White paper and the section 2.10 of the Documentation.

I find it difficult to follow quickly due to the way it is not written with a concise explanation. And I am not really willing to expend the effort to attempt to reverse engineer the possibilities of what he attempting to describe. It appears he is proposing a protocol wherein the seller of for example BTC could escrow the BTC with the buyer such that the buyer risks double the BTC if the buyer doesn't pay the fiat or commodity to the seller. But I can't understand the protocol; for example he makes a statement in the white paper which I don't understand, "Perhaps Bob wishes to purchase bitcoins using cash from Alice".

I will await David to clarify.

Btw, ostensibly he is attempting a very steep learning curve at his age and the level of programming experience he had coming into this. So it is expected that at his age and level of experience, that his articulation would be somewhat difficult to follow, that is unless he is Eric S. Raymond who is a verbal and math genius.

Whats not concise? The protocol was explained from many angles with diagrams as well.

Most crucially, the software exists, works and can be used. Actions speak louder than words. The code speaks for itself.

I think the writepaper could use an update however since its been 2 years and now that its fully coded i can speak from experience in retrograderetrospective.

Note the correction above and also the incoherence of the sentence I had quoted. Now I understand what you meant to write was "Perhaps Bob wishes to pay cash to Alice for Alice's bitcoins" because "using cash from Alice" implies Bob is using Alice's money to buy Bitcoins from someone else which lead to think maybe you were designing a 3 party protocol. You may be similar to myself in having a high math IQ but a lower verbal IQ. Your SAT test would have indicated this to you if so.

Your white paper is written as if you are writing your thinking instead of writing for the reader who understands nothing that is already clear in your mind. As a writer you have to take yourself out of your own perspective, which is difficult to do when deep in engineering/conceptual thought. And the editorial review step of writing should catch and fix incoherent sentences that sow confusion for the reader who is trying to form a conceptual map.

The cash example refers to people who buy bitcoin. Traditionally Bitcoin is bought otc or through escrow. But otc is dangerous they can keep your cash and not send the bitcoins. And an escrow agent could steal funds. Furthermore, an escrow agent cannot truly calidate if deception took place or thr cash never arrived.

So bob wants to buy 100 usd of bitcoin from alice lets say.

So Bob deposits 100 usd in btc (to prevent himself from extorting from alice)
And Alice advances 100 usd in btc for the purchase plus 100 usd deposit

Now Alice is out 200 Bob is out 100 locked into an escrow that each of them has 50% control. They agreed that the time limit is 2 weeks. If this time limit expires they both destroy the escrow resulting in loss for both parties. Since that cant be prevented they must work together.

Now Bob sends 100 in cash via western union. Note this is the first time in history WU can be used trustless without an escrow agent or laws tacitly as a deterrent.

Once Alice gets the 100 she is still -100 because of her deposit and advanced payment. Bob is -200 because his deposit and cash advance.

Now they release escrow since they agree the deal is complete. Bob gets his deposit back and 100 usd in btc and Alice gets her deposit back so now she has 100 usd in cash in exchange for her btc. The sale of btcoins is complete. Both parties are happy and nobody needed a government or third party looming over the deal. And more importantly, at no point could Bob or Alice steal from this deal or try to lie to the other because if they had they both would have lost.

Lke ive said before as well deposits dont always have to be equal to the value. They can be 10% the value since any deposit in this deal would be a net loss for a thief. However make the deposits high is best when dealing with an untrusted party. You deposit thus reflects your level of trust.

This is a much superior, concise, and comprehensible explanation.

And the deposit can be increased relative to the size of what is being traded, so that the intermediate step doesn't alter the balance (-of-risk) much, e.g. Bob deposits $1000 and Alice $1100, then on payment Bob has $1100 at risk and Alice $1000.

This indeed is the only way I can see to solve the sort of problem you explained:

Well there is so many things I could say in response to this.

