Bitcoin Forum
May 25, 2024, 04:09:29 AM *
News: Latest Bitcoin Core release: 27.0 [Torrent]
 
  Home Help Search Login Register More  
  Show Posts
Pages: « 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 [17] 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 »
321  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Decentrally mined currency has failed and can't possibly be rescued on: December 01, 2014, 04:35:02 AM
Anyone who has their transactions "banned" by pools will simply pay enticing enough fees to have other miners include their transactions. OP seems to ignore financial incentives when speaking about banning Bitcoin. If there is money to be made, people will route around any regulations. This has been proven over and over again in the history of the world.
A few questions.

If people have to pay high fees to get their transactions confirmed, why would they use Bitcoin rather than some competing form of money transfer?

If the the hashrate of miners including blacklisted transactions shrinks to insignificance vs. those who adhere to the blacklist, surely it doesn't matter how high the fees are? Those transactions could take weeks/months/years to confirm, depending on what percentage of the overall hashrate the adhering farms represent.

Actually they would never confirm, because the 50% hashrate could blacklist the minority hashrate. This hints at franky1's logic error.
50% of whom? The mining businesses that don't want higher fees?

The mining business that doesn't want to be raided by the authorities and have their computers and ASICs farms confiscated.

As long as they are paying their taxes and bills, why would any authority do this?

For not complying with an AML (Anti-Money Laundering) regulation requiring them to blacklist transactions and mining pools which don't require identity for all transactions, e.g. all transactions must originate from Peter Thiel's Coinbase, BitPay, Paypal, Facebook, etc.. where the user has provided the necessary KYC (Know Your Customer) documentation. (Don't you remember all these ignorant fools who are proclaiming Bitcoin doesn't need fast on chain transactions, because off chain services will provide it!)

Are you not aware that Civil Asset Forfeiture is already running amok in the USA.

My gosh it is only 13 years since 9/11 and all the Patriot Act crap which has spread to every country under USA pressure ("you are either with us or against us", POTUS Bush), and you guys are still clueless at the modus operandi for how the powers-that-be are taking control of everything via the terrorism false flag paradigm.

322  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Decentrally mined currency has failed and can't possibly be rescued on: December 01, 2014, 04:26:52 AM
Anyone who has their transactions "banned" by pools will simply pay enticing enough fees to have other miners include their transactions. OP seems to ignore financial incentives when speaking about banning Bitcoin. If there is money to be made, people will route around any regulations. This has been proven over and over again in the history of the world.
A few questions.

If people have to pay high fees to get their transactions confirmed, why would they use Bitcoin rather than some competing form of money transfer?

If the the hashrate of miners including blacklisted transactions shrinks to insignificance vs. those who adhere to the blacklist, surely it doesn't matter how high the fees are? Those transactions could take weeks/months/years to confirm, depending on what percentage of the overall hashrate the adhering farms represent.

Actually they would never confirm, because the 50% hashrate could blacklist the minority hashrate. This hints at franky1's logic error.
50% of whom? The mining businesses that don't want higher fees?

The mining business that doesn't want to be raided by the authorities and have their computers and ASICs farms confiscated.

I think you, franky1 et al fail to appreciate that an ASIC farm is a fixed position investment, with a lot of fixed capital infrastructure. You don't move these without being seen nor without losing some of your capital (downtime, loss of favorable electricity connection, favorable rent lease, etc).

It is as if you guys are living in some Bugs Bunny fantasy world and have never actually run a business.
323  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Decentrally mined currency has failed and can't possibly be rescued on: December 01, 2014, 04:01:29 AM

Because over the past year, I've run every possible design through my mind, studied everything I could find from others, and have finally come to this conclusion.


Could you list all the designs that ran through your mind?

I never wrote it all down. There are so many cases and thoughts that have transpired. If you are calling out the hubris of "every possible", then granted I could have and probably did miss some possibility.

Could you narrow the scope of the question? Do you mean anonymity strategies? Do you mean network structure? Do you mean factors that impact marketing (e.g. mining for everyone without an ASIC)? And if you are not knowledgeable about how to narrow the scope, then you probably wouldn't understand a very detailed answer any way.

The question is very broad and I don't have time (energy) to write a long essay.

