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81  Bitcoin / Project Development / Re: Calculating Satoshi's coins on: November 25, 2022, 07:39:22 PM
I think that we need:

1) improvement of the hashing/computing power
2) new ways of calculating

I don't think that there will be a formula to get from the public key through a simple calculation the private key. But I'm sure that the 256 bit range can be calculated with less than the today's 128 bit (pollard). Let's say we bring it down to 80 bit and at the same time we improve the hashing/computing power, so it could be possible to solve this.
82  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Technical Support / Re: Unconfirmed transaction is not even visible on block explorers on: November 17, 2022, 06:44:23 PM
Yeah, I did that and was able to successfully move the coins. It generated the same txid.
NotATether didn't say that he changed the fee or locktime.

For example, the new transaction can have a different fee or a different locktime and even with the same inputs and same outputs would have a different ID.
Yes, if you change these intentionally, you will get a different txid. But what is the reason to change the txid? Do the nodes accept it as a new transaction (with the same input) if the old one is in the mempool?
83  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Technical Support / Re: Unconfirmed transaction is not even visible on block explorers on: November 17, 2022, 11:01:00 AM
Yeah, I did that and was able to successfully move the coins. It generated the same txid.

No, you generate a new transaction with the same keys, inputs and outputs, but not the same txid, let me explain.
When you take the secret keys from one wallet to another and make a transaction, even you use the same inputs, same amounts, and same outputs, the Transaction ID (txid) will be different.

If you generate a new transaction with the same input/output you will get the same txid. Else blockchain would not work, so Bitcoin wouldn't exist  Smiley
84  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Technical Support / Re: "Broken" private key. on: November 16, 2022, 10:31:05 PM
80 ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff etc... <15 real bytes, kept secret, presumably valid> <checksum>

are the <15 real bytes, kept secret, presumably valid> = "FEBAAEDCE6AF48A03BBF..."?
85  Economy / Exchanges / Re: Australian crypto exchange suspends withdrawal on: November 16, 2022, 10:27:35 AM
Aust crypto exchange suspends withdrawals


A Brisbane-based crypto exchange has suspended withdrawals, citing spillover from the collapse of FTX.

"Due to the impact of FTX Australia's administration, we are not able to operate business as usual and have suspended all deposits and withdrawals until further notice," Digital Surge said in a message on its website.

"Our current priority is to protect and support you, our users, and keep you informed as the situation develops."

In an email to customers the exchange said it "does hold some limited exposure to FTX" and was "working hard to understand the situation as it relates to our users".

The company didn't immediately return an email seeking comment.Â

The notice said it expects to provide a further announcement on the situation within 14 days.

Founded in 2017, Digital Surge says it offers a fast and easy way for Australians to exchange cryptocurrency. It has 22 employees listed on LinkedIn.

The No.3 crypto exchange globally, FTX filed for bankruptcy last week in the United States and could have up to 1 million individual creditors.


source: https://www.sheppnews.com.au/aap-finance/aust-crypto-exchange-suspends-withdrawals/
86  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Who has/had the oldest mined Bitcoin? on: November 15, 2022, 07:18:23 PM
--reserved for signatures--
87  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Who has/had the oldest mined Bitcoin? on: November 15, 2022, 07:17:37 PM
I want to know if people from the early days of Bitcoin who mined are still here. If you want, you can post here a signature for the text "bitcointalk" with your oldest key so we can check who has/had the oldest mined Bitcoin. Even when the coins were sent (empty address), you can post the signature for that address.
88  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Technical Support / Re: Bitcoin private key with 98 characters and starting with 3 on: November 14, 2022, 05:40:01 PM
Nope. I don't even know if there is bitcoins on this wallet. My goal here is to understand the encoding.

1. Why do you think that it is Bitcoin related?
2. Why do you think that it is a private key?

 Smiley
89  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Technical Support / Re: Bitcoin private key with 98 characters and starting with 3 on: November 14, 2022, 12:25:10 AM
Do you have the url where you found it?
Nope, but I can search on my job's Pc in order to find It.