What you say is true. But consider the fact on E-bay people constantly get empty boxes and still are
forced to pay. Paypal payments get reversed and how can Ebay know who is telling the truth?

They GUESS thats how.

However, I still don't understand how this protocol helps you set up eBay auctions decentralized? (perhaps I could figure it out, but easier to let you tell us)

P.S. I am starting to take an interest in you. He or she who solves a serious problem for society with a viable protocol, especially at your age, is bumped up several notches on my radar. I am very curious about your programming talent.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: TPTB_need_war on March 30, 2016, 11:42:57 PM
David I know how to tap the huge market (https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1219023.msg14346466#msg14346466) for your technology. Perhaps you should consider to partner with someone with a proven reputation in both coding and marketing. Your objective realistic idealism is very much similar to mine (https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1409663.msg14360173#msg14360173), but I am just older and perhaps bit more seasoned and pragmatic (because I don't have the years more to waste on the experimentation I already did):

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1417580.msg14368963#msg14368963
https://www.linkedin.com/in/shelby-moore-iii-b31488b0
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1219023.msg14358322#msg14358322

Your passion is a very important attribute necessary for success. This has to be balanced though.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: TPTB_need_war on March 31, 2016, 12:17:28 AM
Unfortunately there is a flaw in David's protocol concept.

The deliverable may be an empty box, but that still doesn't stop the buyer from releasing the BTC to the seller, because at least the buyer gets back $100 of his $200 deposit in that example case.

I remember now I had considered this sort of protocol in the past and dismissed it as fundamentally flawed.

Both can increase the size of the deposit, so that the amount Bob and Alice lose if Alice sends an empty box is much greater than what Bob loses by not releasing the BTC to the seller. So in that sense the protocol can function, but at a very high risk[1] relative to small transaction values.

Btw, the other overriding issue is I think we are moving away from tangible goods, towards digital delivery in exchange for micropayments, so this protocol may be less useful. Who cares if they lose a micropayment. They will know not to deal with that seller again, i.e. decentralized seller reputation held independently by each customer. Disrupting the tangible goods sector of the economy is a non-starter, as Nxtblg has pointed out upthread. Your protocol is pushing for larger deposits and centralized reputation[1] which is the antithesis of decentralization. You are trying to fix a sector of the economy that is dying as we move into the Knowledge/Information/Digital Age.

[1] What if the seller or buyer just flakes out for what ever reason. Seems we are back to long-term reputation of reliability, but is there is no way to measure this that is objective? I.e. it can't be proven which party failed the prior instances of the protocol.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: whale_shark on March 31, 2016, 12:24:10 AM
That's the buyers fault then I would have thought. You don't pull the tags of a shirt without trying it on do you? If you do that's your own fault

So you wouldn't release the funds without checking you got what you paid for

Glad my first investment in altcoins is Bitbay. I think I have found a rough Diamond here!


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: dzimbeck on March 31, 2016, 02:20:10 AM
TPTB_need_war thank you and I appreciate your patience as well. I realize that this is
a very abstract problem and to market it to society is extremely challenging since it
totally changes the paradigm of agreement.

By the way, I want to agree with you. The whitepaper really needs a rewrite and so does
the documentation. The problem is, I'm working alone so to do that and code is hard
as hell.

Imagine that I have to take off my "nerd hat" and put on my "marketing hat"

Explaining things in a simple way that isn't confusing to a consumer is extremely challenging.

To be honest, I'm not skilled enough at that you are right.

The reason is, I love talking to people the way I think and without a filter. (which has
gotten me into trouble when I accidentally type things I don't truly mean... on impulse)


It is something I can do when spending the time on it though. After all Halo is a good brand,
you can put a Halo on a coin somehow making it "honor amongst theives". The symbol is a branding
strategy to be able to co-brand with popular projects that want to work with Halo (like Ethalo)

Despite all that, I can't be a one man army. Having slack has been helpful. Occasionally
volunteers come in and help (like the miraculous UI made by Sunwah in Blackcoin)
(Or Bitcoin42s Alec Hahn who magically appeared and made my sites for free)
so I'm grateful for the occasional assistance. Very much so.

