iCEBREAKER
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Crypto is the separation of Power and State.
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March 30, 2015, 05:44:24 PM |
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I hate to pull the dev worship card, but unfortunately those that really have the chops (xmr devs) are discouraged to respond, because they are accused of wasting their time and not developing their coin. So in that sense, this thread ran its course before it even started, because the XMR devs are probably exasperated with the cycle of providing critiques and then getting lambasted for providing critiques.
They're playing games to minimize, deflect, and rationalize criticism of their Gold Donkey Cult. When a dev from a competing coin posts, they say 'shut up and work on your own coin.' When non-devs posts, they say 'OMG your critique isn't technical enough.' When a former DARK dev posts, they say 'OMG vertoe is disgruntled and ranting.' If anyone says 'Masternodes and the rest of DASH use unproven crypto' they say 'OMG the burden of proof is on you, so break it or GTFO.'
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majamina
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March 30, 2015, 05:50:37 PM |
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Signal to noise ratio seriously dropping...I'll leave you guys to play with yourselves Will check back later to see if there's new information of any substance. Hope so.
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GingerAle
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March 30, 2015, 05:51:49 PM |
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i like my monkey analogy. "Monero - designed so monkeys can privately trade bananas"
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Hueristic
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Doomed to see the future and unable to prevent it
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March 30, 2015, 05:52:00 PM |
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Signal to noise ratio seriously dropping...I'll leave you guys to play with yourselves Will check back later to see if there's new information of any substance. Hope so. Don't go, I still have coffee and need the laughs.
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“Bad men need nothing more to compass their ends, than that good men should look on and do nothing.”
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generalizethis
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Facts are more efficient than fud
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March 30, 2015, 05:58:40 PM |
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Can anyone even explain a masternode? I mean technically, not a outline, but a detailed explanation of all the moving parts?
I assume human elements will always fail (greed, corruption, stupidity, good intentions) as they do in real life, so if the mastenode system depends on humans obeying best practices to function securely, it follows reason that they will be broken. But if the masternode system does not depend on humans following best use practices for security, then the system should theoretically work--so can I get an thorough explanation?
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BlockaFett
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March 30, 2015, 06:08:20 PM |
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Can anyone even explain a masternode? I mean technically, not a outline, but a detailed explanation of all the moving parts?
I assume human elements will always fail (greed, corruption, stupidity, good intentions) as they do in real life, so if the mastenode system depends on humans obeying best practices to function securely, it follows reason that they will be broken. But if the masternode system does not depend on humans following best use practices for security, then the system should theoretically work--so can I get an thorough explanation?
just my opinion but on this idea that masternodes rely on a human element and humans can't be trusted so they are insecure, personally i don't think so because: human trust fails on individual/small cases - so if human trust governed say transactions, they wouldn't work. but a *network* of humans is a very different thing same as a network of ants or network of neurons in your brain. first it's a chaotic system, second the security is a statistical result and governed by more chaotic predicitions like game theory, not a binary one where a single human is either trustworthy or not in an algorithm. so its misunderstanding at a systems level to say masternodes require human trust - like if I buy BTC i am relying on human trust because miners / fullnodes are run by humans. chaotic systems are governed by actors and their incentives anyway... About the structure from the masternodes, there is a white paper here: http://www.dashpay.io/downloads/DarkcoinWhitepaper.pdfIDK the minutia because i try not to get into detail level on everything. but i can try to explain the concept if u want (others can do it better though i'm sure)
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vokain
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March 30, 2015, 06:10:23 PM |
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Can anyone even explain a masternode? I mean technically, not a outline, but a detailed explanation of all the moving parts?
I assume human elements will always fail (greed, corruption, stupidity, good intentions) as they do in real life, so if the mastenode system depends on humans obeying best practices to function securely, it follows reason that they will be broken. But if the masternode system does not depend on humans following best use practices for security, then the system should theoretically work--so can I get an thorough explanation?
