I am wondering if people here can show what the real Mt. Gox transactions looked like, or if we can work that out ourselves.
Actually I have three outgoing transactions that I know to have been from Mt. Gox. I have looked at the script data. It is kind of
interesting.
The first two on 23rd and 24th of january actually have
negative R and S value of the signature, this means that they have one leading 0 byte and the highest bit set (as they should for negative values). This is a non-canonical signature but valid.
The third transaction on the 31st of january has positive R and S values, so would be canonical.
The IP addresses that transmitted them were involved in a lot of other transmits but they all stopped transmitting on the 4th of february (or blockchain has dropped collecting them?). They are three distinct ip-addresses.
https://blockchain.info/en/tx/5a8464c4e91af71cf77b5cf3f13eca4c5f6e064d4d2cede4037669b839d3d8a4https://blockchain.info/en/tx/d19141769fca9e484616b373a6a0cef234dfda80275a012d2753e1d2b03e7d22https://blockchain.info/nl/tx/927f3fd7aab1ad8700ed841d07385ccfb2506c3f8bcbfcc17c25e7d2b40988b0What were the true Mt. Gox transactions, the non canonical ones or the canonical one? Is the canonical one really a mutated transaction, or did Mt. Gox use the standard client for it?
Anyone?