I'm happy to talk about collaborative efforts. Although I forewarn you that I'm dead set on
honoring my word here at Bitbay, Blackcoin etc no matter how many jobs have to be passed up.

The thing I think will set you at ease is that this is not vaporware. We can do a contract
in Bitbay, you can see for yourself it working. The source code is auditable... although if you
want to build from source I change variable names. This is how I was able to prevent cloning and
people who wanted to make dark markets out of this.

Since you asked, I can explain why there is not a flaw with the empty box and i will explain auctions.
But I should add, I limit my time every day on my browser with a plugin. This throttles my internet
and doesn't let me spend more than 10 minutes a day on social media including BCT and I honestly
need to focus on work. I will add you on LinkedIn though we can talk through email etc.

Okay so the empty box:
Bob wants to buy a guitar, he deposits 100 usd deposit 100 usd advanced payment.
Alice wants to sell a guitar, she deposits 100 usd (to prevent empty box and extortion)

When she sends an empty box, Bob will obviously be extremely angry. He will request a refund
and if Alice refuses any sane person would destroy the escrow or cancel the contract (both
will get deposits back)

In no scenario could I imagine Bob giving Alice 100 dollars to save himself 100 dollars. If Bob
does that he honestly deserves to lose that money. Bob is too weak, a complete pussy rewarding
Alice for lying. This cannot be good behavior. In fact it is people like Bob who are why politics
tramples people with propaganda. This whole "benefit of the doubt" attitude where people reward theives
out of kindness or weakness or "turning a blind eye" or "acquiescing" is exactly why society is
upside down in the first place.

What would happen is, Alice sends and empty Bob and if she refuses to work with Bob he will
certainly let the escrow expire. He will lose 200, she will lose 100. (you could have made
her put up a little more)

There IS a reputation system in place that checks the result of transactions and puts it in
a database. So it already reads to blockchain to make sure no contracts blow up.

The "extortion attack" doesn't work so well not only because of the reputation system but because
in order for Alice to WANT to extort it needs to be profitable long term and I guarantee you it
is not. Many more people will blow up Alices money out of extreme anger for her transgressions.

The whole point here is really mathematical probability:
What is more likely? A risky extortion attack that you need to pull off MORE than 50% of the time
to screw people out of money?

OR simply stealing peoples shit on Ebay with ZERO risk of getting caught because nobody can prove
you didn't put the guitar in the box, not even USPTO (put rocks in it, it will weight the same).

In the above case of theft 100% of the time it works. Mt Gox is a good example. I assure you
if Mark Karpeles had to put up deposits to accept wire transactions for BTC then he would have
never in his right mind stolen the funds. (although he claims he was set up but if thats true
why not return the WIRES since those weren't in BTC)

Also the laziness problem or the missing counterparty problem. The good news is, you can give
the contracts file to your wife or friend and they can manage them for you since all accounts are
multisig and there is no way to steal an escrow or an account with 1/2 a key.

Also, there is a time limit the is arranged before the deal. So if you fear that issue make the expiry
a month or two months. Its extremely rare that I communicate with someone who is never around for
two months. This is also why you have the option to supply additional contact info. (spouses and
friends might be a good idea to have for backup options in case you are hospitalized)

I think the above scenario would be more of a learning curve than an inherent flaw ^

By the way, "people going missing" or "being lazy" is a much much much much more serious FLAW in traditional
outsourcing. Becuase I've dealt with it. Dont get me started on how !@$%ed up freelancers and outsourcers
are!!! They procrastinate, they lie about credentials, they take WEEKS to respond.
Using ODESK or FREELANCER for example is a nightmare! They waste weeks, months of your time! Time I would
have gladly paid money to GET BACK. Nothing is more valuable than time, and people who waste it deserve
a default.