just my opinion but on this idea that masternodes rely on a human element and humans can't be trusted so they are insecure, personally i don't think so because: human trust fails on individual/small cases - so if human trust governed say transactions, they wouldn't work. but a *network* of humans is a very different thing same as a network of ants or network of neurons in your brain. first it's a chaotic system, second the security is a statistical result and governed by more chaotic predicitions like game theory, not a binary one where a single human is either trustworthy or not in an algorithm. so its misunderstanding at a systems level to say masternodes require human trust - like if I buy BTC i am relying on human trust because miners / fullnodes are run by humans. chaotic systems are governed by actors and their incentives anyway... About the structure from the masternodes, there is a white paper here: http://www.dashpay.io/downloads/DarkcoinWhitepaper.pdfIDK the minutia because i try not to get into detail level on everything. but i can try to explain the concept if u want (others can do it better though i'm sure) 404 error :/
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generalizethis
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Facts are more efficient than fud
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March 30, 2015, 06:22:33 PM |
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Blockafett, trying to get me to believe that depending on humans for security is a "good thing" is not going to work. The less a system depends on humans the better, and that seems doubly true for a system that is entrusted with your well-being (finances, privacy, security). * Here you go, Vokain, this was the post I remembered (not Fluffy's man hours ) it was the db total: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=583449.msg10556465#msg10556465 The project total here is (taken from Fluffypony's estimate): "35 weeks of development (245 days) since Monero was inherited by the Core Team 594 separate commits 11 contributors 10 221 modified lines 12 706 new lines 32 lines removed Combining the two together, there were 22 927 lines of code over the first 8 months, which is 18 342 hours of work, so $1 375 620 worth of effort." --OMF--Organic-memory fail. I should have used the AFAIK safety word. I did send Fluffy a pm asking about his personal total, but he probably thinks I'm a tax informant now, so I don't know if he'll give me that total. But this should at least answer how devs calculate these figures.
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BlockaFett
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March 30, 2015, 06:30:46 PM |
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Blockafett, trying to get me to believe that depending on humans for security is a "good thing" is not going to work. The less a system depends on humans the better, and that seems doubly true for a system that is entrusted with your well-being (finances, privacy, security). * Here you go, Vokain, this was the post I remembered (not Fluffy's man hours ) it was the db total: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=583449.msg10556465#msg10556465 The project total here is (taken from Fluffypony's estimate): "35 weeks of development (245 days) since Monero was inherited by the Core Team 594 separate commits 11 contributors 10 221 modified lines 12 706 new lines 32 lines removed Combining the two together, there were 22 927 lines of code over the first 8 months, which is 18 342 hours of work, so $1 375 620 worth of effort." --OMF--Organic-memory fail. I should have used the AFAIK safety word. I did send Fluffy a pm asking about his personal total, but he probably thinks I'm a tax informant now, so I don't know if he'll give me that total. But this should at least answer how devs calculate these figures. "trying to get me to believe that depending on humans for security is a "good thing" is not going to work. The less a system depends on humans the better, and that seems doubly true for a system that is entrusted with your well-being (finances, privacy, security)." masternodes 'depend on humans for security' in the same way that bitcoin fullnodes 'depend on humans for security' dude. It's a misapplication of the concept of trustless operation.
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generalizethis
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Facts are more efficient than fud
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March 30, 2015, 06:32:53 PM |
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Blockafett, trying to get me to believe that depending on humans for security is a "good thing" is not going to work. The less a system depends on humans the better, and that seems doubly true for a system that is entrusted with your well-being (finances, privacy, security). * Here you go, Vokain, this was the post I remembered (not Fluffy's man hours ) it was the db total: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=583449.msg10556465#msg10556465 The project total here is (taken from Fluffypony's estimate): "35 weeks of development (245 days) since Monero was inherited by the Core Team 594 separate commits 11 contributors 10 221 modified lines 12 706 new lines 32 lines removed Combining the two together, there were 22 927 lines of code over the first 8 months, which is 18 342 hours of work, so $1 375 620 worth of effort." --OMF--Organic-memory fail. I should have used the AFAIK safety word. I did send Fluffy a pm asking about his personal total, but he probably thinks I'm a tax informant now, so I don't know if he'll give me that total. But this should at least answer how devs calculate these figures. "trying to get me to believe that depending on humans for security is a "good thing" is not going to work. The less a system depends on humans the better, and that seems doubly true for a system that is entrusted with your well-being (finances, privacy, security)." masternodes 'depend on humans for security' in the same way that bitcoin fullnodes 'depend on humans for security' dude. It's a misapplication of the concept of trustless operation. It's not a misapplication; Bitcoin is claiming to be a public blockchain, and drk is claiming to be private.
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Hueristic
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Doomed to see the future and unable to prevent it
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March 30, 2015, 06:34:04 PM |
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^^^ That is only the actual coding. Development has many other aspects that are time consuming. Especially when starting from someone else's code.
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“Bad men need nothing more to compass their ends, than that good men should look on and do nothing.”
