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Author Topic: My open letter to Bitcoin Foundation  (Read 3756 times)
lucif (OP)
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December 29, 2012, 10:21:57 PM
 #21

That seal must be linked to BS page with my organization details and approval status. With discussions and feedbacks from customers.
lucif (OP)
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December 29, 2012, 10:23:38 PM
 #22

As a service you dont have to get that seal - but you will get less trust without one.
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December 29, 2012, 10:26:53 PM
 #23

I would like to announce my new service called rent-a-customer to ensure all your feedback on CentBitCon looks nice and positive.
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December 29, 2012, 10:29:07 PM
 #24

you are conflating 2 separate things here.  gold serves as a useful analogy.  there is a huge amount of liquidity surrounding the trading of gold on the exchanges precisely b/c it has proven itself in the past as a useful store of value.  there is, otoh, almost a zero economy surrounding gold however.

Bitcoin is just a form of money.  the regulations you speak of concern businesses engaging in Bitcoin services.  there may or may not be a need for a certifying organization.  but it won't affect Bitcoin itself if it becomes a stable store of value like most of us here think it will. 
edd
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December 29, 2012, 10:31:04 PM
 #25

As a service you dont have to get that seal - but you will get less trust without one.

Not necessarily. Whenever I see a business proudly displaying a BBB logo, I wonder what they're trying to hide behind it.

Still around.
repentance
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December 29, 2012, 10:36:09 PM
 #26


Well, i thought its a BF mission

https://bitcoinfoundation.org/about/

Protecting the core client, the infrastructure and the protocol should have nothing whatsoever to do with endorsement of commercial enterprises.

It sounds like you want to implement something along the lines of the Better Business Bureau or the Heart Foundation - the methods of endorsement used by both are deeply flawed.

If a standards oversight organisation is formed - and I do believe that will ultimately happen - then it should only assess services against an objective set of standards.  Customer feedback plays no role in such a process and would ultimately undermine the whole purpose of establishing standards in the first place.

Quote
As a service you dont have to get that seal - but you will get less trust without one.

The seal will not prevent businesses failing.  What you've proposed would not evaluate the kind of information needed to assess the likelihood of a business going broke because its owners are incompetent, it's under-capitalised, it's expanding too quickly, or the hundreds of other reasons new businesses fail.  In fact, if BF starts endorsing Bitcoin businesses and people lose money because they relied on that endorsement BF may well expose itself to legal liability.

All I can say is that this is Bitcoin. I don't believe it until I see six confirmations.
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December 29, 2012, 10:38:19 PM
 #27

"The" Bitcoin Foundation doesn't seem to be doing shit other than collecting funds for their own agenda(s), and if they are, they aren't being open and transparent about their activities, either way it's fail. Maybe it's time for another round of ddos for the foundation? I'm sure they had fun with that after they went online for the first few weeks. Do not give funds to the foundation unless they tell you exactly how your funds will be used, and this will never happen. Abolish it; the quicker the better.
casascius
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December 29, 2012, 10:51:07 PM
 #28

"The" Bitcoin Foundation doesn't seem to be doing shit other than collecting funds for their own agenda(s)

I suppose they should be collecting funds for "your" (or anyone else's) agenda instead?  Seems to me like they're doing plenty, 6 posts on their blog including a "status report" in the last 30 days.

The Foundation can't "force" anybody to do anything.  The only thing that a site seal certifies is the ability of a website operator to add an image of a seal to his web page.

Companies claiming they got hacked and lost your coins sounds like fraud so perfect it could be called fashionable.  I never believe them.  If I ever experience the misfortune of a real intrusion, I declare I have been honest about the way I have managed the keys in Casascius Coins.  I maintain no ability to recover or reproduce the keys, not even under limitless duress or total intrusion.  Remember that trusting strangers with your coins without any recourse is, as a matter of principle, not a best practice.  Don't keep coins online. Use paper or hardware wallets instead.
cypherdoc
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December 29, 2012, 10:52:35 PM
 #29

the one big thing they ARE doing is getting Gavin paid deservedly for all his hard work and time. 
casascius
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December 29, 2012, 10:58:35 PM
 #30

BS, the foundation should be looking out for the community, not the views of 2 businesses and one developer. If he is looking for a pay day, then maybe he shouldn't be the lead developer, complete BS.

Why is that BS?  He forgot he is a slave and works for free?  What do you do for a living, do you work for free?  A fair bit ironic to see this just to the right of:

Quote
Java, PHP, HTML/CSS Programmer for Hire!

If he was getting a pay day and contributing nothing, I suppose I could understand, but when "core development status report" is only 8 days old and clearly indicates he is delivering software and preparing to deliver more, I think we as a community are getting a damn good deal and I think we as a community should rather keep him building bitcoin software.