I did for example conclude that amongst anonymity strategies, only one-time ring signatures appears to be viable for on chain anonymity. Up until recently I thought a variant of CoinJoin could work because most people don't care about their anonymity and the person who cares could run their own pool, but I was never able to conjure a design for a viable way to prevent the non-reputation (i.e. randomly selected) pools from being Sybil attacked. The natural paradigm is concentration of pools as I have explained upthread[1] and also because reputation is the one viable way to deal with Sybil attacks. And much credit goes to smooth because he corrected some of my wrong assumptions about one-time ring signatures.

[1]
In that post I cited:

https://blog.ethereum.org/2014/07/11/toward-a-12-second-block-time/

Which links to:

https://blog.ethereum.org/2014/06/19/mining/

Quote from: Vitalik Buterin
If, in the current 100 PH/s network, you are running an ASIC with 1 TH/s, then every block you have a chance of 1 in 100000 of receiving the block reward of 25 BTC, but the other 99999 times out of 100000 you get exactly nothing. Given that network hashpower is currently doubling every three months (for simplicity, say 12500 blocks), that gives you a probability of 15.9% that your ASIC will ever generate a reward, and a 84.1% chance that the ASIC’s total lifetime earnings will be exactly nothing.
324  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Decentrally mined currency has failed and can't possibly be rescued on: December 01, 2014, 03:47:39 AM
Anyone who has their transactions "banned" by pools will simply pay enticing enough fees to have other miners include their transactions. OP seems to ignore financial incentives when speaking about banning Bitcoin. If there is money to be made, people will route around any regulations. This has been proven over and over again in the history of the world.
A few questions.

If people have to pay high fees to get their transactions confirmed, why would they use Bitcoin rather than some competing form of money transfer?

If the the hashrate of miners including blacklisted transactions shrinks to insignificance vs. those who adhere to the blacklist, surely it doesn't matter how high the fees are? Those transactions could take weeks/months/years to confirm, depending on what percentage of the overall hashrate the adhering farms represent.

Actually they would never confirm, because the 50% hashrate could blacklist the minority hashrate. This hints at franky1's logic error.
325  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Decentrally mined currency has failed and can't possibly be rescued on: December 01, 2014, 02:36:43 AM
I had forgotten to get back to this post.

unun you actually bring up very good arguments.

i hate to bring in the ultra-noob idea since i know very little and i'm sure this has already been thought of multiple times but is it not possible for a theoretical coin to track the entire array of PoW and dole out coins to every single participant? such as a decentralized system of pool mining built into the infrastructure instead of a winner take all?

each period of time the amount of work done by each participant running a mining client is recorded, added up and divided by the total to receive their share to their designated address.

One challenge is the bandwidth and propagation of all these mining shares to every node on the network. Different nodes have different connection qualities.

The reason we don't run a separate smaller pipe from the water district to every house, is because multifurcating networks are more efficient, e.g. a large main pipe has less friction and needing to readjust the line to one house doesn't require digging up the entire city.

There are other subtle design considerations, but I don't think I need to go into all that.


anonymity i know nothing about. but i feel like some kind of 'good-enough' system that could be built to be scaled over time to deal with evolving threats could be built as well.

The problem is that once your anonymity is broken and you are in jail, exterminated, or heavily fined, you don't really have a chance to evolve.

Anonymity has to be strong enough from the start to meet your goals. It can't evolve later. Remember everything is recorded, so the weakest anonymity you used is still around forever, while cracking algorithms and computer processing power is always increasing.

a thing of it is, there is a huge theoretical incentive to build such a platform. if you build the actual bitcoin 2.0 you will become a multimillionaire or billionaire. very few other jobs can offer that kind of salary so i'm sure some super smart ppl will be behind something at some point if the demand for it is present.

on that final point alone, i think something will be thought of. there's just too much money in making solid money to not be innovated on by someone.

That is a huge motivating factor, but it just isn't easy to create something real at that level. Not only technical and implementation effort, but also marketing effort because the long-term exposes the true market capability whereas pump and dump can obscure it for a short time. It is much easier to create a pump and dump scam.
326  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Decentrally mined currency has failed and can't possibly be rescued on: December 01, 2014, 02:08:54 AM
OP now your just a comedy event.

so lets try again on your new worry

Politics is for those who are trying manipulate the minds of others.

You didn't like that quote of your irrationality, because it impacts your reputation amongst the people who follow you blindly.

Politicians are dishonest or at least disingenuous. You know damn well I never stated a new worry. What I am explaining is what I summarized in the OP.