That should help a lot  Smiley
90  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Technical Support / Re: Bitcoin private key with 98 characters and starting with 3 on: November 13, 2022, 11:31:17 PM
~

Do you have the url where you found it?
91  Economy / Exchanges / Re: FTX has been hacked, delete the app, don't go to website on: November 13, 2022, 12:37:03 AM
"Not your keys, not your Bitcoin"

Here is the proof:

- List of Hacked Exchanges, since 2011:

I would like to share this list of hacked exchanges, after viewing the data, consider how and where you store your Bitcoins.
Several types of scams appear in different sources of news, theft or loss of BTC at the individual level.
I prefer to focus on the hacking of exchanges which is what affects us all, but due to the importance of some Bitcoin thefts outside the exchanges, I will include the most important.
If someone wants to publish their personal experience with any of these unpleasant situations, feel free to do so.

Since 2011 have stolen millions of dollars from exchanges, account theft, security breaches, phishing, some recovered others filed for bankruptcy. The solution adopted by governments to improve security is to implement more stringent and regulatory policies.

- This is a list exchanges hacked 2011/2018, I hope I do not have to update this year.
- 2019 has been worse than the previous year.

2020 I have updated some data and renewed the presentation of the incidents of the exchanges, I have more references obtained from several sources, once contrasted with mine they give a wider result of exchanges that have suffered some type of attack, so the presentation is annual to have a more specific vision of each year.

The sources are basically online portals and social networks that warn about hacked exchange, once verified it is included in the corresponding list of the year.

"Not your keys, Not your Bitcoin"

2011 > 7
Code:
 
Year Month Exchange   Amount/$ Hacked   Source:

2011  Jun. MTGOX          30.000    2.000 / BTC    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mt._Gox#Security_breach_and_invalid_addresses_(2011)
2011  Jun. Mass MyBitcoin  60.000            4.000 / BTC    blog.goodaudience.com
2011  Jul. Ubitex  15.575    1.138 / BTC    en.bitcoin.it/wiki/List_of_Major_Bitcoin_Heists,_Thefts,_and_Losses
2011  Jul. Bitomat.pl 231.570   17.000 / BTC    coindesk.com/hacker-attack-polands-bitcoin-exchange
2011  Aug. MyBitcoin                   1.072.500   78.735 / BTC   arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2017/12/a-brief-history-of-bitcoin-hacks-and-frauds/
2011  Sep. Mooncoin  22.300    4.000 / BTC    @wayne_huang medium.com
2011  Oct. Bitcoin7          50.000    5.000 / BTC    coinsutra.com/biggest-bitcoin-hacks/

2012 > 5
Code:
Year Month Exchange		  	Amount/$		 Hacked	   Source:

2012  Mar. Bitcoinica 228.000   43.000 / BTC   hackernoon.com/a-huge-list-of-cryptocurrency-thefts-16d6bf246389
2012  May. Bitcoinica  87.000   18.457 / BTC   hackernoon.com/a-huge-list-of-cryptocurrency-thefts-16d6bf246389
2012  Jul. Bitcoinica 300.000   40.000 / BTC   news.bitcoin.com/bitcoin-exchange-thefts-forgotten
2012  Jul. BTC-e    4.500 / BTC   bitcoinmagazine.com/articles/btc-e-attacked-1343738085
2012  Sep. Bitfloor 250.000   24.000 / BTC    coinsutra.com/biggest-bitcoin-hacks/

2013 > 18
Code:
Year Month Exchange		  	Amount/$		 Hacked	   Source:

