aztecminer
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January 20, 2016, 05:21:24 PM |
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Bitcoin was bound to go back to $400.- I didn't expected this rise so fast, i thought a test $350 ore so then to $400.
they cant go to 350.00, they can be hardballed there. seems to be the case <350 is starting to feel like a pipe dream, if it was going to happen it should have already my guess is price SHOULD BE much higher... but bitcoin isn't some Softball US Stock, so who knows! maybe is why the hearn thing happened, he might be thinking same as u about it would have already if it were going too .. $350 is hardball because from there they would get stuck in a smaller range, or peeps like me and you will win if they go up or down from there... buying at 400-500 range is not very strong position since you are relying on the price to go up from there rather than down .. i do not believe they can beat me at hardball if i bought at 300 - 350 .. i really dont want to buy above 300 though, but if i did, i am confident i would woop em at their game. i don't believe at this time we will see <350 anytime soon much less <300 before halving. i think <350 we can buy in w new fiat and force the win though . your not thinking long term enough in 6-24months there simply wont be any supply at these prices, price might need to climb an order of magnitude once bitcoin is over this block limit crap and supply drops. there are very useful applications to bitcoin poeple are going to find them and use them save some money and make bitcoin price explode. going up. i have cold storage coins for that... at least for me, buying at 400 - 500 to HODL would be a position that relies on bitcoin to go up.. i don't like that position, i prefer a position that doesnt matter which way they go i will win .. anything could happen.. i still think bitfinex is a weakened link in the bitcoin chain.. proceed with caution .
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yefi
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January 20, 2016, 05:29:04 PM |
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Nice try Hearn, but you haven't got the power to stop this train.
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BitUsher
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January 20, 2016, 05:32:05 PM |
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So it should be possible to break Bitcoin's consensus mechanism via node creation? Aren't nodes ridiculously cheap to set up? Walk me through what you mean by boldface above, what are the potential outcomes?
You are generally a troll and "cunt" that I ignore but I will make an exception because this appears to be a valid question : What is of importance is the economic majority that backs those nodes. A node is only as secure and useful to the network insomuch as it has unique and active users behind such nodes. Thus nodes that are in control of exchanges/merchants/processors/Wallets are typically more important than regular nodes and nodes without active users can be malicious. Case in point - A certain btc company recently decided to assist the community with a PR stunt by deploying hundreds of nodes with multiple amazon Ec2 instances without users actively securing them and using them. This type of deployment hurts the bitcoin ecosystem and makes it less decentralized. Another way to understand the power dynamic is what good or mined coins from 75% of the mining community if the other 75% of the economic majority doesn't except them in their stores, exchanges , or in person. Their currency would suddenly become worthless in a short while.
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CuntChocula
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January 20, 2016, 05:36:37 PM |
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So it should be possible to break Bitcoin's consensus mechanism via node creation? Aren't nodes ridiculously cheap to set up? Walk me through what you mean by boldface above, what are the potential outcomes?
You are generally a troll and "cunt" that I ignore but I will make an exception because this appears to be a valid question : What is of importance is the economic majority that backs those nodes. A node is only as secure and useful to the network insomuch as it has unique and active users behind such nodes. Thus nodes that are in control of exchanges/merchants/processors/Wallets are typically more important than regular nodes and nodes without active users can be malicious. Case in point - A certain btc company recently decided to assist the community with a PR stunt by deploying hundreds of nodes with multiple amazon Ec2 instances without users actively securing them and using them. This type of deployment hurts the bitcoin ecosystem and makes it less decentralized. Are you suggesting that Bitcoin's security hinges on people's good faith (to not deploy "hundreds of nodes with multiple amazon Ec2 instances without users actively securing them and using them")?!
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oda.krell
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January 20, 2016, 05:40:40 PM |
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Are you suggesting that Bitcoin's security hinges on people's good faith (to not deploy "hundreds of nodes with multiple amazon Ec2 instances without users actively securing them and using them"?!
No. He suggests that a naive attack that succeeds to only create a majority in the least capital intensive of the three areas (nodes, mining, capital/economic majority) in isolation is doomed to fail -- due to a reaction of the rest of the network out of pure self-interest.
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BitUsher
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January 20, 2016, 05:41:00 PM |
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Are you suggesting that Bitcoin's security hinges on peoples good faith (not to deploy "hundreds of nodes with multiple amazon Ec2 instances without users actively securing them and using them"?!
I said the exact opposite.... but to answer your insinuation: the answer is in understanding the fundementals of bitcoin - Full nodes check for the --- The longest valid PoW chain, so a "51% attack" would need to be carried out along side a Sybil attack. If a majority of the economic majority or nodes broke away from the majority of the hash power than they better quickly switch PoW algo's as they would indeed be susceptible to a 51% attack. Here is an example of a backup plan devs have if miners ever go rogue or do something stupid- https://np.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/41aocn/httpsbitcoinorgenbitcoincorecapacityincreases_why/cz0z9ymhttps://github.com/luke-jr/bitcoin/commit/8d3a84c242598ef3cdc733e99dddebfecdad84a6Keccak with a Nf15 appears extremely ASIC resistant. ***Clarification*** This is just an prepared idea and not a plan. The core devs obviously are prepared for the worst case scenarios like miners being compromised or doing something idiotic like raising the 21 million limit. Luckily most mining pools are intelligent and have our best interests in mind like most of the developers and these drastic steps likely will never be needed.
