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1  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Marketplace (Altcoins) / REQUIRED: Solidity developer on: July 06, 2021, 08:45:22 AM
Hi guys we require a solidity developer to create token and project ongoing. Please pm or contact on telegram @jessiejonesapples

Will be a team position and you will be involved in the project as a member of the team. Heavy marketing, promising project!!!
2  Economy / Services / REQUIRED: Solidity developer on: July 06, 2021, 08:44:50 AM
Hi guys we require a solidity developer to create token and project ongoing. Please pm or contact on telegram @jessiejonesapples

Will be a team position and you will be involved in the project as a member of the team. Heavy marketing, promising project!!!
3  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: BSC token with deflation and minimum supply? on: July 02, 2021, 10:50:13 AM
Based on the trend of cross-platform, there is a clear understanding that almost any of the tokens can give a large percentage of profit, but we do not have knowledge of information on dumps and pumps, and often our movement is the analysis of information flows.

Ok sorry but that comment has absolutely nothing to do with my question
4  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / Re: BSC token with deflation and minimum supply? on: July 02, 2021, 06:50:55 AM
I can't find any in that list that have a min supply ie deflation stops at a floor supply amount?
5  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / BSC token with deflation and minimum supply? on: July 02, 2021, 03:17:56 AM
Hi guys just hoping that you can give me an example of a bsc token that is deflationary ie burns a small % of every transaction but stops at a certain supply or minimum supply? Thanks
6  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Marketplace (Altcoins) / Re: Team members needed for new token launching soon on pancakeswap on: June 19, 2021, 09:34:16 AM
Bump
7  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Marketplace (Altcoins) / Team members needed for new token launching soon on pancakeswap on: June 19, 2021, 06:01:36 AM
Ho guys we require:

1 x dev to create simple dapp and context it to us including ongoing tech support for project

1 x telegram monitor

1 x advisor

1 x marketing guru

Please pm or telegram @jessiejonesapples

8  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Altcoin Discussion / BSC token with auto liquidity, stake rewards to hodlers and burn? on: June 11, 2021, 05:44:40 AM
Hi guys I am looking for a BSC token with auto liquidity, stake rewards to hodlers and burn? so so if their is a 6% tax - 2% goes into auto liquidity, 2% reward to hodlers and 2% burned (deflationary) the 6 and 2% are examples. I cant seem to find any tokens with all 3. 2/3 is best I can find. Can you guys help buy naming any as I am sure their are some.

Thanks
9  Alternate cryptocurrencies / Service Discussion (Altcoins) / Listing token on uniswap - how to and why?` on: May 18, 2021, 04:00:52 AM
Hi guys still trying to get my head around uniswap as it is still very new to me.

What is required to list on uniswap?

From what I gather you send the tokens to the smart contract....and then what? Do you have to send liquidity in eth yourself? or somehow get liquidity providers and if so how? Also what settings do you need/recommend for the exchange? Thanks
10  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Do btc blocks have private keys? on: February 15, 2021, 11:27:57 AM
When creating an altcoin base on bitcoin you generate a genius block private key which controls that chain.

I find this surprising, and I suspect that you are misunderstanding the altcoin, but since I pretty much ignore anything having anything to do with the thousands of scamcoin altcoins out there, I'm willing to accept that there probably are some such that the coin provides the users absolutely zero protection beyond trusting the coin's creator.
If the alt-coin is based on Bitcoin then it will follow Bitcoin's data structures. In bitcoin, the only thing to "control" is a user's address and wallet using your private keys to sign transactions. Transactions only transfer UTXOs and don't change anything in a historic block. Protocol changes ("control that chain") means changes to the consensus rules. Those generally require an upgrade of the client you are running as well as what the majority is running.

I think you are talking about Ethereum based coins. There you have the concept of contracts that can be over-written by the developer that deploys them to change to whatever they want.

Not not tokens. Coins based on bitcoin
11  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Do btc blocks have private keys? on: February 14, 2021, 03:25:13 PM
Google search Bitcoin genesis key I didn't make it up. When you create an alt coin you can have genesis block key which gives control tithe chain. I know I have done it 15 times. It's legit its not debatable

It is clear that Bitcoin does not work the way you think it works.  I don't know what altcoins you've created, or what that altcoin code allows you to do with keys, however:

  • Bitcoin Blocks do not have Private keys OR Public Keys
  • Each Bitcoin Block DOES have a generation (aka coinbase) transaction, that transaction may, or may not have one or more private keys.
  • Having any private keys to an address in a generation transaction allows you to spend any bitcoins still associated with that address EXCEPT in the case of the genesis block.
  • In Bitcoin, there are NO keys that allow anyone to "control the chain". That's just straight-up nonsense.
  • It is possible to have a nonce, without any keys. Every Bitcoin block has a single nonce that is used to create a unique HASH but is NOT used for any key (public or private).
  • The only value used in generating an ECDSA signature that might be called a nonce is the k value.  However, this is typically just called the k value and not usually referred to as a nonce.

You are spewing a lot of nonsense, and asking questions that don't make any sense at all.  It is clear that you need to understand the basics of Bitcoin better before you work on asking detailed questions about the technical details of Bitcoin's implementation.

Geez someone woke up on the wrong side of the bed this morning. No need to take it personally. The question dies make sense. I asked if Bitcoin blocks have private keys. It is clear to a certain extent they do. When creating an altcoin base on bitcoin you generate a genius block private key which controls that chain. I assume it's the same for Bitcoin
12  Bitcoin / Development & Technical Discussion / Re: Finding nonce in historical transactions / blocks on: February 14, 2021, 01:24:04 PM
The transaction nonce is what is used to create the signature of the transaction or the r,s. It's private as it involves the private key to sign transactions
I'm kinda clueless here, but if it's private, it's not on the blockchain, right?

