yugo23
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February 11, 2016, 12:48:49 PM |
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I look forward to Lightning Network if it works as we all hope it does. Hopefully it only requires soft forks to implement.
I'd love to run a lightning node and charge a few bit cents for running it to have a small income from my holdings.
Yes, this is an often ignored point drowned out by the critics, conspiracy theorists, and trolls of blockstream. LN is open source, was invented and primarily being developed outside of Blockstream, and is going to offer a viable solution to the dilemma of node centralization by incentivizing node operators.Ok correct me if I'm wrong but centralization of nodes could get some power to the one running them no? Hence decentralization seems a good thing, but if anyone wants to centralize the nodes of the LN, he will only need to put his nodes for free! Then nobody else will use the paying nodes no?
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BitUsher
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February 11, 2016, 12:52:59 PM |
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Sounds like you're planning a good old fashioned purge there. Sure good you're not a collectivist, comrade. Where's Yezhov? Thank you for reinforcing my point. Most individuals are raised to believe in false dichotomies. No, I am not a communist, or collectivist, far from it.... I am advocating for the rights of the individual over the group. An individual classic supporter should have the right to voluntarily fork off, advocate for, or rejoin any other implementation, free from coercion. I am advocating for greater decentralization and more implementations. I have been consistent upon this. Regardless, of being clear and consistent, the moment I suggest anything negative about "democracies" one assumes the false narrative that I support centralization of governance or development. This is the same problem when core reminds the community that they don't have the authority to perform the hard fork as this is a decision for the economic majority to be made through a consensus process. I believe many are genuine in their belief that Core is saying this to stonewall, not because its true, but because they literally cannot think outside of their paradigm. This is not to suggest that all aspects and use cases of democratic governance models of consensus are flawed or worthless. Let me remind you that some of the central principles and the raison d'être of bitcoin in the first place is in overcoming some of the limitations with republic or democratic governance within currencies.
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8up
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February 11, 2016, 12:55:05 PM |
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Indeed. Time for some reconciliation, and maybe a truth commission too.
I think part of the problem is people involved in bitcoin have gotten addicted to the non-stop drama surrounding it, that has existed since early on (late 2010 at least). So when everything is ticking over peacefully, price is flat, they get bored and start looking around for the next drama fix ... "hey what's this, we can bash the devs? cool" ... "look at this, a simple programming constant we can get upset about and create some drama, awesome" ... "let's jerk the Fed's chain about blockchain, should be neat" ... "hey, did you hear the latest Satoshi rumour?!"
Unfortunately, I believe this drama will only temporarily go away. There were indeed many genuine XT/UL/Classic supporters but there were also many shills/trolls/ agent provocateurs supporting a contentious HF. Bitcoin is competing/undermining against some of the most powerful states and corporations and we should prepare for a vicious and difficult fight ahead. Part of this is educating people towards the true principles of bitcoin, as many are still advocating code be written under the governance of democracy which would be tragic and goes against our current meritocracy consensus based development framework. As we grow our ecosystem this will remain a constant challenge we must overcome as most humans have been programmed to believe democracy is the best form of governance available. Bitcoin is neither a democracy nor a meritocracy. Every "-cracy" has its strength and weakness. It's human. It's bipolar. Bitcoin is (stupid) software enforcing rules (1 ASIC - 1 VOTE) you are free to (dis-)agree with. What makes Bitcoin so powerful is its independence from any form of government or "..."-cracy. Like freedom of speech it is freedom of choice! The bitcoin (price) just reflects the acceptance of a certain group of people who freely agreed to transact value with each other.
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Fatman3001
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Make Bitcoin glow with ENIAC
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February 11, 2016, 12:58:09 PM |
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Sounds like you're planning a good old fashioned purge there. Sure good you're not a collectivist, comrade. Where's Yezhov? Thank you for reinforcing my point. Most individuals are raised to believe in false dichotomies. No, I am not a communist, or collectivist, far from it.... I am advocating for the rights of the individual over the group. An individual classic supporter should have the right to voluntarily fork off, advocate for, or rejoin any other implementation, free from coercion. I am advocating for greater decentralization and more implementations. I have been consistent upon this. Regardless, of being clear and consistent, the moment I suggest anything negative about "democracies" one assumes the false narrative that I support centralization of governance or development. This is the same problem when core reminds the community that they don't have the authority to perform the hard fork as this is a decision for the economic majority to be made through a consensus process. I believe many are genuine in their belief that Core is saying this to stonewall, not because its true, but because they literally cannot think outside of their paradigm. This is not to suggest that all aspects and use cases of democratic governance models of consensus are flawed or worthless. Let me remind you that some of the central principles and the raison d'être of bitcoin in the first place is in overcoming some of the limitations with republic or democratic governance within currencies. It's comforting to see that you don't understand the meaning of what you write, that probably means you won't promote their consequent actions. Maybe.