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BlockaFett
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March 30, 2015, 06:35:28 PM |
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Blockafett, trying to get me to believe that depending on humans for security is a "good thing" is not going to work. The less a system depends on humans the better, and that seems doubly true for a system that is entrusted with your well-being (finances, privacy, security). * Here you go, Vokain, this was the post I remembered (not Fluffy's man hours ) it was the db total: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=583449.msg10556465#msg10556465 The project total here is (taken from Fluffypony's estimate): "35 weeks of development (245 days) since Monero was inherited by the Core Team 594 separate commits 11 contributors 10 221 modified lines 12 706 new lines 32 lines removed Combining the two together, there were 22 927 lines of code over the first 8 months, which is 18 342 hours of work, so $1 375 620 worth of effort." --OMF--Organic-memory fail. I should have used the AFAIK safety word. I did send Fluffy a pm asking about his personal total, but he probably thinks I'm a tax informant now, so I don't know if he'll give me that total. But this should at least answer how devs calculate these figures. "trying to get me to believe that depending on humans for security is a "good thing" is not going to work. The less a system depends on humans the better, and that seems doubly true for a system that is entrusted with your well-being (finances, privacy, security)." masternodes 'depend on humans for security' in the same way that bitcoin fullnodes 'depend on humans for security' dude. It's a misapplication of the concept of trustless operation. It's not a misapplication; Bitcoin is claiming to be a public blockchain, and drk is claiming to be private. whateva
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generalizethis
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Facts are more efficient than fud
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March 30, 2015, 06:38:51 PM |
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Blockafett, trying to get me to believe that depending on humans for security is a "good thing" is not going to work. The less a system depends on humans the better, and that seems doubly true for a system that is entrusted with your well-being (finances, privacy, security). * Here you go, Vokain, this was the post I remembered (not Fluffy's man hours ) it was the db total: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=583449.msg10556465#msg10556465 The project total here is (taken from Fluffypony's estimate): "35 weeks of development (245 days) since Monero was inherited by the Core Team 594 separate commits 11 contributors 10 221 modified lines 12 706 new lines 32 lines removed Combining the two together, there were 22 927 lines of code over the first 8 months, which is 18 342 hours of work, so $1 375 620 worth of effort." --OMF--Organic-memory fail. I should have used the AFAIK safety word. I did send Fluffy a pm asking about his personal total, but he probably thinks I'm a tax informant now, so I don't know if he'll give me that total. But this should at least answer how devs calculate these figures. "trying to get me to believe that depending on humans for security is a "good thing" is not going to work. The less a system depends on humans the better, and that seems doubly true for a system that is entrusted with your well-being (finances, privacy, security)." masternodes 'depend on humans for security' in the same way that bitcoin fullnodes 'depend on humans for security' dude. It's a misapplication of the concept of trustless operation. It's not a misapplication; Bitcoin is claiming to be a public blockchain, and drk is claiming to be private. whateva Don't you mean "what Evan?"
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vokain
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March 30, 2015, 06:42:22 PM |
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Blockafett, trying to get me to believe that depending on humans for security is a "good thing" is not going to work. The less a system depends on humans the better, and that seems doubly true for a system that is entrusted with your well-being (finances, privacy, security). * Here you go, Vokain, this was the post I remembered (not Fluffy's man hours ) it was the db total: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=583449.msg10556465#msg10556465 The project total here is (taken from Fluffypony's estimate): "35 weeks of development (245 days) since Monero was inherited by the Core Team 594 separate commits 11 contributors 10 221 modified lines 12 706 new lines 32 lines removed Combining the two together, there were 22 927 lines of code over the first 8 months, which is 18 342 hours of work, so $1 375 620 worth of effort." --OMF--Organic-memory fail. I should have used the AFAIK safety word. I did send Fluffy a pm asking about his personal total, but he probably thinks I'm a tax informant now, so I don't know if he'll give me that total. But this should at least answer how devs calculate these figures. Go team! Thank you generalizethis, I think this is already sufficient for my curiosity. Of course things go deeper than this e.g. refactoring and testing but here are some numbers anyway: Average valuation of a man hour: $75/hr at around 1.25 lines of code per hour—about $60 per line.
