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8481  Bitcoin / Press / Re: 2013-09-10 lfb.org - The “Domestic Terrorist” You Can Call a Hero on: September 11, 2013, 06:28:05 PM
one day he will write about Satoshi with the same fondness altho i doubt he will be fortunate enough to meet him on some terrace.
8482  Bitcoin / Press / Re: 2013-09-10 Techcrunch Disrupt 2013 - The Bitcoin Revolution Panel (Video) on: September 11, 2013, 06:15:59 PM
Good discussion. There's another panel scheduled on 9/16/13 with the same moderator:

Quote
This Panel includes:

Moderator: Kim-Mai Culter, Journalist, Tech Crunch

Brian Armstrong, CEO, Coinbase

Paige Freeman, VP of Sales, Bitpay

Jared Kenna, CEO, Tradehill

Stefan Thomas, CTO for Opencoin and Founder of We Use Coins

This panel is hosted in collaboration with General Assembly and made possible by our sponsor, Getty Images

http://www.thebolditalic.com/events/6406-tech-panel-bitcoin-and-the-future-of-digital-currency

Note the sponsor. Should be interesting.

how big is Getty Images?
8483  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Elizabeth T. Ploshay for Bitcoin Foundation board on: September 11, 2013, 04:14:29 PM
Lovely nice peaceful people.
lol, yep. It's a regular diplomats brunch here.
Oh well, haters gona hate. non-haters gona build the future.
The ignorant attacks over hamsters, Jews, etc. are very encouraging. Attacks like this are the final bastions of those with no ideas and not enough knowledge to participate in a real process. These sorts of things can be ignored because they represent nothing but an inability to understand the complexity of being a board member.  


This is what I mean.  Nobody can explain why they support her.  They either repeat the Motherhood statements or divert attention to referencing the idiot posts.  The fact that people posted an offensive post doesn't say anything about why someone should or should not vote for her.  I don't think is especially bad or wrong and I don't "hate" her, I just don't see why she would be picked once you compare the qualifications and statements of all the candidates.  Since nobody can really articulate that it makes me suspicious given some the weird things that go on at that Foundation.


Ploshay:  "As the Manager of Communications for Bitcoin Magazine, I first learned about Bitcoin back in January of this year. "

this is what concerns me most.  

she's obviously not only young physically but also young via her history in Bitcoin.  it took me 2 mo just to understand the basic principles of the protocol and probably another year to more better understand Bitcoin as well as work with it.  i'm still learning about Bitcoin.  but that doesn't mean she isn't faster than i am and doesn't understand Bitcoin as well as i do.  i just doubt it.

i'd never heard of Elizabeth prior to these elections and am surprised she's gotten so far.  she's definitely put together a nice website and i think that has helped her greatly.

guys like Platzer are who motivate me.  he's been around for a while and is actively spearheading an active community's use of Bitcoin.  he runs his own business using BTC and probably played a big role in getting Germany to accept Bitcoin for private use as a currency.  i also buy into the fact that the BF needs a more international representation.  it doesn't make a lot of sense to have all US participants in what is a global project as well as the fact that the US gov't has the most to gain from suppressing Bitcoin.  he also participates here on the Forum.  i think of the Forum as one large thinktank where most of the fundamental news and debates about Bitcoin are located.  if you're not actively debating or participating here you don't fully appreciate what's going on.  

if you can't debate with the ppl here how can you debate with the ppl on the Hill?
8484  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Elizabeth T. Ploshay for Bitcoin Foundation board on: September 11, 2013, 03:52:00 AM
It is amazing how many experts we have on what Elizabeth thinks. Especially impressive is how much they know about a person they have never met, or even heard of a few weeks ago.  Roll Eyes
 


I am listening to the candidates now.  Anyone can hear for themselves that she is the weakest candidate and never really says anything other than repeating a bunch of motherhood statements.  There are several good candidates.  Nobody can really explain why they would choose her except to repeat these vague statements.

I would choose from these candidates:

◾Ben Davenport
◾Duncan Goldie-Scot
◾Joerg Platzer
◾Nilam Doctor
◾Noah Silverman
◾Ryan Deming

yeah.  the negative thing for me was she simply read from a prepared statement.  nothing original for me.

Platzer otoh, is clearly a more experienced thinker and is participating in an active neighborhood Bitcoin experiment.  being German would help to internationally diversify the BF board which i think is a positive.
8485  Economy / Speculation / Re: Whales, here why crashing the price is a good idea on: September 10, 2013, 10:23:41 PM
1. The goal is to make bitcoin a more stable currency so that people are willing to quote prices more and more in bitcoin. Obviously it will take many years but those that sell on highs and buy on lows are the only ones creating stability. The permabulls don't add anything of value to the stability of the price and the emotional buyers do exactly the inverse. With the current price at $130 the emotional buyers (and permabulls to a lesser extent) have again lifted the price way above the long term exponential growth rate, time to give them a beating again and flush them out.  