Companies claiming they got hacked and lost your coins sounds like fraud so perfect it could be called fashionable.  I never believe them.  If I ever experience the misfortune of a real intrusion, I declare I have been honest about the way I have managed the keys in Casascius Coins.  I maintain no ability to recover or reproduce the keys, not even under limitless duress or total intrusion.  Remember that trusting strangers with your coins without any recourse is, as a matter of principle, not a best practice.  Don't keep coins online. Use paper or hardware wallets instead.
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December 29, 2012, 11:03:37 PM
 #31

gavin andersen is not the financial regulator. he is the guy that helped develop the currency infrustructure kind of like the mint.

the US mint, is not the SEC

the UK mint is not the FSA

I DO NOT TRADE OR ACT AS ESCROW ON THIS FORUM EVER.
Please do your own research & respect what is written here as both opinion & information gleaned from experience. many people replying with insults but no on-topic content substance, automatically are 'facepalmed' and yawned at
cypherdoc
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December 29, 2012, 11:07:19 PM
 #32

BS, the foundation should be looking out for the community, not the views of 2 businesses and one developer. If he is looking for a pay day, then maybe he shouldn't be the lead developer, complete BS.

Why is that BS?  He forgot he is a slave and works for free?  What do you do for a living, do you work for free?  A fair bit ironic to see this just to the right of:

Quote
Java, PHP, HTML/CSS Programmer for Hire!

lol!
FreeMoney
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December 29, 2012, 11:52:09 PM
 #33

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It must force

Wow, strong. You gunna force it to force people I suppose?


Play Bitcoin Poker at sealswithclubs.eu. We're active and open to everyone.
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December 30, 2012, 12:11:43 AM
 #34

BS, the foundation should be looking out for the community, not the views of 2 businesses and one developer. If he is looking for a pay day, then maybe he shouldn't be the lead developer, complete BS.

Why is that BS?  He forgot he is a slave and works for free?  What do you do for a living, do you work for free?  A fair bit ironic to see this just to the right of:

Quote
Java, PHP, HTML/CSS Programmer for Hire!

If he was getting a pay day and contributing nothing, I suppose I could understand, but when "core development status report" is only 8 days old and clearly indicates he is delivering software and preparing to deliver more, I think we as a community are getting a damn good deal and I think we as a community should rather keep him building bitcoin software.

Then why don't we start paying all developers, he choose to work for free, I choose to be compensated for my work. Satoshi didn't hold a gun to his head and say "hey you have to do this" he was choose and he accepted. Calling him a slave is crazy talk. I just feel like that foundation is, paying his way and the core developers, honestly I rather see the money go to something more worth while. Why don't they have a booth at CEAS, he is the best one to really talk about bitcoins. Also has anyone noticed you say one thing about the foundation and everyone from that elitist group attacks, this is why it will fail, it is a dictatorship so far. Again 2 business companies and a developer I see trouble ahead.
notme
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December 30, 2012, 12:16:56 AM
 #35

BS, the foundation should be looking out for the community, not the views of 2 businesses and one developer. If he is looking for a pay day, then maybe he shouldn't be the lead developer, complete BS.

Why is that BS?  He forgot he is a slave and works for free?  What do you do for a living, do you work for free?  A fair bit ironic to see this just to the right of:

Quote
Java, PHP, HTML/CSS Programmer for Hire!

If he was getting a pay day and contributing nothing, I suppose I could understand, but when "core development status report" is only 8 days old and clearly indicates he is delivering software and preparing to deliver more, I think we as a community are getting a damn good deal and I think we as a community should rather keep him building bitcoin software.

Then why don't we start paying all developers, he choose to work for free, I choose to be compensated for my work. Satoshi didn't hold a gun to his head and say "hey you have to do this" he was choose and he accepted. Calling him a slave is crazy talk. I just feel like that foundation is, paying his way and the core developers, honestly I rather see the money go to something more worth while. Why don't they have a booth at CEAS, he is the best one to really talk about bitcoins. Also has anyone noticed you say one thing about the foundation and everyone from that elitist group attacks, this is why it will fail, it is a dictatorship so far. Again 2 business companies and a developer I see trouble ahead.

Then lose the tunnel vision.  There are way more than 2 companies and many developers.  In fact, there will likely be multiple foundations that support the bitcoin economy/infrastructure/software development/legal issues/etc. in time.  Of course it's scary when you are in a tunnel.  Almost everything is darkness.

https://www.bitcoin.org/bitcoin.pdf
While no idea is perfect, some ideas are useful.
ydenys
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December 30, 2012, 12:53:32 AM
 #36

About strong move, security and responsibility from the point of view of speculant.

You all know what happened right after price bump in Jun 2011. Mtgox got hacked.

Because unknown service coded on knees was not valued in hackers while bitcoin didnt have significant value. But since bump, MtGox security gained value in hackers' eyes. They realized that there are millions of dollars located there and nobody there doesn't mind about security. And we got what we got.

The same stuff with pirateat40, bitcoinica and others. Anonymouse nature of bitcoin destroys any responsibility in service owners mind.

