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2121  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Speculation (Altcoins) / Re: [XMR] Monero Speculation on: April 25, 2016, 06:18:07 AM
Segregated Witness is just another way to centralize mining. I will explain that in the future when I am ready.

... but that is a small price to pay in order to increase the blocksize from 1 MB to an effective 1.6 MB accomplish

  • Malleability Fixes
  • Linear scaling of sighash operations
  • Signing of input values
  • Increased security for multisig via pay-to-script-hash (P2SH)
  • Script versioning
  • Reducing UTXO growth
  • Compact fraud proofs
Cool

ftfy

The technically-challenged will conflate features with don't require Segregated Witness with an argument for why we need Segregated Witness.

Segwit is an elegant way for Bitcoin to gain those benefits.  I never said segwit was the only way, but it's good enough and it's happening.

Other coins (like Monero) enjoyed second/late mover advantages by being designed for those features from the beginning.
2122  Economy / Speculation / Re: GBTC Bitcoin Investment Trust Observer on: April 25, 2016, 02:49:38 AM

The real ETF, COIN, is gonna open the floodgates to trillions of dollars.

Now that Shanghai is making gold and silver markets in yuan, backed by actual physical transactions, I'd like to see the SFE create COIN-like vehicles for BTC exposure (only with less absurdly byzantine regs and obviously self-serving delays).

When it takes a Spider Woman years to simply reuse GLD's template, the Deep Capture is beyond Jump You Fuckers territory and well into the realm of Up Against The Wall, Assholes.
2123  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: [neㄘcash, ᨇcash, net⚷eys, or viᖚes?] Name AnonyMint's vapor coin? on: April 25, 2016, 02:07:12 AM
https://github.com/shelby3/

Don't worry, I will make sure you eat all you words. Be ready.

Quote
Current streak 0 days
Last contributed 5 months ago

Shelby is on the march; the universe trembles.   Roll Eyes
2124  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Speculation (Altcoins) / Re: [XMR] Monero Speculation on: April 25, 2016, 01:11:20 AM
Segregated Witness is just another way to centralize mining. I will explain that in the future when I am ready.

... but that is a small price to pay in order to increase the blocksize from 1 MB to an effective 1.6 MB accomplish

  • Malleability Fixes
  • Linear scaling of sighash operations
  • Signing of input values
  • Increased security for multisig via pay-to-script-hash (P2SH)
  • Script versioning
  • Reducing UTXO growth
  • Compact fraud proofs
Cool

Fixed it for you.

Gotta love the anti-segwit All Star team of Crazy Uncle Shelby, Frap.doc, and Jorge Stolfi.

It's like you guys come up with this FUD after enjoying too many Pan-Galactic Gargle Blasters at Mos Eisley.   Grin
2125  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Announcements (Altcoins) / Re: [ANN] IPO of MaidSafe:  Entering the Future of the Decentralized Internet on: April 25, 2016, 12:33:15 AM
maid is always just about ready.

Maid is just really looking ill.

Maid is just about ready....
























2126  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: [DASH] Dash - Building the IoM | Dash Nation Progress Thread on: April 24, 2016, 06:49:56 AM
Enough of the try-hard DashSpam overpromoting please!
Dude, I'm just getting started!

If you don't like it, iCEBREAKER, you're more than welcome to ignore me and the thread. I won't bother you that way.

Ah yes, there are the fangs.  I knew your passive-aggressive happy talk and mindless marketing burbling was a facade.

What is the Dash roadmap again?  Evolution, or this convoluted/confusing new thing with managers to manage managers?

Wait, what is Dash?  Is it anything to do with privacy, or was that goal abandoned along with the Darkcoin brand?

Sorry to deny your ignore request, but I can't remain silent about the fraud inherent in an "accidentally" instamined coin with emission that varies according to the whims of the developer.

Quote
Asked about Dash, Andresen states:

“I like the 21-million bitcoin limit. I think it makes sense for there to be a limited, predictable supply of money.

The supply of Dash is many things, but "limited" and "predictable" are not among them!   Cheesy

If you don't like that, you're more than welcome to ignore me.
2127  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Announcements (Altcoins) / Re: [ANN][DASH] Dash (dash.org) | First Self-Funding Self-Governing Crypto Currency on: April 24, 2016, 05:47:13 AM
The new way is radically simple, the network hires managers, then managers hire employees. You guys will negotiate pay with the managers, then you're delegating much of the day-to-day operations to the project management team

Oops.