I don't give a rats arse about politics nor my reputation. I am interested in being correct, so I will prosper. I will lay out the red carpet for you to win the infatuation of the majority, and be incorrect with them.

if miners are putting in millions of shares thinking they will get paid. but a pool owner doesnt submit a winning result to the pool. the miners will not get paid. after all... the funds have to come from somewhere.

and when people dont get paid.. they move

Well my little grasshopper, you aren't too strong in the logic department are you?

You don't see your logic error?

I let you ponder it for a few minutes before I embarrass you.
327  Other / Politics & Society / Re: Is a Madmax outcome coming before 2020? Thus do we need anonymity? on: December 01, 2014, 01:44:58 AM
...This exhibits a lack of rationality.



Some of you think the tide is turning and the masses all over the world are waking up to the abuses of the USA government and other manifestations of the powers-that-be.

The greatest mistake anyone can make is to assume the majority will ever do the right thing. They never do. The majority is always wrong. If that were not the case, then evolution would stop functioning.

Any one who plans for the future based on hope in the system and the majority, is a sheeple cow and will prosper when society does and suffer when society does.

We westerners have experienced an amazingly long period of prosperity in the world and especially in the Western nations. This has been propped up by central banks which never allow any debt defaults to correct excesses and misallocations. Thus we've amassed a huge debt bubble that is going to pop with horrific implications on society-at-large.

The powers-that-be are well aware of how to manipulate this "awakening". As always, they turn idealism into fury and collective outcomes which empower their designs. They infiltrated the Black Panters during the Vietnam protest era. They helped to fuel the "free sex, free drugs" destruction of the boomers and western society. They were instrumental in the Bolshevik Revolution, etc.

They will unleash an economic implosion contagion, social unrest, violence, and upheaval. You will be so busy trying to survive all the crap that is hitting you in your daily life, that you won't have any time to sit down and produce anything. All your pontifications about you can do this and that, will fly out the window when you are too busy trying to avoid the daily violence and secure your food.

The growing hatred of the USA and the angst that will be spread, is fuel for the fire of burning the nation-state system to the ground, after which the weary burned out fury will welcome the one world governance savior to restore order.

The masses love chaos when they've been cooped up too long in a well controlled order. Let them fight for a while and grow weary then they will beg for order again and to be managed like the compliant sheeple they really are.

Because the majority are not leaders. The majority are sheeple and I think that includes you reader.

328  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Decentrally mined currency has failed and can't possibly be rescued on: December 01, 2014, 01:19:37 AM
I have stopped reading after a while.
I just have one question:
If governments can regulate everything, why is https://thepiratebay.se/ still there?

I had already answered you before you wrote that, but you stopped reading so that means your laziness caused you to miss an important detail as follows.

You are making the same category error in your comparison as Holliday did (erroneously equating two orthogonal categories). Please refer to my reply to him, wherein I pointed out that the government can not centralize actions (e.g. growing marijuana) people can do independently.

Whereas, money is inherently a centralized concept, because we all need a ledger that we can agree is the record of who paid what to whom. Thus individuals can't ignore government regulations acting independently with their Bitcoin if the authorities can find the mining pools (and thus the government can regulate the mining pools, i.e. the servers control which transactions are put on the block chain).

The only way you can stop the government from having this power, is to hide the mining pools so the government can't find them (the servers).

It doesn't amaze me that n00bs can repeat the same category error over and over again, completely failing to establish the logic firmly in their mind. This is the difference between a very high caliber computer programmer and normal folks. To be a very good computer programmer, you need to have very well developed logic skills.

So don't you see? That piratebay is a paradigm that doesn't depend on a centralized resource, thus it is "whackamole" in that the authorities can whack one instance but other instances can pop up any where in the world spontaneously.

Whereas, crypto-currency depends on the the consensus of 50% of the hashrate. Thus if the majority of the users follow the edicts of the government and transact through the government approved mining pools, then the spontaneous instances of decentralized mining pools are impotent.

You don't understand that the government is expert at social engineering, otherwise it wouldn't exist. Social engineering is the definition of a politician.

Remember money is always a consensus paradigm. Don't forget that crucial distinction!

http://armstrongeconomics.com/2014/11/30/swiss-vote-on-gold-anti-immigration-today/

Quote from: Armstrong
However, owning gold will not solve that problem nationally if the rest of the nations do not respect gold as a medium of exchange in a world converging on electronic money. Whatever the medium of exchange, it must be universally accepted. The problem is gold is far from a constant value and its value is predicated upon its universal acceptance. If other countries are moving to electronic money, gold may serve no role in official international settlements. You cannot look at your personal preference as an individual and impose that upon the rest of the world.



satoshi was just 1 man

How do you know that? Did you meet him?