2. so I can buy cheap coins  Grin (hey, I walk the talk and did my part of the selling already but I'll admit I'm getting nervous this price ain't collapsing as I expected. Hence my outcry to you dear whale Smiley )


well at least you have a sense of humor.  Grin
8486  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: SHA-256 is designed by the NSA - do they have a backdoor? on: September 10, 2013, 04:50:59 PM
as evidence Linux is gaining in popularity:

http://blog.cryptographyengineering.com/2013/09/on-nsa.html

8487  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Elizabeth T. Ploshay for Bitcoin Foundation board on: September 10, 2013, 04:44:51 PM
how old is Elizabeth?
8488  Economy / Speculation / Re: Financial Risk Analytics-Subscription Service on: September 10, 2013, 04:20:02 PM
Failure
8489  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: SHA-256 is designed by the NSA - do they have a backdoor? on: September 10, 2013, 03:10:41 PM
if open source is so insecure, why are all these gov't agencies using it including the NSA itself via SELinux?  i think the same can be said of SHA 1&2:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Linux_adopters

Government

As local governments come under pressure from institutions such as the World Trade Organization and the International Intellectual Property Alliance, some have turned to Linux and other Free Software as an affordable, legal alternative to both pirated software and expensive proprietary computer products from Microsoft, Apple and other commercial companies. The spread of Linux affords some leverage for these countries when companies from the developed world bid for government contracts (since a low-cost option exists), while furnishing an alternative path to development for countries like India and Pakistan that have many citizens skilled in computer applications but cannot afford technological investment at "First World" prices.