This is why I have a template dedicated to EMPLOYMENT because if there was a way to punish people who
waste my time, I would. Also this has been successfully tested with a quick refactor job in BlackHalo
and guess what? The guy who would normally procrastinate on me was forced to send me weekly updates.
Escrow extensions can be automated in that template. We did it manually. When i gave him too many
extensions (because he got lazy after 3 weeks) then I would have been happy to default. The contract
ended and saved me so much time and pain from waiting another X months to hear a response from
yet another lazy contractor!!

As for auctions, its really quite simple. There is TWO auction styles being worked on in Bitbay/Halo


The first is normal auctions.

Bob lists the product and waits for bids. Those bids are signed of course (anything that gets to the market
is signed) and Bob will then sign a message back with the highest bid.

Its in Bobs best interest to post accurate bids. If both parties sign their bid, everyone can check
that the values indeed match. So faking this would be pointless and difficult to do.

Bob accepts the highest bidder, because there is more money in it for him.

IF we see people trolling auctions, we can require them to BURN funds to Bid. For the first version
of auctions, I'm not going to force a burn... simply because its scope creep and I need to finish all
my templates.

So its really simple.

The next method is REVERSE auctions.

Basically a person wants to BUY a product (Bob wants a guitar)... but Bob wants the BEST PRICE!
So, he can again burn funds securing the auction and then let bids come in.

He will want to take the lowest bidder but a higher bidder might offer a nicer guitar! I'm sort of debating
how to sort these offers in my user interface. Do I let Bob take lowest bids that seem favorable?
Or do force Bob to take the lowest bid? No point to the reverse auction if Bob is asked to buy a broken
guitar. So best to probably list all bids as counter-offers. The whole point of the bidding is to simply
alert the MARKET of the current prices accurately.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: Pietpiraat on March 31, 2016, 05:13:53 AM
What is next for BitBay to be done, i can't seem to find it anywhere.
I have readed something that they addes a new marketing team and planning on being added to Polo ?


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: TPTB_need_war on March 31, 2016, 07:17:07 AM
What would happen is, Alice sends and empty Bob and if she refuses to work with Bob he will
certainly let the escrow expire. He will lose 200, she will lose 100. (you could have made
her put up a little more)

There IS a reputation system in place that checks the result of transactions and puts it in
a database. So it already reads to blockchain to make sure no contracts blow up.

The "extortion attack" doesn't work so well not only because of the reputation system but because
in order for Alice to WANT to extort it needs to be profitable long term and I guarantee you it
is not. Many more people will blow up Alices money out of extreme anger for her transgressions.

The whole point here is really mathematical probability:
What is more likely? A risky extortion attack that you need to pull off MORE than 50% of the time
to screw people out of money?

OR simply stealing peoples shit on Ebay with ZERO risk of getting caught because nobody can prove
you didn't put the guitar in the box, not even USPTO (put rocks in it, it will weight the same).

In the above case of theft 100% of the time it works.

Afaik, eBay has a reputation system and anyone not using it to check the reputation of both the seller and those who voted on the seller's reputation, deserves to be defrauded.

People that use eBay understand very well that if they want 100% protection, go buy from Amazon instead. If they buy from eBay, they use human judgements which are actually pretty astute for those who bother to hone that useful life skill.

What can happen with your system is that eBay spends part of the marketing budget to do the empty box scam on 1% of your transactions. What is likely to happen is people will find it is more risky than eBay, because at least on eBay they can make their case to eBay and then eBay has to weigh the facts and make a judgement. eBay will over time be able to statistically determine which users are the liars by doing correlation analysis.

So yeah some people might get pissed off, but that will also make them pissed off at your system. They are much more likely to then choose Amazon next time or vetting the person somehow.