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ChartBuddy
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1CBuddyxy4FerT3hzMmi1Jz48ESzRw1ZzZ
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February 11, 2016, 01:01:24 PM |
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BitUsher
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February 11, 2016, 01:02:47 PM |
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But I don't think I get it right, does it cost anything to run a node? i mean you do that on an average normal computer no?
Yes, building a decent node costs at least 90 dollars , and has a maintenance fee for hosting the bandwidth and electricity. Thus ideally a LN channel node should exceed 15 dollars a month to overcome this in tx fees revenue. Ok correct me if I'm wrong but centralization of nodes could get some power to the one running them no? Hence decentralization seems a good thing, but if anyone wants to centralize the nodes of the LN, he will only need to put his nodes for free! Then nobody else will use the paying nodes no?
There will be many different competing models of nodes and their features. Some can act as escrow agents with higher level services and insurance programs, some will offer better anonymity through coinjoin/CT/mixing, some will merely have an advantage as they represent a unique hop for better connectivity between other nodes. I wouldn't worry about free nodes as their are few miners who process free tx right now ... Free LN channels would quickly get filled with spam and people would use other channels.
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BitUsher
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Activity: 994
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February 11, 2016, 01:07:31 PM |
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Bitcoin is neither a democracy nor a meritocracy.
Every "-cracy" has its strength and weakness. It's human. It's bipolar.
Bitcoin is (stupid) software enforcing rules (1 ASIC - 1 VOTE) you are free to (dis-)agree with.
What makes Bitcoin so powerful is its independence from any form of government or "..."-cracy. Like freedom of speech it is freedom of choice!
The bitcoin (price) just reflects the acceptance of a certain group of people who freely agreed to transact value with each other.
I mostly agree with this, but there are some standards and norms which have come forth from both the code and the roots of the cipherpunk movement. This is why I was referring to development being decided upon mostly by meritocracy and consensus and not bitcoin as a whole. As Bitcoin as a whole the "governance" and control is far more complex and nuanced. The history of bitcoin and the nature of the code has direct philosophical and political implications regardless of Bitcoin being apolitical.
I.E... Rather than one person, one vote... the economic majority has greater influence on bitcoin balanced by the ability of developers and limitations of the technology. This is opposed to many democratic republics where the economic majority indirectly influences the majorities vote to remain dominant. It's comforting to see that you don't understand the meaning of what you write, that probably means you won't promote their consequent actions. Maybe.
Please elaborate, specifically.
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bargainbin
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February 11, 2016, 01:08:42 PM |
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Indeed. Time for some reconciliation, and maybe a truth commission too.
I think part of the problem is people involved in bitcoin have gotten addicted to the non-stop drama surrounding it, that has existed since early on (late 2010 at least). So when everything is ticking over peacefully, price is flat, they get bored and start looking around for the next drama fix ... "hey what's this, we can bash the devs? cool" ... "look at this, a simple programming constant we can get upset about and create some drama, awesome" ... "let's jerk the Fed's chain about blockchain, should be neat" ... "hey, did you hear the latest Satoshi rumour?!"
Unfortunately, I believe this drama will only temporarily go away. There were indeed many genuine XT/UL/Classic supporters but there were also many shills/trolls/ agent provocateurs supporting a contentious HF. Bitcoin is competing/undermining against some of the most powerful states and corporations and we should prepare for a vicious and difficult fight ahead. Part of this is educating people towards the true principles of bitcoin, as many are still advocating code be written under the governance of democracy which would be tragic and goes against our current meritocracy consensus based development framework. As we grow our ecosystem this will remain a constant challenge we must overcome as most humans have been programmed to believe democracy is the best form of governance available. Bitcoin is neither a democracy nor a meritocracy. Every "-cracy" has its strength and weakness. It's human. It's bipolar. Bitcoin is (stupid) software enforcing rules (1 ASIC - 1 VOTE) you are free to (dis-)agree with. What makes Bitcoin so powerful is its independence from any form of government or "..."-cracy. Like freedom of speech it is freedom of choice! The bitcoin (price) just reflects the acceptance of a certain group of people who freely agreed to transact value with each other. Of course. "They vote with their CPU power [...] Any needed rules and incentives can be enforced with this consensus mechanism." --satoshi Opposing meritocracy to democracy is a sleazy, false dichotomy: both are meritocracies. >Yes, building a decent node costs at least 90 dollars. Nah, it's leasing a VM instance. But by your calculations, total nodes < $500k, pocket lint for any mining cartel. No use pretending that non-mining nodes secure wallets benefit more than their operator
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yugo23
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February 11, 2016, 01:14:59 PM |
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But I don't think I get it right, does it cost anything to run a node? i mean you do that on an average normal computer no?