2013  Feb. Bit LC    Not revealed            2.000 / BTC   themerkle.com/top-5-bitcoin-heists-of-2013/
2013  Mar. Bitcoin Rain 230.000    4.000 / BTC   bitcoinsaints.blogspot.com/p/3rd-mt.html
2013  Mar. BTC Guild    Not revealed            1.254 / BTC    bitcoinsaints.blogspot.com/p/3rd-mt.html
2013  Apr. Ozcoin 100.000      923 / BTC    bitcoinmagazine.com/articles/ozcoin-hacked
2013  Apr. ZigGap 195.000    1.708 / BTC    bitcoinsaints.blogspot.com/p/3rd-mt.html
2013  Apr. Bitcoin Central    Not revealed    x.xxx / BTC   coindesk.com/hackers-hit-bitcoin-central-exchange
2013  May. Vircurex 160.000    1.450 / BTC   coiniq.com/cryptocurrency-exchange-hacks/
2013  Jun. PicoStocks         130.000    1.300 / BTC    coiniq.com/cryptocurrency-exchange-hacks/
2013  Aug. Android RNG bug    Not revealed       60 / BTC    bitcoinsaints.blogspot.com/p/3rd-mt.html
2013  Oct. basic-mining    Not revealed    2.131 / BTC    bitcoinsaints.blogspot.com/p/3rd-mt.html
2013  Oct. GBL    Not revealed           22.000 / BTC    bitcoinsaints.blogspot.com/p/3rd-mt.html
2013  Oct. Silk Road FBI confiscation  171.955 / BTC    Silk Road - FBI.gov
2013  Nov. Just-Dice 108.807    1.300 / BTC   https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Talk:Inputs.io
2013  Nov. Bips    Not revealed    1.295 / BTC    thehackernews.com/2013/11/danish-bitcoin-exchange-bips-hacked-and_25.html
2013  Nov. Bidextreme    Not revealed      500 / BTC    bitcoinsaints.blogspot.com/p/3rd-mt.html
2013  Nov. bitcash.cz 100.000              485 / BTC    coindesk.com/czech-bitcoin-exchange-bitcash-cz-hacked-4000-user-wallets-emptied
2013  Nov. inputs.io       1.200.000    4.100 / BTC    wired.com/2013/11/inputs/
2013  Nov. PicoStocks       3.000.000    5.896 / BTC   coiniq.com/cryptocurrency-exchange-hacks/
2013  Dec. Sheep Market 100.000    5.400 / BTC    coindesk.com/sheep-marketplace-track-stolen-bitcoins

2014 > 12
Code:
Year Month Exchange		  	Amount/$		 Hacked	   Source:

2014  Feb. Silk Road 2       2.600.000    4.476 / BTC    coindesk.com/silk-road-2-loses-bitcoins-hack
2014  Feb. Mt.Gox     473.000.000      750.000 / BTC    cointelegraph.com/news/the-mess-that-was-mt-gox-four-years-on
2014  Mar. Bitcurex            Not revealed  / BTC   coindesk.com/polish-bitcoin-exchange-bitcurex-targeted-hacking-attack
2014  Mar. Canadian Bitcoins  95.000      149 / BTC    coindesk.com/9-biggest-screwups-bitcoin-history
2014  Mar. Flexcoin         600.000              896 / BTC    coindesk.com/bitcoin-bank-flexcoin-close-600000-bitcoin-theft
2014  Mar. CryptoRush         570.000      950 / BTC    coiniq.com/cryptocurrency-exchange-hacks/#Cryptorush
2014  Mar. Poloniex          64.000       97 / BTC    coiniq.com/cryptocurrency-exchange-hacks/#Cryptorush
2014  Jul. Cryptsy               7.500.000   13.000 / BTC    coindesk.com/cryptsy-bankruptcy-millions-bitcoin-stolen
2014  Aug. BTER       1.065.000  / NXT    coindesk.com/bter-nxt-bitcoin-exchange-hack
2014  Oct. KipCoin         690.000    3.000 / BTC    selfkey.org/list-of-cryptocurrency-exchange-hacks/
2014  Oct. MintPal       1.300.000     / VeriCoin    cointelegraph.com/news/mintpal-hacked-considerable-amount-of-vericoin-stolen
2014  Dec. BitPay       1.800.000    5.000 / BTC    siliconangle.com/2015/09/17/bitpay-hacked-for-1-8-million-in-bitcoin-during-december-2014/

2015 > 7
Code:
Year Month Exchange		  	Amount/$		 Hacked	   Source:

2015  Jan. LocalBitcoins       17 / BTC    newsbtc.com/2015/01/29/localbitcoins-hacked-17-bitcoins-stolen-amongst-users/
2015  Jan. 796Exchange         230.000    1.000 / BTC    coiniq.com/cryptocurrency-exchange-hacks/#2015
2015  Jan. Bitstamp       5.200.000   19.000 / BTC    coiniq.com/cryptocurrency-exchange-hacks/#Bitstamp
2015  Feb. BTER       1.750.000    7.170 / BTC    coindesk.com/bter-to-return-hacked-funds-following-security-partnership
2015  Feb. KipCoin 600.000    3.000 / BTC    newsbtc.com/2015/02/19/chinese-bitcoin-exchange-kipcoin-shuts-claims-losing-3000-btc-hackers/
2015  May. Coinapult  42.900      150 / BTC    coindesk.com/coinapult-loses-40k-hot-wallet-compromise
2015  May. Bitfinex       Hot Wallet Hacked    1.500 / BTC    cointelegraph.com/news/breaking-bitfinex-hot-wallet-hacked-bitcoins-stolen