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andytoshi
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March 30, 2015, 07:16:20 PM |
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it's more like math hasn't got to the stage where it can describe complex systems, i.e. chaotic systems, e.g. weather, turbulence, market behaviour. That's not a 'human element', it's a 'chaotic element'. Cryptography's purpose is to obscure information for the purpose of un-obscuring it later. Which is essential for underpinnings of mechanics of crypto currency. But when you want to start to lose information like you do with anonymity, (in my opinion) it's not the best suited way. Because it's essentially reversible with the right tools (because the information is confined in one place, it security relies on your ability to decode it). Trying to lose information in a complex system, i don't think that approach is a good idea. You need to abstract the problem and use the system itself, in DRK's case, disparate location of the information, combining information to create ambiguity, across a chaotic network, is used to help 'lose' it - a cryptographic function can't do that; it's an alternative method. So just because there is not a mathematical proof to describe it doesn't matter, current math fails to describe most complex systems, forward brances are trying to like chaos theory. it's the application that counts and the efficacy of it's application which distils down to a statistic result, same as cryptography does IMO.
Hi BlockaFett, I'm not sure what you mean by "math hasn't got to the stage where it can describe complex systems". I have a math degree and several published papers in mathematics and I can't for the life of me square this claim with actual work in the field. Mathematics, though the power of clever abstractions, is able to describe extremely complex systems with inhuman precision and correctness. The breakdown in modeling real systems comes from the fact that real systems have many independent moving parts which we are unable to measure precisely and which are infeasible to compute with anyway. So the problem is not complexity per se, nor is it somehow a failure of mathematics that things are this way. The breakdown in modeling software is that there often is no much-simpler description of a software program than the program itself (which can span many millions of bits). Oh -- and we can define "simpler description" precisely and actually prove that this is true for almost all programs. "Chaotic systems" can be modeled as stochastic processes, and this field is much better developed than I think you realize. And anyway this is about situations where there is no physical way to obtain complete information, not about systems which are humanly defined and whose components are purely mathematical in nature anyway. It sounds like you're trying to justify the standard altcoin practice of responding to criticism by piling on so much complexity that experts won't bother looking at it anymore. But there is no mathematical or scientific result or practice that justifies this. It's just charlatanism. Next, cryptography's purpose is not "to obscure information for the purpose of un-obscuring it later". If you define "obscure" as "computationally indistinguishable from the encryption of a random element" I suppose it might be the purpose of encryption, but that is a much stronger definition of obscure than is usually meant by the word. Lots of cryptography is designed specifically to remove information: zero-knowledge proofs, ring signatures, preimage-resistant hash functions and pseudorandom functions are some examples (and there are many others ... this is just the longest list I could form without slowing typing to think). So this notion that cryptography is inappropriate for these kind of applications is just not true. In fact the only way to do these things without cryptography is to physically control the flow of information, which is at odds with trust-minimization and public verifiability, not to mention really difficult in a world where people routinely communicate over long distances. I hope this helps clarify some things. Andrew
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Joshuar
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March 30, 2015, 07:39:43 PM Last edit: March 30, 2015, 07:52:21 PM by Joshuar |
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Then there's "instant transactions", which as others showed was taken from Green Addresses, a system already available with Bitcoin.
If you read what GreenAddress actually is, you will see they are not at all the same. It can never be used from personal wallets, as the recipient has to trust the previously published sending address not to double spend. This is just one more misunderstanding on what Darkcoin/DASH is in addition to uniform denominations, change handling, and whether masternodes actually send and receive coins. Wait, what does Dash do again? Oh yea, I have to rely on others to setup masternodes in order to even use the "anonymity" in the first place. I also have to trust that all the masternodes are not compromised since most of them are hosted on centralized servers online, as there's still a chance of deanonymizing a transaction. Yippee. Wait, what has your reply to do with the misunderstandings I mentioned? Oh yea, nothing. It's just your need to regurgitate the same old that's been discussed to death already. Since you're so concerned about masternodes "being compromised", can you explain what is exactly the most important data that the attacker (realistically, only the NSA) would collect? Huh? You replied that Green Addresses required a level of trust, to which I replied that Dash's entire masternode system requires a level of trust, get it? It's not even the NSA, it's much more simpler than that. Masternodes are hosted on centralized servers, the hosting providers of such servers technically "own the masternode". Dash's entire masternode system is centralized. Even your former lead developer admitted it...Don't let investments clog your reasoning.
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Johnny Mnemonic
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March 30, 2015, 07:41:12 PM |
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Majamina, all of your questions have been answered many times. It is clear that nothing we say can possibly convince you that DASH is not "fit for purpose" (whatever that means). Nothing will ever be proven to your satisfaction, no matter how many red flags we point out.
At this point, the quality of the anonymity tech should be the least of your concerns. However, that is all you're interested in talking about. You've already agreed DASH's privacy is inferior to Monero's... so what exactly are you really trying to accomplish?
This thread has been quite an eye-opener for me, as I've learned there's been a hell of a lot more going on with DASH than just a shady premine and inferior tech. It makes me sad, Majamina, that you are so determined to go down with this ship.