    In July 2001[1] the White House started moving their computers to a Linux platform based on Red Hat Linux and Apache HTTP Server.[2] The installation was completed in February 2009.[3][4] In October 2009 the White House servers adopted Drupal, an open source content management system software distribution.[5][6]
    Brazil uses PC Conectado, a program utilizing Linux.
    The City government of Munich chose in 2003 to start to migrate its 14,000 desktops to Debian-based LiMux.[7] Even though more than 80% of workstations used OpenOffice and 100% used Firefox/Thunderbird five years later (November 2008),[8] an adoption rate of Linux itself of only 20.0% (June 2010) was achieved.[9][10] The effort was later reorganized, focusing on smaller deployments and winning over staff to the value of the program. By the end of 2011 the program had exceeded its goal and changed over 9000 desktops to Linux.[11] The city of Munich reported at the end of 2012 that the migration to Linux was highly successful and has already saved the city over €11 million (US$14 million).[12]
    The United States Department of Defense uses Linux - "the U.S. Army is “the” single largest install base for Red Hat Linux"[13] and the US Navy nuclear submarine fleet runs on Linux.[14]
    The city of Vienna has chosen to start migrating its desktop PCs to Debian-based Wienux.[15] However, the idea was largely abandoned, because the necessary software was incompatible with Linux.[16]
    Spain was noted as the furthest along the road to Linux adoption in 2003,[17] for example with Linux distribution LinEx
    State owned Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) is installing Linux in all of its 20,000 retail branches as the basis for its web server and a new terminal platform. (2005) [18]
    In April 2006, the US Federal Aviation Administration announced that it had completed a migration to Red Hat Enterprise Linux in one third of the scheduled time and saved 15 million dollars.[19][dead link]
    The Government of Pakistan established a Technology Resource Mobilization Unit in 2002 to enable groups of professionals to exchange views and coordinate activities in their sectors and to educate users about free software alternatives. Linux is an option for poor countries which have little revenue for public investment; Pakistan is using open source software in public schools and colleges, and hopes to run all government services on Linux eventually.
    The French Parliament has switched to using Ubuntu on desktop PCs.[20][21]
    The Federal Employment Office of Germany (Bundesagentur für Arbeit) has migrated 13,000 public workstations from Windows NT to OpenSuse.[22]
    Czech Post migrated 4000 servers and 12,000 clients to Novell Linux in 2005[23][24]
    Cuba - Students from the Cuban University of Information Science launched its own distribution of Linux called Nova to promote the replace of Microsoft Windows on civilian and government computers, a project that is now supported by the Cuban Government. By early 2011 the Universidad de Ciencias Informáticas announced that they would migrate more than 8000 PCs to this new operating system.[25][26][27]
    The Canton of Solothurn in Switzerland decided in 2001 to migrate its computers to Linux, but in 2010 the Swiss authority has made a U-turn by deciding to use Windows 7 for desktop clients.[28]
    France's national police force, the National Gendarmerie started moving their 90,000 desktops from Windows XP to Ubuntu in 2007 over concerns about the additional training costs of moving to Windows Vista, and following the success of OpenOffice.org roll-outs. The migration should be completed by 2015. The force has saved about €50 million on software licensing between 2004 and 2008.[29][30][31]
    France's Ministry of Agriculture uses Mandriva Linux.[31]
    Macedonia's Ministry of Education and Science deployed more than 180,000 Ubuntu based classroom desktops, and has encouraged every student in the Republic of Macedonia to use Ubuntu computer workstations.[32]
    The People's Republic of China exclusively uses Linux as the operating system for its Loongson processor family, with the aim of technology independence.[33]
    The US National Nuclear Security Administration operates the world's tenth fastest supercomputer, the IBM Roadrunner, which uses Red Hat Enterprise Linux along with Fedora as its operating systems.[34]
    The regional Andalusian Autonomous Government of Andalucía in Spain developed its own Linux distribution, called Guadalinex in 2004.[35]
    The South African Social Security Agency (SASSA) deployed Multi-station Linux Desktops to address budget and infrastructure constraints in 50 rural sites.[36]
    In 2003, the Turkish government decided to create its own Linux distribution, Pardus, developed by UEKAE (National Research Institute of Electronics and Cryptology). The first version, Pardus 1.0, was officially announced in 27 December 2005.[37]
    In 2010 The Philippines fielded an Ubuntu-powered national voting system.[38]
    In July 2010 Malaysia had switched 703 of the state's 724 agencies to Free and Open Source software with a Linux based operating system used.[39] The Chief Secretary to the Government cited, "(the) general acceptance of its promise of better quality, higher reliability, more flexibility and lower cost".[40]
    In late 2010 Vladimir Putin signed a plan to move the Russian Federation government towards free software including Linux in the second quarter of 2012.[41][42]
    The city government of Largo, Florida, USA uses Linux and has won international recognition for their implementation, indicating that it provides "extensive savings over more traditional alternatives in city-wide applications."[43]
    Iceland has announced in March 2012 that it wishes to migrate to open source software in public institutions. Schools have already migrated from Windows to Ubuntu Linux.[44]
    In June 2012 the US Navy signed a US$27,883,883 contract with Raytheon to install Linux ground control software for its fleet of vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) Northrup-Grumman MQ8B Fire Scout drones. The contract involves Naval Air Station Patuxent River, Maryland, which has already spent $5,175,075 in preparation for the Linux systems.[45]
    In 2004 Venezuela's government approved the 3390 decree,[46] to give preference to using free software in public administration. One result of this policy is the development of Canaima, a Deban-based Linux distribution.
8490  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: SHA-256 is designed by the NSA - do they have a backdoor? on: September 10, 2013, 02:57:52 PM
The algorithm is open ... however it was produced by a politically motivated rogue government branch that seems to harbouring a cynical bunch of criminal bastards ... do your own due diligence, if you don't have to deal with them why bother?
Don't forget that the Internet and TOR were also started by the US military.
Just the fact that they did something does not mean that they still have control over it.

Edit: oops, forgot to point out that the NSA algos flaws/backdoors will be tailored towards cracking by hardware capabilities that they , and maybe only them, possess. So saying it is secure because no-one else has found a flaw is redundant since no-one else knows or can replicate what they are capable of in terms of mining the exploit ...
Flaws in one of most widely used algos would be quickly found by NSA's/USA enemies - such as China and Russia (Russia/China have some of the world brightest mathematicans & cryptographers).
Especially after the Prism scandal.

Hiding something like this is simply not possible in after-Prism paranoia world.

and don't forget that the NSA relies on it's operatives going into harms way into foreign and hostile areas.

you now have to imagine a scenario where they lie to them, and have the operatives allow themselves to be lied to, and say all their communications will continue to be safe and secure so continue doing what you're doing?  either way, the NSA has suffered irreparable damage as a result of these so called revelations.  

i prefer the simplest explanation and that is to continue to believe that the Internet is ripping open age-old secrets and increasing the dissemination of the truth.  to expect one US centric organization to be able to buck that trend over the long term is not viable, imo.
8491  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: SHA-256 is designed by the NSA - do they have a backdoor? on: September 10, 2013, 02:47:04 PM
Why would the NSA ever release a 'secure' algorithm? It's like shooting yourself in the foot, it would make their job so much harder. They would only ever release something that they could control. It's just the way the world works.