2016 > 5
Code:
Year Month Exchange		  	Amount/$		 Hacked	   Source:

2016  Mar. Cointrader    Not revealed       Shuts Down    coindesk.com/bitcoin-exchange-cointrader-shuts-down
2016  Apr. Shapeshift 230.000              469 / BTC    coiniq.com/cryptocurrency-exchange-hacks/#2016
2016  May. Gatecoin       2.140.000              250 / BTC    coiniq.com/cryptocurrency-exchange-hacks/#2016
2016  Aug. Bitfinex      77.000.000  119.700 / BTC    coiniq.com/cryptocurrency-exchange-hacks/#2016
2016  Oct. Bitcurex       1.500.000    2.300 / BTC    news.bitcoin.com/bitcurex-forced-million-theft/

2017 > 5
Code:
Year Month Exchange		  	Amount/$		 Hacked	   Source:

2017  Apr. Yapizon (Youbit)       5.300.000    3.816 / BTC    news.bitcoin.com/hacked-korean-bitcoin-exchange-yapizon-offers-ious/
2017  Jun. Bithumb      31.000.000         Crypto    coindesk.com/bithumb-exchanges-31-million-hack-know-dont-know
2017  Aug. OKEx       3.000.000      600 / BTC    cointelegraph.com/news/chinese-bitcoin-exchange-okex-hacked-for-3-mln-police-not-interested
2017  Dec. Nicehash      65.000.000    4.736 / BTC    coindesk.com/62-million-gone-cryptocurrency-mining-market-nicehash-hacked
2017  Dec. Youbit       Stolen 17% of its assets      Shut Down    https://coiniq.com/cryptocurrency-exchange-hacks/#2017

2018 > 9
Code:
Year Month Exchange		  	Amount/$		 Hacked	   Source:

2018  Jan. Coincheck       500.000.000  / NEM    coindesk.com/coincheck-confirms-crypto-hack-loss-larger-than-mt-gox
2018  Feb. BitGrail         187.000.000  /Nano    bitcoinist.com/bitgrail-cryptocurrency-exchange-hacked-170-million-nano-allegedly-stolen/
2018  Mar. Foxbit 270.000       30 / BTC    finance.yahoo.com/news/270-000-brazil-largest-bitcoin-172549113.html
2018  Apr. Coinsecure       3.500.000      430 / BTC    bitcoinist.com/3-5-million-bitcoin-stolen-coinsecure-exchange-hack-security-chief-suspected/
2018  May. Bitcoin Gold      18.000.000  / BTG    news.bitcoin.com/bitcoin-gold-hacked-for-18-million/
2018  Jun. Coinrail          40.000.000           Crypto    bitcoinmagazine.com/articles/south-korean-exchange-coinrail-hacked-40-million-crypto-reported-stolen
2018  Jun. Bithumb      30.000.000 Crypto    cointelegraph.com/news/from-coincheck-to-bithumb-2018-s-largest-security-breaches-so-far
2018  Jul. Bancor        13.500.000   Crypto    coindesk.com/token-platform-bancor-goes-offline-following-security-breach
2018  Sep. Zaif        60.000.000     Crypto / BTC    coindesk.com/crypto-exchange-zaif-hacked-in-60-million-6000-bitcoin-theft

2019 > 16
Code:
Year Month Exchange		  	Amount/$		 Hacked	   Source:

2019  Jan. Cryptopia      16.000.000   Crypto / ETH    twitter.com/Cryptopia_NZ/status/1085084168852291586
2019  Jan. Liqui Crypto       lack of liquidity      Shut Down    cointelegraph.com/news/ukrainian-crypto-exchange-liqui-shuts-down-cites-lack-of-liquidity
2019  Jan. QuadrigaCX     190.000.000 Blocked   coindesk.com/quadriga-creditor-protection-filing
2019  Feb. Coinmama 450.000       emails+passwords   ccn.com/exchange-coinbene-swears-it-wasnt-hacked-traders-fear-the-worst
2019  Mar. DragonEx    Not revealed         Crypto    coindesk.com/singapore-based-crypto-exchange-dragonex-has-been-hacked
2019  Mar. Coinbene    Not revealed Blocked   blockonomi.com/coinbene-hacked-exchange-says-not/
2019  Mar. Bithumb      13.000.000         Crypto    coindesk.com/crypto-exchange-bithumb-hacked-for-13-million-in-suspected-insider-job
2019  May. Binance      41.000.000    7.000 / BTC    cointelegraph.com/news/hackers-withdraw-7-000-bitcoins-in-binance-crypto-exchange-security-breach
2019  Jun. GateHub      10.000.000  / XRP    cointelegraph.com/news/report-nearly-10-million-in-xrp-stolen-in-gatehub-hack
2019  Jun. Bitrue       5.000.000   cointelegraph.com/news/singaporean-exchange-bitrue-gets-hacked-losing-5-million-in-xrp-cardano
2019  Jun. Bitsane    Not revealed           cointelegraph.com/news/exit-scam-dublin-based-exchange-bitsane-vanishes-with-users-funds
2019  Jun. Bitcoins Norway    Not revealed   news.trijo.co/news/norwegian-crypto-exchange-wants-to-force-users-to-sell-their-cryptocurrencies/?lang=en
2019  Jun. BitMarket    Not revealed      Shut Down    cointelegraph.com/news/polish-crypto-exchange-bitmarket-shuts-down-citing-liquidity-loss
2019  Jul. Bitpoint      32.000.000           Crypto / BTC    cointelegraph.com/news/japanese-crypto-exchange-bitpoint-suffers-32-million-hack
2019  Nov. Upbit      49.000.000  342.000 / ETH    coindesk.com/crypto-exchange-upbit-confirms-theft-of-49m-in-ether
2019  Dec. PlusToken Ponzi       scammers    coindesk.com/chainalysis-report-on-plustoken-scammers-blamed-for-mondays-crypto-selloff

2020 > 6
Code:
Year Month Exchange		  	Amount/$		 Hacked	   Source:					

2020  Jul. Cashaa         -------        336 / BTC   cointelegraph.com/news/hacker-stole-336-btc-from-crypto-exchange-cashaa
2020  Feb. Altsbit          63.000   Crypto / BTC    coindesk.com/new-crypto-exchange-altsbit-says-it-will-close-following-hack
2020  Sep. Eterbase       5.300.000   Crypto / BTC    coingeek.com/european-exchange-hacked-for-over-5-million/
2020  Sep. KuCoin             150.000.000   Crypto / BTC   decrypt.co/43015/cryptocurrency-exchange-kucoin-likely-hacked-reports
2020  Dec. Livecoin     465.000   Crypto / BTC    zdnet.com/article/russian-crypto-exchange-livecoin-hacked-after-it-lost-control-of-its-servers/
2020  Dec. Altilly                       -------   ------------   canadaecoin.site/altilly-hack/

Please, post your comment if you are affected by this unpleasant situation or how you solved it, of course, it can help a lot.



Before this thread, in the forum there was a thread with very detailed information, but it is no longer updated, I leave the link in case you want to visit it, maybe some information is useful for you.

List of Major Bitcoin Heists, Thefts, Hacks, Scams, and Losses:

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=83794.0
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=576337.0

2023 > x
Code:
RESERVED	

2024 > x
Code:
RESERVED	

2025 > x
Code:
RESERVED	

2026 > x
Code:
RESERVED	

...
92  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Technical Support / Re: Bitcoin private key with 98 characters and starting with 3 on: November 12, 2022, 11:57:41 PM
The problem is, the entire string has non-hex characters. It starts with 3jJ and finish with 49n.

Maybe you have to hash it (1x, 2x) and use the outcome as private key HEX? [unlikely, but why not to try it?  Smiley]
93  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: BITCOIN created by NSA & Promoted by BIS since 1997; Trust Seriously U R Joking? on: November 12, 2022, 11:45:18 PM
interesting  Roll Eyes ... but we need proofs.