This exhibits a lack of rationality.



Some of you think the tide is turning and the masses all over the world are waking up to the abuses of the USA government and other manifestations of the powers-that-be.

The greatest mistake anyone can make is to assume the majority will ever do the right thing. They never do. The majority is always wrong. If that were not the case, then evolution would stop functioning.

Any one who plans for the future based on hope in the system and the majority, is a sheeple cow and will prosper when society does and suffer when society does.

We westerners have experienced an amazingly long period of prosperity in the world and especially in the Western nations. This has been propped up by central banks which never allow any debt defaults to correct excesses and misallocations. Thus we've amassed a huge debt bubble that is going to pop with horrific implications on society-at-large.

The powers-that-be are well aware of how to manipulate this "awakening". As always, they turn idealism into fury and collective outcomes which empower their designs. They infiltrated the Black Panters during the Vietnam protest era. They helped to fuel the "free sex, free drugs" destruction of the boomers and western society. They were instrumental in the Bolshevik Revolution, etc.

They will unleash an economic implosion contagion, social unrest, violence, and upheaval. You will be so busy trying to survive all the crap that is hitting you in your daily life, that you won't have any time to sit down and produce anything. All your pontifications about you can do this and that, will fly out the window when you are too busy trying to avoid the daily violence and secure your food.

The growing hatred of the USA and the angst that will be spread, is fuel for the fire of burning the nation-state system to the ground, after which the weary burned out fury will welcome the one world governance savior to restore order.

The masses love chaos when they've been cooped up too long in a well controlled order. Let them fight for a while and grow weary then they will beg for order again and to be managed like the compliant sheeple they really are.

You are safe within the herd until the herd stampedes over a cliff or stampedes over you.

Because the majority are not leaders. The majority are sheeple and I think that includes you reader.
329  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Decentrally mined currency has failed and can't possibly be rescued on: December 01, 2014, 12:13:04 AM
...and also people can use different types of pool software such as p2pool etc which offer different features...

The centralization of pools is a problem until it is solved, apparently p2pool is not the solution, and this sort of hand-waving and saying "it'll be ok, we'll figure this out" strikes me as naive, and fundamentally unwise.

forgive my ignorance, why is p2pool not going to work?


because he is mis understanding the multiple users connected to a mining pool, centralisation (which i and the OP mentioned) vs a single mining farm centralising the hash power.

The traditional pools could all cease to exist today and Bitcoin would be just fine. There would probably be a period (a few days to a week) of slower than average blocks as unprepared hash rate providers set up p2pool and solo mining (becoming actual miners in the process). Any competent hash rate provider should have his mining software already set up to automatically default to p2pool and ultimately to solo mining should the traditional pools fail for whatever reason. Mining software makes this extremely easy.


I mentioned in the OP that P2Pool can not be resistant to the share withholding attack:

...

Some of have argued that there is P2Pool, but how many times do I have to repeat that P2Pool can't be impervious to a share withholding attack[1], thus it can't be a sustainable paradigm.

...

[1]https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=339902.msg3719385#msg3719385
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=789978.msg9115612#msg9115612

See the linked posts from the [1] footnote for more explanation. In a share withholding attack, the adversary sends shares to the pool so he gets paid, but withholds any share that is a block solution, thus the pool never gets any revenue from the adversary's shares. Thus the adversary steals income from the other members of the pool. The government can entirely destroy P2Pool if ever it becomes widely used.

Share withholding can in theory be used to destroy all pools in Bitcoin now, because Bitcoin did not implement Meni Rosenfeld's oblivious shares fix[2] (which he proposed I think in 2011). Even if Bitcoin or other altcoin implements Meni's oblivious shares fix, P2Pool can not use it, while server based pools can. The reason is because the secret (so no miner knows which shares are block solutions) in the oblivious shares fix can't be hidden because in P2Pool there is no pool server to hide it with.

So franky1 et al, this should serve as an example to you that in software engineering, the details matter a lot and can totally change the conclusion. So please check your hubris and confidence at the door before you enter this discussion, because I have done a lot of research and thinking about the details that matter. I appreciate our discussion because I want to determine if I am incorrect. And I will surely admit it if I am. But I also hope you approach this discussion with a similar open mind, because it is also likely that you are incorrect.