Because you can never definitively prove a cryptographic system is secure.  The only way to "know" a cipher is secure is to make it publicly available and let the best in the world take a crack at it.  It is very easy to write a cryptographic system that you yourself can't break but that is next to useless.  Secret cryptography usually is weak cryptography.  History is littered with examples of failed "strong" systems.  One classic one is WEP which is so unbelievably broken it is hard to believe cryptographers came up with it.  Security through obscurity doesn't work.  Had the specs for WEP been made publicly available in the design phase people would have found the flaws in a matter of weeks and saved everyone a ton of problems down the road.  For every good cipher there are dozens and dozens of flawed ones.  No matter how smart a single developer is the combined intellect of the planet is better, that is the entire rationale for open source.  The NSA is not only responsible for finding the secrets of others they are responsible for ensuring others don't find the secrets of the United States. 

The US government uses SHA-2 in secure cryptographic systems including SIPERNet.  I know this from personal experience.

i agree with this.

8492  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: eASIC Fast Hash One Platinum 24TH/s miner announced - $353777 on: September 10, 2013, 09:30:09 AM
That is one expensive machine.
8493  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: Mining Equipment Manufacturers -- 10, 15, 20, 25, 30% on: September 10, 2013, 09:28:29 AM
  Grin
8494  Other / Meta / Re: Elizabeth T. Ploshay for Bitcoin Foundation board on: September 10, 2013, 02:57:59 AM
I see what is happening now, this is playing itself out over on Reddit.

What the insiders want is someone who will not rock the boat and just go along with the flow.  The Bitcoin Foundation now wants to have "chapters" instead of forming independent groups that collaborate.  They have created a new meaningless buzz word (don't all politicians do that) called "Organized Decentralization."  http://elizabethtploshay.com/organized-decentralization/

Folks, people like Theymos are taking you for a ride.  It is like the donations to this forum which total over $600K.  Theymos has been given advice time and time again about how to secure this web site against attacks and hacks.  He never takes the advice and refuses to take even basic steps to run this site properly.  He also gives elevated status to people running obviously illegal services.  He is apparently holding on the $600K in case he needs some kind of legal defense.  

i have to agree with this as well.

theymos lets his global moderators run wild deleting posts of anyone challenging their moderating decisions.  this has been a great disappointment to me, censorship.  
right now, i am the victim of a moderator who is unilaterally deleting my posts and enforcing a once per day posting on my subscription thread based solely on a complaint/recommendation of a competitor, no discussion from me allowed.  i was banned from posting on the forum for 2 days just b/c of bumping my thread more than once last week after not having bumped at all for several days from travelling.  imo, this is just retribution from a moderator who i've had personal disagreements with in the past.

power corrupts even at this level of a forum.  this post will probably get deleted and i might end up "disappearing" once again.
8495  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: HashFast announces specs for new ASIC: 400GH/s on: September 10, 2013, 12:13:48 AM
Interesting......I see that you can pre-order up to 9,223,372,036,854,775,807 unit at a price is $51,650,883,406,386,744,524,800. 


just like KNC.
8496  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: ► ► ►HashFast Endorsement on: September 09, 2013, 11:12:19 PM
everyone, please pay attention:

"The Baby Jet motherboard has room for an additional GN chip.**"

this applies to the Batch 1 units as well.
8497  Economy / Speculation / Re: Financial Risk Analytics-Subscription Service on: September 08, 2013, 10:52:09 PM
Update
8498  Bitcoin / Armory / Re: Armory - Discussion Thread on: September 08, 2013, 06:48:21 PM
Bug:

Alienware laptop, 32 bit OS, Ubuntu 12.10, 16 GB ram, I7 1st gen.

Armory  0.88.1 launches fine but self crashes after about 5 minutes.

(Cypher sent me more details over email)  That crash is happening in a location I've never seen before (isMineBulkFilter).  Can you export a log file and email that to me?  The only thing that comes to mind that would cause that is:

(1) Corrupted wallet, leading to bad address string which is crashing the code that identifies when tx belong to your wallet
(2) Malformed/corrupt blockdata in your blk*.dat files (does this happen during scanning or after scanning is done?)

I'll tell you more when I see the log file.


happening after successfully scanning chain.  sent you an email.
8499  Bitcoin / Press / Re: 2013-09-03 contrariancompliance.com: No Banking, No Bitcoin on: September 08, 2013, 02:37:52 AM
juan is here pushing his compliance racket barrow incessantly now ...

... these posts are really not much better than those Ponzi ads pirate@40 was running in the "Projects" section, the racket is less transparent and definitely more sophisticated though I suppose.

sounds expensive.
8500  Bitcoin / Armory / Re: Armory - Discussion Thread on: September 08, 2013, 02:11:09 AM
Bug:

Alienware laptop, 32 bit OS, Ubuntu 12.10, 16 GB ram, I7 1st gen.

Armory  0.88.1 launches fine but self crashes after about 5 minutes.
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