It is also very interesting that Satoshi used secp256k1 and not the common secp256r1, isn't it?
Yeah; it was discussed a few times on this forum. You find it all through the search function.
Now, I found this:

'Many crypto experts have noticed that Bitcoin’s choice of secp256k1 elliptic curve was unusual for its time, as it was not yet well researched. ... Cointelegraph asked one of the world’s leading cryptographers, Tatsuaki Okamoto, about this unusual choice. Okamoto currently serves as director of the Cryptography & Information Security Lab at NTT Research. According to Okamoto, there are two alternative explanations for this choice: Either Satoshi picked because it offers greater efficiency or because it may have offered a secret backdoor.'
https://cointelegraph.com/news/this-researcher-says-bitcoins-elliptic-curve-could-have-a-secret-backdoor

'Laszlo Hanyecz, who worked closely with Satsohi in 2010, told Cointelegraph that he was befuddled by Satoshi’s choice of the elliptic curve secp256k1. The use of this curve, at the time, was unusual. ... At some point, Hanyecz sent Satoshi an email asking him why he picked this particular curve, Satoshi explained to Hanyecz that he had had some experts helping him: “‘I had a bunch of people look at it and they told me this was good.’ And he didn't really elaborate on it, but he said he had experts look at it.” It is not clear exactly when Satoshi sought this outside help, but prior to launching Bitcoin.'
https://cointelegraph.com/news/satoshi-nakamoto-had-outside-cryptography-help-says-early-bitcoin-dev

I had a bunch of people look at it and they told me this was good.  Huh
94  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Could Bitcoin have launched in the 1990s — Or was it waiting for Satoshi? on: November 08, 2022, 10:52:25 PM
Could Bitcoin have launched in the 1990s — Or was it waiting for Satoshi?


This year, Oct. 31 marked the 14th anniversary of the issuance of one of this century’s most consequential white papers — Satoshi Nakamoto’s “Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System.” Its 2008 publication set off a “revolution in finance” and “heralded a new era for money, one that did not derive its value from governmental edict but rather from technological proficiency and ingenuity,” as NYDIG celebrated in its Nov. 4 newsletter.

Many aren’t aware, though, that Satoshi’s nine-page white paper was met with some skepticism initially, even among the cypherpunk community where it first surfaced. This reluctance may be understandable since earlier attempts to create a cryptocurrency failed — David Chaum’s Digicash effort in the 1990s, for example — nor at first glance did it appear that Satoshi was bringing anything new to the table in terms of technology.

“It was technically possible to develop Bitcoin in 1994,” Jan Lansky, head of the department of computer science and mathematics at the Czech Republic’s University of Finance and Administration, told Cointelegraph, explaining that Bitcoin is based on three technical improvements that were available at that time: Merkle trees (1979), blockchain data structure (Haber and Stornetta, 1991) and proof of work (1993).

Peter Vessenes, co-founder and chief cryptographer at Lamina1 — a layer-1 blockchain — basically agreed: “We definitely could have been mining Bitcoin” in the early 1990s, at least from a technical perspective, he told Cointelegraph. The necessary cryptography was in hand:

“Bitcoin’s elliptic curve technology is mid-1980s technology. Bitcoin doesn’t need any in-band encryption like SSL; the data is unencrypted and easy to transfer.”
Satoshi sometimes gets credit for establishing the proof-of-work (PoW) protocol used by Bitcoin and other blockchain networks (though no longer Ethereum ) to secure digital ledgers, but here too, he had antecedents. “Cynthia Dwork and Moni Naor suggested the idea of proof of work to combat spam in 1992,” added Vessenes.

PoW, which is also effective in thwarting Sybil attacks, establishes a high economic price for making any changes to the digital ledger. As explained in a 2017 paper on Bitcoin’s origins by Arvind Narayanan and Jeremy Clark, “In Dwork and Naor's design, email recipients would process only those emails that were accompanied by proof that the sender had performed a moderate amount of computational work — hence, ‘proof of work.’” As the researchers further noted:

“Computing the proof would take perhaps a few seconds on a regular computer. Thus, it would pose no difficulty for regular users, but a spammer wishing to send a million emails would require several weeks, using equivalent hardware.”

Elsewhere, “Ralph Merkle invented Merkle trees in the late 1980s — so we had hashing functions that were secure for the times,” Vessenes added.

So, why then did Satoshi succeed while others foundered? Was the world simply not ready for a decentralized digital currency earlier? Were there still technical limitations, like accessible computer power? Or maybe Bitcoin’s true constituency hadn’t yet come of age — a new generation distrustful of centralized authority, especially in light of the Great Recession of 2008?

Establishing ‘trustless’ systems

David Chaum has been called “perhaps the most influential person in the cryptocurrency space.” His 1982 doctoral dissertation, Computer Systems Established, Maintained, and Trusted by Mutually Suspicious Groups, anticipated many of the elements that were to eventually find their way into the Bitcoin network. It also presented the key challenge to be solved, that is:

“The problem of establishing and maintaining computer systems that can be trusted by those who don't necessarily trust one another.”
Indeed, an academic exploration of blockchain technologies’s origins by four University of Maryland researchers lauded “the 1979 work of David Chaum, whose vault system embodies many of the elements of blockchains.”