Additionally P2Pool requires that every miner run a full node, which given the size of the block chain (and even savvy forum members complaining about the download time) for Monero and Bitcoin, that pretty much rules out mining by all and certainly rules out instantaneous mining and gratification (which is one of my main goals for an altcoin and please don't tell it is not possible and botnets and all that crap because you don't know the details of what I have up my sleeve). Remember my special talent is not that I am not just a programmer, but also a capable marketer (I had 1 million users of my CoolPage.com software in 2001, when the internet had 1/10 the users it does now). Also most ASICs are not capable of doing the logic of a full node[3].

Additionally P2Pool would make it unlikely to achieve fast block periods[4], because the propagation delay would be quite variable given so many different cases of peer connection qualities.

[2] http://arxiv.org/pdf/1112.4980.pdf#page=29
[3] https://blog.ethereum.org/2014/06/19/mining/
[4] https://blog.ethereum.org/2014/07/11/toward-a-12-second-block-time/
330  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Decentrally mined currency has failed and can't possibly be rescued on: November 30, 2014, 11:41:30 PM

the problem has always been and will always be how do we get there? Talk doesn't get it done.

This.  Imagine if Satoshi went around ranting and writing essays instead of actually coding the protocol.

The OP purports to be tech savvy, and I'm not here to challenge that...but if he is, wouldn't his time and energy be better spent building stuff (or at least having a focused technical discussion with a specific goal), rather than whatever it is we seem to be doing here?

I was in a good mood last nite (perhaps it was the date I had Smiley), and I was thinking I was really impressed how all the guys here were respectful and stayed on topic ("what a great group of guys" was the thought). I even felt guilty for being so forceful with some of my admonishments, and need to keep an open mind to the perspective of others.

Any way, the reason for discussing is that marketing surveys should precede development. Also given my variable health (usually not good and maybe not good enough anymore to code really large projects), it is good for me to share as maybe there are others who will develop something, in case I am unable to.

Also I guess I like debate, since I am good at it and given my crappy health I am not as consistently good at coding as I was before I got ill. I guess I want to feel as I am productive still, and frustrated with my recent handicap (which I am diligently trying to cure by every non-chemo means I can find). Also if I will not be cured and will die sooner, the writing is what I can leave to humanity, perhaps to help (maybe not though if I am incorrect). Another is according to Armstrong's 8.6 year cycles, I have been on a downwave since May, 2006 when I  was infected with HPV which lead to the condition I have now. And thus I am due for an upturn wave Jan 2015, so perhaps I am just finding a way to occupy my mind until my productive wave turns up again. I did not release any new software since 2006.

Also I am (perhaps too) focused on Armstrong's model and its predictions for a renewed global contagion starting Oct 2015. And his warnings about the global police state. I really need to be careful that I don't become a zealot and become blinded to other possible outcomes. However I also don't want to be complacent. So I am not sure yet if the opposing attitude here in this thread is correct, or if Armstrong's paranoia is more correct. I am trying to determine this.
331  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Decentrally mined currency has failed and can't possibly be rescued on: November 30, 2014, 09:31:42 AM
One countries over regulation becomes another countries opportunity... eventually the heavy handed entities will realize that this is truly a global economy that can survive nicely with or without them... that's when they begin to backpedal (as NY is currently in the process of).
BTW, thank you Canada for listening and letting the technology take it's course before submitting knee jerk regs  ... they will reap the early rewards.
The OP does not recognize international free market competition.

I did mention that point-of-view in the OP, but I don't agree with it, because of this:

http://blog.mpettis.com/2014/11/china-europe-and-optimal-currency-zones/#comment-96652

Quote from: me
...

Quote from: Suvy
Who are they gonna be open to? The Chinese? The Koreans? They hate both of them.

Japan, China, and Korea are  likely to resort (with the Senkaku a.k.a. Diaoyu islands  as one pretext) to the old pattern of mutual war to make the unavoidable economic implosion to politically palatable.

The global implications of a collapsing periphery (i.e. all nations except the reserve currency USA) is that all capital is being  driven into the dollar, and this dollar hegemony means the USA laws will effectively govern the world, because for example if your country doesn't cooperate with FATCA and fledgling plans for internet licensing then the USA will blacklist your country or company. Essentially the same outcome of rising protectionism that worsened the Great Depression and lead to WW2 is repeating.

We are headed into the typical scorched earth paradigm (e.g. World War 2) that always throughout recorded human history exhibits at the times of peaking [global] socialism [and total global debt]. If we make it through to the other side, the balance of power will have shifted from West to East[1] and from multi-national corporations to individuals (by 2032), but the hell we have to go through before we get there is daunting.