Roadmap off the rails.


I have to admit, I'm a bit confused now.  What is DASH?

The hazards of centralized Dash governance's arbitrary and random approach to development have come up before.

The sudden rebrand and pivot from Darkcoin's privacy to Dash's high tps showed everyone how things work in the Evan's Gate cult.

The High Priest receives visions, and the followers rejoice.

Dash is whatever Duffield does.  No more, no less.

IIRC that's why vertoe left the project's dev team in disgust.

NXT/JL777 unicorn/blue-sky/holy-grail scam-projects display the same bait-and-switch pattern of lofty goals being set and used for price pumps, only to be abandoned for some new shiny thing Because Reasons.

Dash investors should be asking if/when the latest Layer 2 scaling tech will be integrated.

Without segwit, Lightning, and sidechains Dash is going to be obsolete long before Evolution is done.
2128  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: The impact of bad crypto (DASH, SDC, etc). How much does math matter? on: April 24, 2016, 04:49:51 AM
Ladies & Gentlemen, I present to you the Toknormal Memorial DashHole Ignorance Hall of Fame.   Cheesy

Gold is a public blockchain

Cryptography has never been a significant part of cryptocurrency - even though it may share the first few letters.

2129  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: [neㄘcash, ᨇcash, net⚷eys, or viᖚes?] Name AnonyMint's vapor coin? on: April 24, 2016, 03:41:09 AM
The only sure way to gain respect in the Bitcoin community is to contribute code.

Why would I want respect from the community of a coin with a broken design that I aim for my project to supercede  Huh  (note no one is excluded from leaving the broken design and joining the winner)

iCEBREAKER, just admit you can't understand what I wrote at the linked research.

Good to see iCEBREAKER is still going to need some proof from me. I love the competitiveness.

Sorry when I build up Monero because I state facts that are true about it, it doesn't mean anything has changed in terms of my plans. Hell will freeze over before I will ever write a line of code for Monero[1]. No disrespect to those who created Monero, they will be welcome to join the winner.

(can you tell I am getting healthy now, lol)

[1] I am not going to get involved in any C++ source code bases, so no bitcoind and no Monero. I know C++ since I wrote CoolPage (million user app) in it, but been there, done that, never again. More importantly, I want to change the world, so I am not going to get involved with designs that can't possible scale to 1 million transactions per second. That would be a waste of my legacy. And I am not going to get involved with communities that are off in their little corner of the internet and haven't attracted superstar non-anonymous programmers. I want to see LinkedIn accounts and career history plus major accomplishments. Gmaxwell and Adam Back don't count, because they are number theoretic/cryptography nerds. They are not systems engineers (which was obvious in my technical debate with gmaxwell regarding the indexing of streaming audio formats) and certainly not savvy marketers for the large scale adoption we need.

If you want respect, demonstrate you competence by contributing code.  It's not complicated, no matter how much you resent the requirement.

I understand type theory.  My formal education included computer science at the highest levels.  And I can google the rest.

OTOH you don't understand how to earn respect in the FOSS community, so you are doomed to fail.
2130  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: The impact of bad crypto (DASH, SDC, etc). How much does math matter? on: April 24, 2016, 02:46:17 AM
The elephant in the room is monetary properties, not technical ones. It's very simple, for tier 1 monetary assets:

Good crypto = Public Blockchains
Bad Crypto = Obscrued Blockchains

For higher order tiers (backed money, e.g. Bitcoin CT), obscured blockchains are acceptable.

So you should therefore be discussing the merits of Good/Bad crypto within the domain of Public Blockchains explicitly or Good/Bad crypto within the domain of Obscured Blockchains explicitly since they are distinct monetary domains and obscured blockchains do not have any native (unbacked) monetary properties in the first place - even if it is "good crypto".

You are still singing this tune, eh?

For those just tuning in, you should know that this guy is responsible for the brilliant statement of

"Cryptography has never been a significant part of cryptocurrency - even though it may share the first few letters. "

This occurred during a very heated debate in what I hoped we could consider "classic" DASH vs XMR threads, which were quite literally 1 year ago.