In an interview with Cointelegraph last week, Chaum was asked if Bitcoin really could have been launched 15 years earlier, as some contend. He agreed with the U. of Maryland researchers that all the key blockchain elements were already present in his 1982 dissertation — with one key exception: Satoshi’s consensus mechanism:

 “The specifics of the [i.e., Satoshi’s] consensus algorithm is unlike, as far as I know, those in the literature on consensus algorithms.”
When pressed for specifics, Chaum was reluctant to say much more other than that the 2008 white paper described a “somewhat ad hoc… crude mechanism” that actually “could be made to work — more or less.”

In a recently published book, University of Oxford social scientist Vili Lehdonvirta also focuses on the uniqueness of that consensus mechanism. Satoshi rotated the cryptocurrency’s record-keepers/validators — better known today as “miners” — roughly every 10 minutes.

Then “the next randomly appointed administrator would take over, double check the previous block of records, and append their own block to it, forming a chain of blocks,” Lehdonvirta writes in Cloud Empires.

The reason for rotating miners, in Lehdonvirta’s telling, was to prevent the system’s administrators from becoming too entrenched and, thus, to avoid the corruption that inevitably comes with a concentration of power.

Even though PoW protocols were well known at this point, the specifics of Satoshi’s algorithm “really came out of nowhere… it wasn’t anticipated,” Chaum told Cointelegraph.

‘Three fundamental breakthroughs’

Vinay Gupta, founder and CEO of startup Mattereum, who also helped to launch Ethereum in 2015 as its release coordinator, agreed that most of Bitcoin’s key components were available for the taking when Satoshi came along, though he differs on some of the chronology. “The parts themselves were simply not ready until at least 2001,” he told Cointelegraph.

“Bitcoin is a combination of three fundamental breakthroughs on top of public key cryptography — Merkle trees, proof-of-work and distributed hash tables,” all developed before Satoshi, said Gupta. There were no problems with network hardware and computer power in the 1990s either. “It’s the core algorithms that were the slow part […]. We just didn’t have all the core building blocks for Bitcoin until 2001. The cryptography was first, and the extremely clever networking layer was last.”

Garrick Hileman, a visiting fellow at the London School of Economics, also cited a later date for Bitcoin’s technical feasibility:

“I’m not sure the early 1990s is a strong claim as some of the prior work referenced in Satoshi’s white paper — e.g. Adam Back’s hashcash/proof of work algorithm — were developed and/or published in the late 1990s or thereafter.”

Awaiting a favorable social climate

What about non-technical factors? Maybe Bitcoin was waiting for a demographic cohort that had grown up with computers/cell phones and distrusted banks and centralized finance generally? Did BTC require a new social-economic consciousness to flourish?

Alex Tapscott, a member of the Millennial generation, writes in his book Financial Services Revolution:

“For many of my generation, 2008 began a lost decade of structural unemployment, sluggish growth, political instability and a corrosion of trust and confidence in many of our institutions. The financial crisis exposed the avarice, malfeasance and plain incompetence that had driven the economy to the brink of collapse and had some asking, ‘How deep did the rot go?’”
In a 2020 interview with Cointelegraph, Tapscott was asked if Bitcoin could have happened without the financial upheaval of 2008. Given the “historically high unemployment rates in countries like Spain, Greece and Italy, there’s not much question that the ensuing lack of trust in institutions led many to view decentralized systems like blockchain more favorably,” he answered.

Lansky seemed to agree. There was no social need or demand for a decentralized payments solution in the 1990s “because we did not have enough experience with the fact that centralized solutions do not work,” he told Cointelegraph.

“Bitcoin was undeniably a cultural product of its times,” added Vessenes. “We wouldn’t have a decentralized push without this DNA of mistrust of central government technology controls.”

Pulling it all together

Overall, one can go back and forth arguing about who contributed what and when. Most agree, though, that most of the pieces were in place by 2008, and Satoshi’s real gift may have been how he was able to pull it all together — in just nine pages. “No single part of Bitcoin’s fundamental mechanics is new,” Gupta reiterated. “The genius is in the combination of these existing three components — Merkle trees, hash cash and distributed hash tables for the networking into a fundamentally new whole.”