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Dotto
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No maps for these territories
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January 20, 2016, 05:47:49 PM |
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Sub $300 coins around february 11th. BFX might flash crash as low as $160 for a nanosecond After that:  Hold your fiat. Quote me. i always keep some fiat, or at least try to.. on other hand i am looking at how to buy pms and keep those stored in vault in singapore. i think that is a better idea atm, buy the suppressed pms rather than the pumped bitcoins. You should read the Andromeda Bitcoinian Catastrophe. Its about a crypto that cost 400~$. When iy enters bubble mode goes to 4000, then moon, after that, solar system, and finally, Andromeda. Bears and precious metals get utterly REKT in the odisea. You may like it
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CuntChocula
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January 20, 2016, 05:49:06 PM |
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Are you suggesting that Bitcoin's security hinges on people's good faith (to not deploy "hundreds of nodes with multiple amazon Ec2 instances without users actively securing them and using them"?!
No. He suggests that a naive attack that succeeds to only create a majority in the least capital intensive of the three areas (nodes, mining, capital/economic majority) in isolation is doomed to fail -- due to a reaction of the rest of the network out of pure self-interest. So how should have the network reacted to the boldface above, in its self-interest? Did it do so? If yes, why was boldface dangerous? If not, why not?
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Dotto
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No maps for these territories
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January 20, 2016, 05:52:44 PM |
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You guys are focusing to much on USDBTC  Looks a bit like BTC/oil  Good points
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CuntChocula
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January 20, 2016, 05:55:39 PM |
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If a majority of the economic majority or nodes broke away from the majority of the hash power than they better quickly switch PoW algo's as they would indeed be susceptible to a 51% attack.
You keep implying a link between "economic majority" and "nodes." Not obvious to me. Nodes could be created & run (at minimal expense) by actors hodling no bitcoin; many (most) hodlers don't run nodes, so?
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BitUsher
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January 20, 2016, 05:58:24 PM |
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Are you suggesting that Bitcoin's security hinges on people's good faith (to not deploy "hundreds of nodes with multiple amazon Ec2 instances without users actively securing them and using them"?!
No. He suggests that a naive attack that succeeds to only create a majority in the least capital intensive of the three areas (nodes, mining, capital/economic majority) in isolation is doomed to fail -- due to a reaction of the rest of the network out of pure self-interest. So how should have the network reacted to the boldface above, in its self-interest? Did it do so? If yes, why was boldface dangerous? If not, why not? Yes, devs and people who actually understand bitcoin corrected the company and educated the errors in their ways. Simply deploying hundreds of nodes without active users securing them with economic interests isn't extremely dangerous in itself because wallets still check for the longest PoW chain and not just the rules from the corresponding nodes. It is dangerous in a sense that those nodes could falsely give the impression that our ecosystem was more decentralized and it could introduce some potential non-consensus bugs but any nodes that were compromised and didn't follow the consensus rules would simply be an ignored alt. You keep implying a link between "economic majority" and "nodes." Not obvious to me. Nodes could be created & run (at minimal expense) by actors hodling no bitcoin; many (most) hodlers don't run nodes, so?
You aren't realizing that full nodes validate both the longest PoW chain and if the valid rules are being followed. What you are describing is the creation of an alt , which is fine and has no direct impact on bitcoin. Nodes that don't have economic interests behind them are of little value. Not all nodes are equal! Here is an analogy to consider: What is worth more: 5 large fortune 500 companies and their userbase that enjoys their products and services or 100 shell companies with no capital, no products, and no users? What happens in an ecosystem when these 100 shell companies are introduced to a location and the general public chooses to ignore them because they don't like their product?
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ChartBuddy
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1CBuddyxy4FerT3hzMmi1Jz48ESzRw1ZzZ
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January 20, 2016, 06:01:46 PM |
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CuntChocula
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January 20, 2016, 06:08:21 PM |
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Are you suggesting that Bitcoin's security hinges on people's good faith (to not deploy "hundreds of nodes with multiple amazon Ec2 instances without users actively securing them and using them"?!
No. He suggests that a naive attack that succeeds to only create a majority in the least capital intensive of the three areas (nodes, mining, capital/economic majority) in isolation is doomed to fail -- due to a reaction of the rest of the network out of pure self-interest. So how should have the network reacted to the boldface above, in its self-interest? Did it do so? If yes, why was boldface dangerous? If not, why not? Yes, devs and people who actually understand bitcoin corrected the company and educated the errors in their ways. Simply deploying hundreds of nodes without active users securing them with economic interests isn't extremely dangerous in itself because wallets still check for the longest PoW chain and not just the rules from the corresponding nodes. It is dangerous in a sense that those nodes could falsely give the impression that our ecosystem was more decentralized and it could introduce some potential non-consensus bugs but any nodes that were compromised and didn't follow the consensus rules would simply be an ignored alt. So Bitcoin's security depends on the dev team spotting and educating the malefactors? But if the intent is to harm Bitcoin (statist gubermint thugs, Saurian Bankster Jewesses, etc.), wouldn't they laugh at the devs' friendly advice? What would the outcome have been, had the miscreant ignored devs' advice & said "lolno, putting up moar nodes, don't cost us shit"?