[1] http://armstrongeconomics.com/2014/08/05/the-shift-from-west-to-the-east/
     http://armstrongeconomics.com/693-2/2012-2/we-are-on-the-verge-of-a-very-profound-systemic-global-meltdown/
     http://armstrongeconomics.com/2014/08/19/crisis-collapse-in-world-capital-flows/

Any country that doesn't adhere will find the CIA funded coup and/or USA military bombing as need be.

I watched the Philippines (where I live) cave in to USA pressure and is about to end their banking secrecy law, implemented AML laws, etc.. The Philippines had to cozy up to the USA, because of China threatening in the Spratly Islands. This of course is by design, the USA and China are cooperating as pretend enemies to help set up the new world order. Or let's put it this way, Rockefeller is playing chess with China and China doesn't realize how it is being used-- combination of the two, because some elites in China understand and want the cooperation on establishing the new world order. Other grunts e.g. in the military have to be lead by their over eager patriotic nose or greed.
332  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Decentrally mined currency has failed and can't possibly be rescued on: November 30, 2014, 08:28:21 AM
blackbird307, I am not concerned about the Bitcoin price. I mention in passing that I had made some correct expectations on the declines in price only to establish a bit of my credibility as to be able to foresee trends.

The applicable theme of this thread is to about whether Bitcoin can succeed very well, while simultaneously defeating our ideals about monetary freedom.

What is strange is that I think we all share similar ideals about freedom and the political issues facing us Libertarians and anarchists. But for some reason, I don't seem to resonate with those who have a very lackadaisical attitude about threats to those ideals pertaining to Bitcoin.

I think this is because most people are followers, not leaders. They are accustomed to being led to a solution, not beating the path to a solution. I have always been a leader (sorry if it is bragging, but I was a leader on sports teams, a leader in my software projects, etc). Also I think most people don't want to assume the worst outcome, because they would feel so helpless and depressed. So that realization would always be avoided by their subconscious mind.

I really hate when people don't want to get things done. That is why usually it is best if I don't talk (and that is why I shut down the AnonyMint identity and I will not push this discussion too long-- also because I was suffering from bad health condition and needed to waste less time talking and more time focused on my health and actual work).

I am here to share my ideas, to perhaps raise awareness, to see what I can learn from others, and then collect all that experience and move on away from "Those who can't build, talk".


Edit: I am headed out to gym, dinner, maybe a date. Please feel free to express yourselves. I wanted to test my logic against the best of input. So thus, thank you to everyone who commented. I really appreciate it. You all helped me refine my thought process and logic.
333  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Decentrally mined currency has failed and can't possibly be rescued on: November 30, 2014, 08:20:57 AM
God I hope I'm not arguing with John Nash.

To which one of me do you refer?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VDVQbhOg3V4

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Forbes_Nash,_Jr.#Mental_illness
334  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Decentrally mined currency has failed and can't possibly be rescued on: November 30, 2014, 08:05:30 AM
I personally talked to someone from the FBI
and they admitted they can't really track coins
on the blockchain.

Hahaha. Glad to hear that you were escorted to the inner annals of the NSA (and GHCQ) and met the top crackers in the agency.

As if the NSA tells the FBI what their capabilities are.  Roll Eyes Much less low-level FBI agents willing to talk to the public.

Watch cartoons much?

http://www.activistpost.com/2014/11/fbi-report-accidentally-exposes.html

Missing the point.

The Internet itself (yeah the same one the NSA is spying on all the time),
is already spreading freedom memes more successfully than government
propoganda memes, at least in my opinion.  

Despite desperate attempts, "they" can't even control what people
think or say anymore,

Agreed! In fact, Zbigniew Brzezinski has said "Populist Awakening" is possibly derailing the move towards a new world order controlled by the technocrats and elite.

However, you would be very naive to think that the global elite didn't anticipate this and didn't already have a plan of action. Brzezinski has hinted at their plan (which is obvious to me). Key on this phrase, "it is easier to kill a million". Do you not see ISIS rising funded by the USA leveraging the idealism of religious fundamentalism (and the push back against feminism and state castration of the Western males)? Do you not see the Ukraine war instigated by the CIA leveraging the dreams of the Ukrainians to join the Western quality of life they see on TV and internet? Refer to the Denver airport murals for their plan. The elite always inform you of their plan, so they have the moral high ground, because you were warned and didn't take corrective action.