It is good that you have a fighting spirit, but you need to understand that you don't make successful (software) businesses based on introducing strife for the users. Humans prefer things that just work with the least tsuris.

There may be a use case for Bitbay which supercedes what I wrote above. I encourage you to complete it and fulfill your obligations. I am not trashing it. I am just speaking frankly about the potential to replace eBay.

Using ODESK or FREELANCER for example is a nightmare!

I found out about that too. Cheap and Eastern European or Indian programmers don't work out well.

Bob lists the product and waits for bids. Those bids are signed of course (anything that gets to the market
is signed) and Bob will then sign a message back with the highest bid.

Its in Bobs best interest to post accurate bids. If both parties sign their bid, everyone can check
that the values indeed match. So faking this would be pointless and difficult to do.

Bob accepts the highest bidder, because there is more money in it for him.

IF we see people trolling auctions, we can require them to BURN funds to Bid. For the first version
of auctions, I'm not going to force a burn... simply because its scope creep and I need to finish all
my templates.

So its really simple.

But I am asking about how you can be sure the bidders have committed the funds for their bid? I am assuming you have some multi-party commitment to a deposit? But I just don't see how that can work.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: Munti on March 31, 2016, 12:15:01 PM
@Tptb_need_war
I pretty much agree with your analysis on who would find our market useful. There is however one thing you forgot.
Do you remember dotcom? How everyone was trying to make the most important portal to the Internet? No one was at that time able to predict the impact of social media or the income from big data.
I believe that's where we are with markets today. We are all competing to be the next eBay, but most likely that will never happen. If we come with something that can actually threaten eBay, they will adopt it. We may be able to carve out some niches for ourselves,and that may be lucrative enough.  But the big potential imo is in all the possibilities we have not thought of yet. Just like no one imagined Facebook or Netflix in the dotcom days. And it is Based on this that I made BitBay my main investment in crypto. It is the first and,for now, only truly decentralized market project -meaning no middle men, it is scalable, and it will get pegging. The combination of all this should make BitBay the obvious choice for someone that wants to use the tech for new purposes.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: dzimbeck on March 31, 2016, 06:44:40 PM
TPTB, you cant force a commitment of funds unless you overengineer it with deposits for each bid.

So if you read my response notice where I said "Proof of burn"

In other words if we find people backing out of bids, we can force them to burn funds to secure it.

In other words, the auctioner and the auctionee can both do burns and we can even do them based on the size of the contract.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: whale_shark on March 31, 2016, 11:14:52 PM
Still learning all this but with Azure people can develop Bitbay and create new features and add-ons which is only a good thing isnt it? What are the negatives to Azure and is Bitbay planning on joining Azure to let others do this?


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: TPTB_need_war on April 01, 2016, 06:10:39 AM
Assuming the technological issues are correct, one potential use case for Bitpay are the types things that eBay doesn't allow to be sold, or the repudiable payment options that eBay requires sellers to use, are not compatible with the non-repudiable item being sold, e.g. selling gold and silver at very low spreads where the cost of payment fraud can't be absorbed into the profit in the spread.

Of course Bitpay will probably end up another Silk Road and will end up being attacked. But it might be a profitable wild ride for a while.

David as for the technology, why not just use a block chain and store commitments on it. Okay I understand there is a scaling versus decentralization issue. I also understand I have solved it.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: dzimbeck on April 01, 2016, 02:54:30 PM
Assuming the technological issues are correct, one potential use case for Bitpay are the types things that eBay doesn't allow to be sold, or the repudiable payment options that eBay requires sellers to use, are not compatible with the non-repudiable item being sold, e.g. selling gold and silver at very low spreads where the cost of payment fraud can't be absorbed into the profit in the spread.

Of course Bitpay will probably end up another Silk Road and will end up being attacked. But it might be a profitable wild ride for a while.

David as for the technology, why not just use a block chain and store commitments on it. Okay I understand there is a scaling versus decentralization issue. I also understand I have solved it.