But sometimes, the historical environment has to be propitious too. Chaum’s project failed “because there was not enough interest in this service” at the time, among other reasons, according to Lansky. Satoshi Nakamoto, by comparison, had perfect timing. “He came up with Bitcoin in 2008, when the classical financial system was failing,” and the founder’s vanishing from the scene in 2010 “only strengthened Bitcoin, because the development was taken over by its community.”

It should be remembered, too, that technological progress is almost always a collaborative effort. While Satoshi’s system seems “radically different from most other payment systems today,” Narayanan and Clark wrote, “these ideas are quite old, dating back to David Chaum, the father of digital cash.”

Satoshi clearly had forerunners — Chaum, Merkle, Dwork, Naor, Haber, Stornetta and Back, among others. Said Gupta: “Credit where credit is due: Satoshi stood on the shoulders of giants.”


source: https://cointelegraph.com/news/could-bitcoin-have-launched-in-the-1990s-or-was-it-waiting-for-satoshi


Maybe some of you asked that question too ... therefore I posted it  Smiley
95  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Technical Support / Re: Forged or empty WIFs (paper wallets) - do not waste your time on: November 07, 2022, 08:08:24 PM
Anyway, no address containing "6DsQTUiH6" has ever been used.
Thanks a lot. (That was a fast service  Smiley)

So we know that this 'damaged paper' is fake or contains an unused WIF/address.

Some people still try to restore that WIF!
Tell them, they don't need to restore it.
96  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Technical Support / Re: Forged or empty WIFs (paper wallets) - do not waste your time on: November 07, 2022, 07:39:41 PM



Piece of paper used as a example(!) of damaged WIF on WIKI page about paper wallets: https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Paper_wallet
Some people still try to restore that WIF!






@PawGo
Do we know the Bitcoin address of this damaged paper?

If not, we can check it as we have a part of the address:
In that case we would have '6DsQTUiH6'

@LoyceV
Maybe you can find the address? Smiley

To follow up on List of all Bitcoin addresses with a balance and this post, I made a list of all Bitcoin addresses that have ever been used.
97  Bitcoin / Development & Technical Discussion / Re: A useful PoW without replacing Nakamoto Consensus on: October 28, 2022, 07:19:39 PM
Quote
3. The PoW computation is task-based.
If there is no demand, the computer will go to sleep mode to save energy

We propose to build a blockchain with storage and EcoPoW.
Sorry to ask is the computer sleeping as a central storage network, will there be no contribution from other miners to keep the the network running

Some smart miners will create 'fake' demand  Smiley
98  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Technical Support / Re: How to find the first 35 digits of bitcoin private key on: October 25, 2022, 06:27:18 PM
Now lets suppose this is the private key in Wif format starting with 5: 5KJyGeq5gngHP25WMwpNb2jGwRGGerdrasY7rBzKXFVBZ7ZkWBn

Split into 2 parts
First 35 characters : 5KJyGeq5gngHP25WMwpNb2jGwRGGerdras
Last 17 characters : Y7rBzKXFVBZ7ZkWBn

Now my question is that how can i Calculate the exact first part of this address.
because i know if i get the first part then remining 17 will be find with brute force.

If someone knows how to calculate the first part, they would be able to calculate all 51 characters. So you won't need to brute force the second part.
99  Other / Archival / Re: Help! My wallet was stole and password changed! 3million BTS and 800BTC gone. on: October 21, 2022, 09:10:23 AM
my  bitcoin address is :  1Jk7GXyun2Cadvn2XfsBdSfPToa3KmZaeK

If you posted a signed message with that Bitcoin address, that would help you to find more people to get your BTC back.  Smiley
100  Bitcoin / Development & Technical Discussion / Re: Collection of 18.509 found and used Brainwallets on: October 21, 2022, 09:03:48 AM
recently I have found https://bitcars.eu/ Nice initiative, but I did not investigate deeply how they wok - if they sell cars directly or if it is just a catalogue with offers where owner accepts crypto. But what I like is that they offer almost everything - from aston martin sport car to volkswagen camper Wink

© BitCars | The Crypto Car Marketplace. Since 2016  (btw they are in Switzerland)
https://bitcars.eu/pages/bitcars-bitcoin-automobile-boutique-imprint-legal-disclosure

 Smiley
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