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1001642.msg10921597#msg10921597

Which was politely responded to by gmaxwell

Cryptography has never been a significant part of cryptocurrency - even though it may share the first few letters. It works on a system of digital signatures.
It would seem that you actually do not understand what cryptography is in the modern sense.

A fundamental nature of information is that it wants to be freely copied everywhere to everyone. That any bit is equal and indistinguishable from any other bit of the same value and that any bit is eventually known to all who care.  Cryptography is all that technology by which we hope to confine and constrain the nature of information, to put up fences and direct it to our exclusive purposes, against all attacks and in defiance of the seemingly (and perhaps actually) impossible.  Digital signatures are cryptography by any modern definition and utilize the same tools and techniques (for example, a DSA signature is a linear equation encrypted with an additively homorphic encryption), and suffer from most of the same challenges as the message encryption systems to which you seem to be incorrectly defining cryptography as equivalent.  Moreover, the use of digital signatures isn't the only (or even most relevant) aspect of cryptography in cryptocurrencies-- e.g. the prevention of double spending of otherwise perfectly copyable and indistinguishable information in a decentralized system is a cryptographic problem which we address using cryptographic tools, and-- like all other practical cryptography-- achieve far less than perfect confidence in our solution. As are more modest ends like interacting with strangers but not being subject to resource exhaustion from them.

Far more so than other sub-fields of engineering, cryptographic systems are doing something which is fundamentally at odds with nature and share an incredible fragility and subtly as a result (and perhaps all are failures, we have no proof otherwise).

A failure to understand and respect these considerations has resulted in a lot of harmful garbage and dysfunctional software.


And then by andytoshi

Can you (or Tok) point to a part of a cryptocurrency which isn't cryptography?

the dev team, the website, any part of the wallet not doing a cryptographic function, the buyers, the masternode operators, the network transport, whatever isn't going into a cryptographic function.

This thread is moving pretty quickly (ten pages of mudslinging in half as many hours!) so I'm not sure you'll see this, but there's an important misunderstanding here. You're right that the human beings aren't cryptographic (e.g. the development team, market participants, etc) --- though it's important to observe that this makes them very unsuited to cryptographic functionality. gmaxwell had an elegant description of cryptography as "technology by which we hope to confine and constrain the nature of information" despite information respecting no ownership, borders or morality. He described this as "inherently subtle and fragile", which it is, but this indifference to political and social pressure also make it efficient (human trust is expensive to build and maintain!) and robust against a lot of political and social pressures that human systems are not. This robustness is the cypherpunk motivation for bringing cryptography into everyday life: anything we have the technology to do cryptographically rather than socially ought to be, since social systems can change quickly and unjustly. Nowhere is this more true than finance, so cryptocurrency is a perfect environment for this kind of thing. So cryptocurrencies try to eliminate human decision points wherever possible, and where not they try to set things up so others can't override each others' decisions (hence the value implied by buzzwords like "decentralization" and "censorship resistance" and "public verifiability").

I'm not entirely clear on what masternodes do these days, but I infer that their actions affect users' privacy, i.e. they are "confining and constraining" information. This is a cryptographic function too. Human decisions may factor into their behaviour, but they are still performing a cryptographic function; human involvement does not change this, only changes the failure modes.

All this to say that basically the entirety of cryptocurrency really is cryptography. Even many of the human parts. The network transport is part of the cryptosystem: it needs to be designed to prevent modification of data in transport, authentication of data even when endpoints are anonymous and spoofable, etc. A wallet is part of the cryptosystem: it's responsible for creating verification keys ("scriptPubKeys" in Bitcoin, which are usually abbreviated to addresses) whose corresponding private keys are controlled by the correct parties to the correct extent, and for correctly and securely storing these keys. Wallets are decoupled from the main cryptocurrency cryptosystem, and in particular are not part of the hard part --- consensus code --- but they are certainly cryptographic and are subject to the same sort of subtle missteps as other cryptosystems. (For example, the oft-cited BIP32 "bug" where a party in possession of a public key and chaincode can derive the secret key from a non-hardened child secret key; it would not be hard to come up with a plausible-sounding system which "unintentionally" exposed secret data through this mechanism.)