Ah, I seem to get it now. He's talking about in the ECDSA signature algorithm where a secret number k, the so-called transaction nonce (though this is the first time I heard it being called a nonce to be honest) is chosen that is used to create r and s.

Obviously that's not available in the raw transaction as he pointed out, but in another thread here I made a process for getting the nonce k from the private key, the message data - in this case the raw transaction with a few fields unfilled - , r and s: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=5316741.msg56331333#msg56331333


Interesting thread thank you. Although I don't see the point  in finding K if you have P? Finding K leads you to P.

I find this interesting:

S1 = (h1+rx1*P)/k   =>  k = (h1+rx1*P)/S1

S2 = (h2+rx2*P)/(k+1)  =>  k+1 = (h2+rx2*P)/S2

((h1+rx1*P)/S1)  + 1 = (h2+rx2*P)/S2


.........

P = (h2*S1 - h1*S2 - S2)/(rx1*S2 - rx2*S1)
13  Bitcoin / Development & Technical Discussion / Re: Finding nonce in historical transactions / blocks on: February 14, 2021, 01:14:21 PM
The transaction nonce is what is used to create the signature of the transaction or the r,s. It's private as it involves the private key to sign transactions
I'm kinda clueless here, but if it's private, it's not on the blockchain, right?

Ah, I seem to get it now. He's talking about in the ECDSA signature algorithm where a secret number k, the so-called transaction nonce (though this is the first time I heard it being called a nonce to be honest) is chosen that is used to create r and s.

Obviously that's not available in the raw transaction as he pointed out, but in another thread here I made a process for getting the nonce k from the private key, the message data - in this case the raw transaction with a few fields unfilled - , r and s: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=5316741.msg56331333#msg56331333


Yes you got it my friend sorry. I can't find much data on it. Block nonce is usually 10 decimal characters 8 hex 32 bit. Was wandering what format the secret K value is if it is also a 32 bit string
14  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Do btc blocks have private keys? on: February 14, 2021, 11:29:41 AM
People going in different directions. Your crazy if you think genesis keys don't control the chain. You can make any changes and implement new features mint new coins if you hold genesis keys.




 
Unless you have a working example of a genesis key, this is only a a fictional phrase invented for price manipulation

Google search Bitcoin genesis key I didn't make it up. When you create an alt coin you can have genesis block key which gives control tithe chain. I know I have done it 15 times. It's legit its not debatable
15  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Do btc blocks have private keys? on: February 14, 2021, 11:26:59 AM
People going in different directions. Your crazy if you think genesis keys don't control the chain. You can make any changes and implement new features mint new coins if you hold genesis keys.




 
Unless you have a working example of a genesis key, this is only a a fictional phrase invented for price manipulation

Price manipulation lol
16  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Do btc blocks have private keys? on: February 14, 2021, 10:04:10 AM
People going in different directions. Your crazy if you think genesis keys don't control the chain. You can make any changes and implement new features mint new coins if you hold genesis keys.




 
17  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Do btc blocks have private keys? on: February 14, 2021, 08:51:24 AM
I too wouldn't mind knowing this, I thought about it when I spotted this Block for sale in the Collectibles section.



That is interesting it's a physical block lol so he's selling private key to a block? I know that private key to the genesis block can control the entire blockchain. Their isn't much info about it. If the priv key has a nonce which it does it must have a private key but it's weird because it doesn't seem to have a public key on the curve. There are 2^256 priv keys and only 2^160 addresses does that leave priv keys for blocks or am I reading too much into lol
18  Bitcoin / Development & Technical Discussion / Re: Finding nonce in historical transactions / blocks on: February 14, 2021, 08:45:46 AM
Is the data you're looking for included in any of those files?
http://blockdata.loyce.club/inputs/blockchair_bitcoin_inputs_20110615.tsv.gz
http://blockdata.loyce.club/outputs/blockchair_bitcoin_outputs_20110615.tsv.gz
http://blockdata.loyce.club/transactions/blockchair_bitcoin_transactions_20110615.tsv.gz
(Reference thread: Bitcoin block data: inputs, outputs and transactions)
If it's in here, I can get you the data.

The transaction nonce is what is used to create the signature of the transaction or the r,s. It's private as it involves the private key to sign transactions
I'm kinda clueless here, but if it's private, it's not on the blockchain, right?

Brute forced as in mining is only way I am familiar with
19  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Do btc blocks have private keys? on: February 14, 2021, 07:48:41 AM
Thanks for the crypto 101 lesson. Are you trying to boost post count? Your answer isn't relevant
20  Bitcoin / Development & Technical Discussion / Re: Finding nonce in historical transactions / blocks on: February 14, 2021, 06:53:37 AM
I'm not sure where to find the extra nonce though, they're located in the Coinbase transaction.

It turns out that the extraNonce is not included in the block or block header formats. This is a reply from theymos:

...
extraNonce is used by bitcoind, but it's not part of the protocol. There is no extraNonce field in blocks or transactions.



Thanks for that. Their is always some ninja here with knowledge needed. This is obviously historical block data? Any idea how to find individual transaction nonce? Thanks

There is no nonce for individual transactions, because it only applies to block generation. Individual transactions have no use knowing the nonce, since that would just waste more bytes making the tx larger. It's a 32-bit counter located in the last 4 bytes of the block header.

The transaction nonce is what is used to create the signature of the transaction or the r,s. It's private as it involves the private key to sign transactions
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