I have long ago realized that the elite planned to turn those 130 million glossy eyed developing youth into a war rage machine, and then after the wars, by 2032 they will use their exhaustion and idealism to achieve a "social harmony" with a new world order peace as depicted in the Denver murals.


and you're somehow worried that
Bitcoin mining has failed?

Yes Bitcoin has market dominance yet no block chain anonymity. Yes this is a major hurdle that even Monero can't climb. In short, we are complacent and going to be fucked by our ("Bitcoin is good enough; it can be improved if need be; it is better than sex") myopia.

In the long run, the trend of humanity is toward greater freedom.
We are far more free, educated, enlightened, aware, connected,
and empowered as individuals today than we were 100 years ago.

Oh I guess you are one of those younger glossy eyed idealists?

Note I am not a Mathusian and I actually agree with that premise. But there is a lot of hurt to come between now and there.

You want a "high latency TOR" or whatever?  Fine.  Write up some
specs on it, or start a dedicated thread on THAT.  No offense, but
you're all over the place with doom and gloom proclamations and
I don't see the point.

Yes I want action. Trying to argue my case on that.
335  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Decentrally mined currency has failed and can't possibly be rescued on: November 30, 2014, 07:17:07 AM
BTC is an experiment - whether a token can have value without being backed by anything and it has been a success. As such I dont think it has failed.

If what it says in teh first post id true it merely means that there are some flaws which can be corrected.

Agreed.

When I wrote the thread title I was sleepy and got myself conflated over the issue of centralization of mining pools and anonymity of mining pools. When I awoke, I realized we could at least get the situation we have now with mining pools (somewhat centralized) and improve the anonymity of the mining pools to deal with the threat I am talking about.

Also there are still significant problems in the way ring-sigs are implemented in the current crop of Cryptonote coins. I am talking forking changes needed.

Also the issue of transaction speed is a major one, because Bitcoin is not unlinkable and untraceable, so if you can't do transactions faster than Bitcoin, you are going to have a difficult time moving the market away from Bitcoin (and the plan to use off chain Paypal, Coinbase, etc to make transactions fast). The powers-that-be are sitting in an enviable market position. Note I assume Bitcoin's protocol can't be improved to add ring-sigs. I think there is too much vested inertia that would prevent that.
336  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Decentrally mined currency has failed and can't possibly be rescued on: November 30, 2014, 07:12:16 AM
You start with one false technological premise above, then proclaim that pools can create a better mix-net (and I know you don't realize that is the only possible solution to remain hidden) without even comprehending how a mix-net amongst a few pools would be trivially easy to unmask. For a mix-net to work, you need a lot of varied users of the internet involved, meaning you need to create the high-latency improved Tor I have called for. This is the Dunning-Kruger effect (sorry not wanting to ad hominen, but factually this is exactly Dunning-Kruger).

Again, we're engaging in hypotheticals. Bitcoin isn't the only protocol that wants a better privacy. All I'm saying is that TOR is pretty good and most of the sites that have been shut down were just sloppy. Where do you think the governments get their hackers? They get people with little motivation to assist them, usually through coercion. While I'm not making the Libertarian argument that govts screw up everything, I go back to my point that people tend to resist ridiculous laws.

I don't know enough tech to assess your "technologically plausible solution" but I will say that there are plenty of people, if not governments, that will be interested in such pursuits. I also agree with franky1 that individuals have the power to resist and demand due process in the light of day. Bullies should never be tolerated, especially in positions of authority.

I agree with:

  • There is much demand for anonymous networks, thus many have an incentive to create and improve them.
  • Government can not beat the hackers in ingenuity.

Our weakness is our own myopia and hubris ("Bitcoin is better than sex") ignoring our weak points and just expecting "someone" will always provide a solution and not too late.

Worse myopia is franky1 not willing to admit Bitcoin's block chain can't be untraceable and unlinkable in the current version of the protocol.

337  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Decentrally mined currency has failed and can't possibly be rescued on: November 30, 2014, 06:25:36 AM
Someone wrote me in a PM that Bitcoin was too amateurish at launch to be a product of the NSA working group (or other taskforce created by some powerful who want to drive control over electronic currency the government). I replied as follows:

The NSA would of course be astute enough to give the presentation the necessary amateurish character.

And I emphatically agree the NSA was not involved in Cryptonote. Why would they? The necessary egg has already hatched.

Bitcoin is perfectly matched to co-opting the transition to electronic currency. The whitepaper was perfectly written to turn the gold bugs into drooling fanboys.