There is no central authority in Bitcoin which will force services to complete identification and force to meet security standards like PCI-DSS like it is done in payment card industry by banks and VISA.

And what does Bitcoin Foundation do about that? Nothing. They just scream about bitcoin price gaining value 100500% in press release.

They dont realize that if Bitcoin will get $100 in value - 80% of bitcoin services will be hacked and scam people for money due lack of security and resposibility.

All major drops were due to or accelerated with some big service fuckup.

Bitcoin will not get enought liquidity on market until Bitcoin Foundation will not bring to community central advisory authority for bitcoin centralized services.

It must force services to meet security and responsibility standards.

It should put site seal for approved services which hints common users that service is verified and keeps security standards.

It should widthdraw site seal from services which ignore users complains or security standards and identification procedures. This will hint common users to be careful with this service.

I think I dont need to explain, that wide usage of Bitcoins needs price stability - coz everyone fear volatility.

And price stabilty only may be reached with enough liquidity on market.

But enough liquidity on market can't be reached without people trust in centralized services. They just scaried to do this. They fear scam.

So we need a service which will verify, identify and watch for keeping security stadards by existsting verified Bitcoin centralized services.

Please provide us with one. Thanks.

Sorry for not reading through all thread, but what you purpose is exactly what is now devaluing current ‘money’ and making bitcoin valuable by being different.

There is an issue in a very core of present ‘trust in authority’-based value storage/exchange system and until it is correctly addressed, this [alternative] concept has little, but quite certain value.

One can simply argue that the current worth of bitcoin is solely based on p2p, free will, free market value exchange model (it may be as hypothetical as you/others like you choose it to be) and while your proposal, correctly implemented, would certainly attract some comfortably big-pocketed users and even move the currency forward, it is nothing but a copy of existing model with different players (different only so far).

However, it is likely to discourage current majority from using it and will simply kill the fundamental idea of an individual(s) being solely responsible for their own worth. (Which i like).

Rather than propagate protected by the state/central authority/Jesus the god concept why not to leave it as it is and rely on a free will and free market model which is always at least morally clean and is in itself beautiful. Sure, we all are imperfect, but do most of us need ‘protection’ from ourselves? Time will tell Smiley

Saying that, i would like to see an attempt (and it is as sure as rain to follow) of BF/other entity to try and regulate bitcoin – this and majority’s reply to this (not price fluctuations/miners/future technology, etc) is what will make or break this concept.
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December 30, 2012, 01:31:54 AM
 #37

I would suggest become a member and get elected/vote to bf-board.

Wait isn't the bitcoin foundation suppose to help the bitcoin community, when did it turn to an elite country club? This is why I would never pay for the bitcoin foundation, they are becoming elitist already. So sad...

They should change the name to Biterati Foundation.

Introducing constraints to the economy only serves to limit what can be economical.
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December 30, 2012, 02:01:18 AM
 #38

Quote
They just scaried to do this
lmao,

You obviously do not understand why Bitcoin is popular in the first place. People use Bitcoin for the anonymity of it, I doubt anyone who understands Bitcoin would truly want to destroy that.
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December 30, 2012, 11:40:45 AM
 #39

There is absolutely nothing preventing existing Bitcoin services from forming a professional organisation which requires its members to adhere to specific standards on a whole range of issues.

It should never be the role of Bitcoin Foundation to endorse individual services, although it should probably play a role in facilitating discussion about central issues affecting Bitcoin including desirable security standards and perhaps publish discussion papers on those issues from time to time.

Apart from anything else, it's almost impossible to play a standards oversight role without charging a fee to evaluate organisations for endorsement - you need qualified people to evaluate those applications and to assess whether organisations are actually complying with standards as they claim.  BF really isn't the appropriate body to do that given the composition of its board.

Likewise, the endorsement becomes absolutely meaningless the minute that an organisation which has been endorsed fails - and that will happen because the majority of new business ventures do fail.  An endorsement isn't going to help people get their money back - it may well lull people into a false sense of security, though.

You'll get responsibility when there are real world consequences for losing other people's funds - something a "tick of approval" can't address.

Insurance (insurance company) - that's the problem of anonymity and security (confidence in the new companies) IMHO  Undecided Undecided

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December 30, 2012, 03:07:05 PM
 #40

We don't need a "Bitcoin Foundation seal" - there are many companies where you can get something like that ... http://www.truste.com/products-and-services/consumer_privacy/Seal_Comparisons

And here are 2 examples of services with security seals: Mt.Gox, CampBX

Also has anyone noticed you say one thing about the foundation and everyone from that elitist group attacks, this is why it will fail, it is a dictatorship so far. Again 2 business companies and a developer I see trouble ahead.

gweedo, what makes you so aggressive when it comes to the Bitcoin Foundation? When you take a look inside (2.5 BTC per year for an elitist group is quite cheap), you'll see it's just a group of 242  humans (right now) - and most of them are really friendly. Nobody forced me to pay 25 BTC and I don't regret it.

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