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majamina
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March 30, 2015, 08:08:42 PM Last edit: March 30, 2015, 08:18:59 PM by majamina |
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Majamina, all of your questions have been answered many times. It is clear that nothing we say can possibly convince you that DASH is not "fit for purpose" (whatever that means). Nothing will ever be proven to your satisfaction, no matter how many red flags we point out.
OK just one last time, for the record: - Nobody has answered the question about DRK fungibility - Nobody has answered the question about Masternodes being 'compromised' by anyone other than NSA - Nobody has responded to Illodin regarding what an attacker would actually get if they compromised a masternode - Nobody has demonstrated how DASH is not fit-for-purpose At this point, the quality of the anonymity tech should be the least of your concerns. However, that is all you're interested in talking about. You've already agreed DASH's privacy is inferior to Monero's... so what exactly are you really trying to accomplish?
No, it's not just the anonymity tech. Critics are saying that Masternodes are flawed but nobody can say why. Masternodes provide Privacy, InstantX and more features to come. This is what makes DASH different - if they're broken then show me and anyone else who's interested in these coins why they're broken. What I'm trying to accomplish, by this point, is to show that the critics of DASH are persistently failing to follow through their claims with anything conclusive. I'm more than happy to be 'pwned' by any of you on this and will then dump my DASH holdings. Go for it! This thread has been quite an eye-opener for me, as I've learned there's been a hell of a lot more going on with DASH than just a shady premine and inferior tech. It makes me sad, Majamina, that you are so determined to go down with this ship.
don't be sad for me, I'm old enough to look after myself
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generalizethis
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Facts are more efficient than fud
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March 30, 2015, 08:21:44 PM |
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Majamina, all of your questions have been answered many times. It is clear that nothing we say can possibly convince you that DASH is not "fit for purpose" (whatever that means). Nothing will ever be proven to your satisfaction, no matter how many red flags we point out.
OK just one last time, for the record: - Nobody has answered the question about DRK fungibility - Nobody has answered the question about Masternodes being 'compromised' by anyone other than NSA - Nobody has responded to Illodin regarding what an attacker would actually get if they compromised a masternode - Nobody has demonstrated how DASH is not fit-for-purpose At this point, the quality of the anonymity tech should be the least of your concerns. However, that is all you're interested in talking about. You've already agreed DASH's privacy is inferior to Monero's... so what exactly are you really trying to accomplish?
No, it's not just the anonymity tech. Everyone is saying that Masternodes are flawed, but nobody can say why. Masternodes provide Privacy, InstantX and more features to come. This is what makes DASH different - if they're broken then show me and anyone else who's interested in these coins why they're broken. What I'm trying to accomplish, by this point, is to show that the critics of DASH are persistently failing to follow through their claims with anything conclusive. I'm more than happy to be 'pwned' by any of you on this and will then dump my DASH holdings. Go for it! This thread has been quite an eye-opener for me, as I've learned there's been a hell of a lot more going on with DASH than just a shady premine and inferior tech. It makes me sad, Majamina, that you are so determined to go down with this ship.
don't be sad for me, I'm old enough to look after myself Can you explain how a masternode works in a more detailed way? I'm curious to see how all the moving parts work in coordination--on just a cursory look, it seems like an added complication (unnecessarily so) to a cryptocurrency.
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iCEBREAKER
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Crypto is the separation of Power and State.
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March 30, 2015, 08:37:26 PM |
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Critics are saying that Masternodes are flawed but nobody can say why.
Masternodes are by default assumed to be flawed until mathematically proven otherwise. You've already been shown the maths proving Cryptonote/Monero is secure and private. There exists no equivalent research for Masternodes, much less the rest of Darkcoin's hodge-podge of borrowed and rebranded crypto tricks. You refuse to listen when gmaxwell, the inventor of CoinJoin, says Evan's homespun version is flawed. Trusted 3rd parties are security holes. That is why Bitcoin exists. If you still don't get it, you never will. There are two kinds of cult enforcers. The first kind are the physical bullies. They keep most of the cultists in line with plain old fear. The second kind are the High Priests, who enforce cult ideology as the Chosen One's lieutenants. They stamp out any doubts which arise, and brainwash new members. You are of the latter type. So congratulations, have this: May your dumpsters of Digital Trash buy you many islands and yachts!
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| "The difference between bad and well-developed digital cash will determine whether we have a dictatorship or a real democracy." David Chaum 1996 "Fungibility provides privacy as a side effect." Adam Back 2014
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