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BitUsher
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January 20, 2016, 06:12:51 PM |
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So Bitcoin's security depends on the dev team spotting and educating the malefactors? But if the intent is to harm Bitcoin (statist gubermint thugs, Saurian Bankster Jewesses, etc.), wouldn't they laugh at the devs' friendly advice? What would have been the outcome if the misguided Bitcoin company ignored devs' advice & said lolno, we're putting up more nodes, don't cost us shit?
Simply deploying hundreds of nodes without active users securing them with economic interests isn't extremely dangerous in itself because wallets still check for the longest PoW chain and not just the rules from the corresponding nodes. It is dangerous in a sense that those nodes could falsely give the impression that our ecosystem was more decentralized and it could introduce some potential non-consensus bugs but any nodes that were compromised and didn't follow the consensus rules would simply be an ignored alt.
The security of our ecosystem is dependent upon all of us, not just the devs. This goes the same for security on the internet and in meatspace.
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aztecminer
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January 20, 2016, 06:15:25 PM |
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Sub $300 coins around february 11th. BFX might flash crash as low as $160 for a nanosecond After that:  Hold your fiat. Quote me. i always keep some fiat, or at least try to.. on other hand i am looking at how to buy pms and keep those stored in vault in singapore. i think that is a better idea atm, buy the suppressed pms rather than the pumped bitcoins. You should read the Andromeda Bitcoinian Catastrophe. Its about a crypto that cost 400~$. When iy enters bubble mode goes to 4000, then moon, after that, solar system, and finally, Andromeda. Bears and precious metals get utterly REKT in the odisea. You may like it i don't have time right now.. i am publishing Of the Mahabharata Catastrophes in a few weeks... maybe i can fit into my schedule after that.
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CuntChocula
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January 20, 2016, 06:17:17 PM |
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You keep implying a link between "economic majority" and "nodes." Not obvious to me. Nodes could be created & run (at minimal expense) by actors hodling no bitcoin; many (most) hodlers don't run nodes, so?
You aren't realizing that full nodes validate both the longest PoW chain and if the valid rules are being followed. What you are describing is the creation of an alt , which is fine and has no direct impact on bitcoin. Nodes that don't have economic interests behind them are of little value. Not all nodes are equal! Here is an analogy to consider: What is worth more: 5 large fortune 500 companies and their userbase that enjoys their products and services or 100 shell companies with no capital, no products, and no users? What happens in an ecosystem when these 100 shell companies are introduced to a location and the general public chooses to ignore them because they don't like their product? I don't care what the full nodes do, it is irrelevant to my [implicit] question, which is: What makes you believe there's any correlation between nodes & BTC wealth?
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BitUsher
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January 20, 2016, 06:26:47 PM |
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I don't care what the full nodes do, it is irrelevant to my [implicit] question, which is: What makes you believe there's any correlation between nodes & BTC wealth?
Your question is generic and open ended and can be interpreted in multiple ways. So I will take a stab at explaining different aspects. A node is indeed relatively cheap to produce and maintain, but nodes without economic intrest are valueless just like anything in life - fiat, assets, stocks, ect..).The reason why certain nodes are more valuable than others is because the network effect. A single user behind a full node with an active wallet is more valuable than a userless ec2 node because the node is being tested for bugs and has a real economic actor behind it that can make both economic decisions as to assigning value to items and the consensus rules within his wallet. A node controlled by a processor /wallet/ merchant has a greater value as they have a pool of users interacting with their node and thus conforming to their consensus rules. Here is an analogy to consider:
What is worth more: 5 large fortune 500 companies(these companies can be represented by humans and code alone and don't nessesarily need to sell a physical good) and their userbase that enjoys their products and services or 100 shell companies with no capital, no products, and no users? What happens in an ecosystem when these 100 shell companies are introduced to a location and the general public chooses to ignore them because they don't like their product?
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BlindMayorBitcorn
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January 20, 2016, 06:40:46 PM |
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Why are we back above 400? Has the Toominista Rebellion really been defeated?
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BitUsher
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January 20, 2016, 06:42:33 PM |
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Why are we back above 400? Has the Toominista Rebellion really been defeated?
Appears to be china news or stock market getting slammed due to uncertainty and a small amount of capital flight... when consensus is reached or other competing implementations give up I expect a much higher bump.
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inca
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January 20, 2016, 06:53:32 PM |
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Why are we back above 400? Has the Toominista Rebellion really been defeated?
Appears to be china news or stock market getting slammed due to uncertainty and a small amount of capital flight... when consensus is reached or other competing implementations give up I expect a much higher bump. Yep once we get consensus - either a fork higher or Core fold and increase the maximum blocksize to arrest complete loss of support from the entire ecosystem - the relief rally (conveniently timed as a pre-halving surge) could be epic.
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