I'll repeat my above statement: basically the entirety of cryptocurrency really is cryptography. This is important. It's why things are so subtle, why complexity is dangerous, and why changing even trivial-seeming things can have drastic and hard-to-analyze consequences. This is where "a lot of harmful garbage and dysfunctional software" comes from. It's the default for poorly-thought-out systems. And in cryptography, "poorly thought out" means anything less than expert cryptographers spending large amounts of time and effort designing things to be both correct and clearly correct. (Given how few experts there are in the cryptocurrency space, I could tell you that almost all of it is shit just by the pigeonhole principle Smiley.)

This is not a cheap standard to hold a system to even if its designers want to; and falsely claiming that something is not cryptographic is an easy way to excuse not wanting to. But such claims do not change reality.

The encryption of data through cryptography is the foundation of cryptocurrencies.

This is simply false.



At the end of the day, reader, whomever you are, you are obviously free to do whatever you wish and listen to whomever. Just know who (and what) you're getting in bed with.

I believe toknormal is intentionally being disingenuous by pretending to not understand that zero-knowledge proofs and homomorphic functions are long-established and well-tested forms of good crypto.

It is typical for DashHoles like tok to attempt bamboozling noobs with FUD about how "zomg if a coin's blockchain is 'Obscrued' (sic) how do U NO there are only X number of coins?"

Dash: The privacy coin for those not educated sufficiently to understand ZKPs.

If tok wanted to understand good crypto rather than merely FUD against Monero, he would read and understand this:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zero-knowledge_proof

Nobody should listen to tok's ham-fisted gainsaying and dissembling.  Given the humiliating epic spanking he got from gmax and andytoshi, I'm surprised he's not too embarrassed to continue making a fool of himself here.  But then again he's probably trying to protect his bags of DarkDashDuffCoin, and may even be paid for his promotional/propaganda/browbeating efforts.
2131  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: [DASH] Dash - Building the IoM | Dash Nation Progress Thread on: April 24, 2016, 02:27:18 AM
Good morning everyone. Cheers to you and yours!

As I've mentioned before, in order to become the Internet of Money, we have to start to get out from under Bitcoin's shadow. This will not be easy, but a road map is in place to achieve this.

In the short term, however, we take baby steps. The first one is Shakepay, based out of Montreal, Canada, integrating Dash to its platform. It's currently in beta testing, and will allow Dash to be spent anywhere VISA is accepted.

https://dashtalk.org/threads/shake-labs-inc-are-integrating-dash.8648/
http://blog.shakepay.co/2016/introducing-shake-alpha/

Evan Duffield has expanded on the staggering possibilities of the Dash Sentinel system:

https://www.rebelmouse.com/dashnation/evan-duffield-explains-the-power-of-sentinel-1749718779.html

It will be a very interesting Dash Roundtable episode tomorrow. Don't miss it!

To progress, optimism and decentralized technology,

Tao (Dash Nation Campaign Founder)

No need for links this time, my buddy posted them all over the page  Wink

Are you being paid to post for this "Dash Nation Campaign?"

I ask because of what happened on bitco.in (too much DashSpam resulted in mod concern; the thread died once sponsored posts stopped).

Quote

Enough of the try-hard DashSpam overpromoting please!
2132  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: [neㄘcash, ᨇcash, net⚷eys, or viᖚes?] Name AnonyMint's vapor coin? on: April 24, 2016, 01:40:01 AM
Research level insight first published on Rust’s forum by myself:

https://users.rust-lang.org/t/high-order-function-with-type-parameter/3112/30

(Don't know if anyone else made this point in the prior art, I presume probably yes)

I doubt Bitcoin core devs can do the above, because programming language typing is not their area of specialization (especially the number theorists/cryptographers). We have different talents and specializations, so we need to learn to respect each other.

The only sure way to gain respect in the Bitcoin community is to contribute code.

Find some bug or create a new feature in Bitcoin (or Monero) and make a pull request.

Otherwise you're just another forum clown and a crypto gadfly.  Not that there's anything wrong with that!  Tongue

Here's my shovel-ready project for you: find a way to make p2pool use a XCN-style miniblockchain so as to reduce the overhead that comes with running a second full node for the "sharechain" p2pool overlay network (and hence be suitable for Cryptonote PoW).

https://www.reddit.com/r/Monero/comments/4emz61/wondering_how_to_make_a_p2p_mining_pool/d227ptc

Quote from: smooth
It is similar to weak blocks (lower difficulty target) but the chain is completely distinct.

It does not exist for Monero but it would be a nice little project to create one.