I use "NSA" as a catch all term for anything developed covertly. I agree more likely some working group funded directly by some umbrella of the globalists, than the NSA precisely (as you say there is a professional, structured culture there that wouldn't be a good fit to Bazaar-style open source entrepreneurial effort).

If some technical idiots banksters wanted to fund something like that, they would not have some structured process on code quality.

Nick Szabo wrote what Bitcoin became before it did. It is possible that someone put 2 + 2 together.

I agree with you that the possibility that the powers-that-be are just opportunists and at best might have just been expecting electronic currency to come and been trying to figure out how to get there, and were handed a black swan gift from a small group they did not create.


You don't need to be fully anonymous, just anonymous enough so that your privacy is protected from majority of others. If someone spend lots of time and resource to social engineering, you would be found eventually, but doing so is very time consuming and costly. Unless you have become the enemy of the state, there is just not enough human resource to social engineer everyone

This is a typical, idealistic, drooling Bitcoin fanboy myopia ("there are too many of us, they can't track us all"). I mean I don't say it that way to ridicule you. Not at all. I am just saying this is blinded to the point I made.

Try reading what I wrote about regulating mining pools and how that is not akin to "whackamole". They only need to track the mining pools. From there, they can require any transaction that doesn't have identification attached to it (i.e. isn't originated from Coinbase, Paypal, Bitpay, Facebook, or any other Peter Thiel corporation, do you see the plan Wink) to be blacklisted by the mining pools.

When I said 18 months ago that Tor wasn't anonymous, everyone ignored me. Now we see I was correct and 100s of hidden services have been seized and research says 81% of Tor users can be unmasked.

And now when I say what will happen to regulation of mining and even cite that the trend is underway, you all still ignoring me.

Ignorance is bliss. How did you enjoy ignoring my warnings that Bitcoin would drop to $350? Are you going to hold for $200?
338  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Decentrally mined currency has failed and can't possibly be rescued on: November 30, 2014, 06:08:47 AM
an IP is just an IP.
just because you think Tor or proxies are the only way to change/mask/borrow an IP. is again nothing to do with the bitcoin protocol. but more to do with human choice and human knowledge.

there are many many other ways to separate yourself so your real life info is not linked to bitcoin transactions. this is not a fault of bitcoin. this is again human choice

Yes there are other ways to obtain an IP that is untraceable to your identity such as an unregistered prepaid USB dongle, connecting through an unregistered WiFi connection, even using a botnet to get throw away IP addresses.

But mining pools need to be at a stable IP address so none of those options above apply.

Also you did not address the point I made about Bitcoin's protocol can't provide untraceability and unlinkability.

The relevant analogy is you are the Philosopher's stone who can make gold with alchemy. Although it might be possible, it isn't practical nor realizable.

I do agree with the underlying point of your thesis, which is that the more the government pushes, the more we will push back.  So they would be wise not to regulate mining too soon. Wait and do it when they are really ready to take control so we don't have enough time to push back. Given your "don't worry" Philosopher's stone attitude, if they are wise and don't alert us, then we won't be able to implement fast enough once they go into rapid fire action around say 2017 or so.
339  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Decentrally mined currency has failed and can't possibly be rescued on: November 30, 2014, 05:46:07 AM
I personally talked to someone from the FBI
and they admitted they can't really track coins
on the blockchain.

Hahaha. Glad to hear that you were escorted to the inner annals of the NSA (and GHCQ) and met the top crackers in the agency.

As if the NSA tells the FBI what their capabilities are.  Roll Eyes Much less low-level FBI agents willing to talk to the public.

Watch cartoons much?

http://www.activistpost.com/2014/11/fbi-report-accidentally-exposes.html
340  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Decentrally mined currency has failed and can't possibly be rescued on: November 30, 2014, 05:30:35 AM
franky1, please read my posts more carefully. I have made some of the same points you made.

You underestimate (the time lag to implementation and critical importance) however the fact that there is no high-latency mix-net in existence, thus IP anonymity is impossible at this time. Apparently you lack technological detail in your thinking.

Also Bitcoin doesn't have on chain untraceability and unlinkability, and CoinJoin can't provide it for Bitcoin (I explained why upthread). So sorry, the Bitcoin protocol is broken w.r.t. to resisting government regulation of mining pools. Monero is closer to being not broken at least w.r.t. to on chain anonymity, but still does not have all the technological aspects implemented.
Pages: « 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 [17] 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 »
Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.19 | SMF © 2006-2009, Simple Machines Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!