I have a moderation key that i can give out to prevent silk road type offers. However if we dont know about the market we cant moderate it.

There is also a barter template in Bitbay especially for gold for silver, corn for wheat, farm coops etc.

So the comparison to ebay is a bit narrow. This is more like Ebay, Reverse auctions, Freelancer, Craigslist, Localbitcoins, Smart Contracts, and Barter all rolled into one.

There are more reasons to not store cotracts on the blockchain besides bloat. Mostly they are peer to peer. Why store them on the blockchain? Using burn would require 100s if not 1000 outputs. Its tremendous bloat and a waste of fees.

Bloat can be reduced with a lightning network but for markets they are done in Bitmessage. And then two communication protocol options are used. Imap with pgp and Bitmessage with pgp.

You should research Bitmessage to see their protocol.

The double deposit of course goes on the blockchain but the nitty gritty non financial details doesnt belong on the blockchain.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: TPTB_need_war on April 01, 2016, 02:58:21 PM
You should research Bitmessage to see their protocol.

I was in their forum discussing how to fix it when it was overloaded with spam. It wasn't only you who was helping them fix it.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: cryptohunter on April 02, 2016, 03:18:10 PM
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1423568.0

someone else is called bitbay too? or is this part of the same project?


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: Munti on April 02, 2016, 03:29:42 PM
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1423568.0

someone else is called bitbay too? or is this part of the same project?

That's a polish exchange. Has nothing to do with the coin BitBay


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: pugman on April 02, 2016, 07:51:01 PM
I'm so glad I did some research and found Bitbay a few months back!
I think it's going to be a big mover in 2016


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: dzimbeck on April 02, 2016, 08:05:19 PM
You should research Bitmessage to see their protocol.

I was in their forum discussing how to fix it when it was overloaded with spam. It wasn't only you who was helping them fix it.

Yes my mistake there were several others. I sent Aetheros some pms, posted on their forums and reddit. They knew about the issue. Basically there was a node mutating messages because of how they left parts of it volatile. There was several other bugs. Those got fixed. There is a few more still but Bitmessage is going in the right direction


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: TPTB_need_war on April 03, 2016, 06:46:07 AM
You should research Bitmessage to see their protocol.

I was in their forum discussing how to fix it when it was overloaded with spam. It wasn't only you who was helping them fix it.

Yes my mistake there were several others. I sent Aetheros some pms, posted on their forums and reddit. They knew about the issue. Basically there was a node mutating messages because of how they left parts of it volatile. There was several other bugs. Those got fixed. There is a few more still but Bitmessage is going in the right direction

Thank you for helping to fix Bitmessage. I was able to communicate again apparently due to your efforts.

Sorry I don't have free time right now to dig into all the design specifics of Bitbay auctions. I still have some questions and doubts, but I simply lack the free time.

I believe you are sincere and hopefully you are also talented.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: Peachy on April 03, 2016, 04:37:18 PM
Seems like the method is the same (or quite similar) to the NashX proposal:

http://nashx.com/About (http://nashx.com/About)

http://nashx.com/Images/hownashxworks.png


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: dzimbeck on April 03, 2016, 06:05:14 PM
Seems like the method is the same (or quite similar) to the NashX proposal:

http://nashx.com/About (http://nashx.com/About)

http://nashx.com/Images/hownashxworks.png


Yes its similar but i didnt know about Nash when i started.

Also this is basically Nash in software form. And in my system there is guarantor contracts and the deposits are completely adjustable and there is a reputation system. So its much more involved.

But the theory is the same as Nash, Ultimatum game etc etc

In other words, its game theory. And why not, when applied to the real world it results in the only contract in the world not backed up with a gun.


Title: Re: Bitbay Announce First Decentralized Market Release (out of Beta)
Post by: pugman on April 05, 2016, 05:13:00 PM
Is this end of this month?