The main reason people don't seem to go for it is higher overhead. You have to run a full node, and you have to run what is essentially a second full node for the sharechain. With traditional stratum miners you just run a tiny mining program and have tiny bandwidth usage.

The second reason, on Bitcoin in particular, is somewhat chicken-and-egg. Since not enough people use p2pool, it doesn't get blocks very often (takes days currently) and then miners using it get unhappy with the variance.

I think p2pool is reasonably popular on some alts.

There's also an opening for someone to fill the late warptangent's shoes and assume the role of RingCT implementation.
2133  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: ToominCoin aka "Bitcoin_Classic" #R3KT on: April 23, 2016, 01:00:46 PM
The global average does not make any sense. You need only 7000 enterprise level 1Gbps full nodes and mining nodes to keep the system decentralized, and rest of the slow internet user can just use SPV nodes. And you can already do it today. In 5 years, those full nodes can be upgraded to 10Gbps
You are the one who isn't making sense. I have no idea why ICEBREAKER even lets you spread nonsense here. People who run nodes don't really have an incentive (aside from businesses and miners?) to spend even more money on them. Even if we disregard the cost in advanced countries, exactly how do you plan that node operators in third world countries to upgrade to 1 Gbps (not to mention 10 Gbps)? Oh right, they don't matter for you (IIRC you mentioned the network being okay with 100 nodes; I could be mistaken).

I let johnyj spread nonsense because that creates a teachable moment.

For example, his nonsensical assertion about the network only needing "7000 enterprise level 1Gbps full nodes and mining nodes to keep the system decentralized" provies an ideal opportunity for educating him about the role DIVERSITY plays in a DIVERSE/diffuse/defensible/resilient (AKA "decentralized") network.

Thanks to his nonsense, we now have the chance to point out that limiting Bitcoin to 7000 nodes exclusively in data centers undermines the DIVERSITY of its network (and thus its interesting antifragile property).

The Visa-killing 1000tps-on-Layer-One thing johnyj wants isn't Bitcoin.  Bitcoin lives in diverse niches, deep in the jungles of Asia and swamps of Florida; it cannot be shut down by a few phones calls to some (uninvested/unintersted) NETOPS guys at a few dozen COLO facilities.

What johnyj wants is something I call CoinbaseCoin.  CoinbaseCoin is what we'd get if we prematurely (IE prior to post-fiat Cryptopia) restrict Bitcoin to data centers, ignoring the engineering requirement it be above the law.

When Bitcoin has accomplished its primary mission of disrupting central banking and ensuring Chancellors may no longer consider bailouts for TBTF banks, then we may relegate most full nodes to data centers.

But until we usher in the Golden Age of Satoshi, full nodes must be kept in places where the long arm of the BIS cannot easily reach.


Here we go!  Gavin is Officially supporting CoinbaseCoin.   Roll Eyes

https://www.cryptocoinsnews.com/bitcoin-exchanges-seriously-considering-funding-competitor-gavin-andresen/

Quote
Asked about Dash, Andresen states:

“I like the 21-million bitcoin limit. I think it makes sense for there to be a limited, predictable supply of money.
2134  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Announcements (Altcoins) / Re: [ANN] Nxt :: descendant of Bitcoin on: April 23, 2016, 12:19:34 PM
NXT whale Marc De Mesel says good bye and thanks for all the scamming:

https://twitter.com/marcdemesel/status/720662018248859649

"NXT CRUMBLING"

"Scamming"? He wrote about Nxt, not about you and your Hashfast scam.

lol
Touche.

Paying Shareholders with more n more worthless Shares of new undeveloped stupid Stuff was the beginning of the End imo.

777
Milk it till its dead.

Time to repeat it with Waves huh ?

Attacking me is just shooting the messenger and won't change what Marc De Mesel said about "NXT crumbling."

Before they ran out of money thanks to lawsuits, Hashfast actually made a very good chip and shipped 1000s of miners.

In contrast, NXT has never made anything good or useful.

JL777MilkIt is not a good asset.
2135  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: Why the darkcoin/dash instamine matters on: April 23, 2016, 08:28:06 AM
I'd just sum it up as: The dash instamine matters because it leads to a corrupt and centralized governance.

Except that it didn't and you can't prove otherwise. You can't even define what's supposed to be "corrupt" about it.

our M.O.: Vague empty statements and outrageous conclusions. Never seen anything different. Can't get more dishonest than that.

Vertoe already proved Dash (then Darkcoin) is corrupt.  As a Dash core dev, vertoe would know better than anyone.

There is nothing vague about the specific conclusion that Dash is an instamined scamcoin.  I agree that Duffield's Golden Donkey HYIP and bad crypto are "outrageous."
2136  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: [DASH] Dash - Building the IoM | Dash Nation Progress Thread on: April 23, 2016, 05:14:58 AM
Now I don't have to post my informative links anymore

Good.  Thank you for not spamming (anymore).   Wink
2137  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Bitcoin's Great Schism - A Compendium on: April 23, 2016, 02:48:47 AM
+

6/19/14
Bitcoin and Voting Power
http://hackingdistributed.com/2014/06/19/bitcoin-and-voting-power/

4/7/16
Bitcoin Hard Forks May Become Safer With User Voting
https://bitcoinmagazine.com/articles/bitcoin-hard-forks-may-become-safer-with-user-voting-1460040031

4/12/16
Peter Todd Worried About Those Willing to ‘Fork Bitcoin at All Costs’
https://bitcoinmagazine.com/articles/peter-todd-worried-about-those-willing-to-fork-bitcoin-at-all-costs-1460475488

4/15/16
Bitcoin Core 0.12.1 Released, Major Step Forward for Scalability
https://bitcoinmagazine.com/articles/bitcoin-core-released-major-step-forward-for-scalability-1460762378

4/18/16
Supporters of 2 MB Bitcoin Blocks Unable to Convince Miners to Hard Fork in Beijing Meeting
https://bitcoinmagazine.com/articles/supporters-of-mb-bitcoin-blocks-unable-to-convince-miners-to-hard-fork-in-beijing-meeting-1461004264
2138  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: Talk about MaidSafe coin on: April 23, 2016, 01:37:43 AM
What do you think about it? The price is currently rising, over 300% in the last month and Safecoin hasnt been released yet.

It's being pumped, sell all you have now before the dumping begins, or else you might be the guy holding the bag.

That's good advice.

If 10 years of fruitless delays (despite taking in IPO $$$$) doesn't demonstrate the incompetence of Maid's devs, nothing will.

When they realize their "double charging ISP" (or triple-charging if you also use VPS) model is intrinsically flawed, expect Maid to pivot towards whatever shiny new thing is being hyped at the moment (probably smart contracts).
2139  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Speculation (Altcoins) / Re: [XMR] Monero Speculation on: April 23, 2016, 12:34:42 AM
The 1 MB blocksize was added to Bitcoin in 2010 as an anti spam "temporary" fix. Virtually every other coin has copied Bitcoin on this and inherited the problem.

That's half true.  1MB also serves as a sanity check to prevent blocks with sigops construed so as to require outrageous processing times.

That's why BIP109 includes sigop and sighash limits, which are an unwelcome source of additional technical debt and magic-number-based cruft.

Bitcoin has a fixed emission with no tail-end after the main body of subsidies end, so it cannot use dynamic market-based Monero-style block sizing heuristics (unless we raise the 21e6 coin limit, which is simply out of the question).
2140  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Speculation (Altcoins) / Re: [XMR] Monero Speculation on: April 23, 2016, 12:12:34 AM
If Bitcoin had allowed the blocksize to grow back in 2012 - 2013, the Chinese ASIC manufacturer's would have been forced to sell their ASICs for export rather than operate them themselves locally and this would have prevented the concentration of Bitcoin mining in China.

This is just not true for numerous reasons.  You're basically saying we needed to spam blocks with bogus transactions for years on end to prevent an ASIC empire from growing in China.  If a larger block size existed allowing people to do things like this, people would have implemented something like a hard coded min transaction fee or just lowered block size to fight against it.  ASICs in China isn't a big problem because it's just a symptom of everything on earth being manufactured in China.  This will inevitably cease to exist through either tariffs or war.

The Sinophobic Yellow Peril nonsense isn't supposed to be true, it's supposed to be an indictment of the ostensibly horrible job Core is doing.

The other untrue part of his post was a regurgitated talking point about 1MB "stagnating."

The "Ode to 1MB Stagnation" song playing on AM's tiny violin get funnier the more obviously at odds to reality it becomes.

https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/7910

*STAGNATION INTENSIFIES*

 Tongue
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