Yes, building a decent node costs at least 90 dollars , and has a maintenance fee for hosting the bandwidth and electricity. Thus ideally a LN channel node should exceed 15 dollars a month to overcome this in tx fees revenue. Ok correct me if I'm wrong but centralization of nodes could get some power to the one running them no? Hence decentralization seems a good thing, but if anyone wants to centralize the nodes of the LN, he will only need to put his nodes for free! Then nobody else will use the paying nodes no?
There will be many different competing models of nodes and their features. Some can act as escrow agents with higher level services and insurance programs, some will offer better anonymity through coinjoin/CT/mixing, some will merely have an advantage as they represent a unique hop for better connectivity between other nodes. I wouldn't worry about free nodes as their are few miners who process free tx right now ... Free LN channels would quickly get filled with spam and people would use other channels. Ok thanks for your explanations buddy Everything is clearer now ^^
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Dotto
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Activity: 981
Merit: 1005
No maps for these territories
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February 11, 2016, 01:34:01 PM |
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Big triangle (visible in 6h and 12h) closing around 14-15 feb. Expecting a huge move before that. Not sure if up or down, thought. I would say lightly probable over the upside.
Popcorns
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bargainbin
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February 11, 2016, 01:40:42 PM |
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... The history of bitcoin and the nature of the code has direct philosophical and political implications regardless of Bitcoin being apolitical.
I.E... Rather than one person, one vote... the economic majority has greater influence on bitcoin balanced by the ability of developers and limitations of the technology. This is opposed to many democratic republics where the economic majority indirectly influences the majorities vote to remain dominant. ... All this talk of "economic majority" without a definition. WTF is "economic majority"? -Those holding fiat, who can buy BTC mined by the miners? -The miners, who are heavily invested in gear & will turn their power to the most-profitable SHA256 coin? -The hodlers, who can rage on the interwebs and threaten to dump their coin if things don't go their way (but otherwise have no mechanism for voting)? plz explain.
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8up
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February 11, 2016, 01:50:59 PM |
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Bitcoin is neither a democracy nor a meritocracy.
Every "-cracy" has its strength and weakness. It's human. It's bipolar.
Bitcoin is (stupid) software enforcing rules (1 ASIC - 1 VOTE) you are free to (dis-)agree with.
What makes Bitcoin so powerful is its independence from any form of government or "..."-cracy. Like freedom of speech it is freedom of choice!
The bitcoin (price) just reflects the acceptance of a certain group of people who freely agreed to transact value with each other.
I mostly agree with this, but there are some standards and norms which have come forth from both the code and the roots of the cipherpunk movement. This is why I was referring to development being decided upon mostly by meritocracy and consensus and not bitcoin as a whole. As Bitcoin as a whole the "governance" and control is far more complex and nuanced. The history of bitcoin and the nature of the code has direct philosophical and political implications regardless of Bitcoin being apolitical.
I.E... Rather than one person, one vote... the economic majority has greater influence on bitcoin balanced by the ability of developers and limitations of the technology. This is opposed to many democratic republics where the economic majority indirectly influences the majorities vote to remain dominant. It's comforting to see that you don't understand the meaning of what you write, that probably means you won't promote their consequent actions. Maybe.
Please elaborate, specifically. Nice to see. Maybe we should start to talk about a regime of certain dominant "-cracies" that form and govern society (as well as each and every community/family). These "cracy-regimes" tend to change over time. I would even imagine to see cycles. dominant form of government (and motive):democracy (egalitarian) > oligarchy (money) > autocracy (power) > anarchy (freedom) > meritocracy (performance) > aristocracy (stated mastery) > monarchy (stated maystery by god/birth) > democrarcysee also noocracy, netocracy/technocracy, geniocracy, plutarchy, kleptocracy which give each dominant government form its special flavor. Take the above with a grain of salt... It's just a crazy (in no way scientifical) observation.
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ChartBuddy
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1CBuddyxy4FerT3hzMmi1Jz48ESzRw1ZzZ
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February 11, 2016, 02:01:28 PM |
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8up
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February 11, 2016, 02:03:20 PM |
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ETH is seeing the bubble meant to be for bitcoin. Everybody is "waiting for the consolidation" to get in...
Sounds familiar!? > ETH is 2011 all over again.
any doubts?
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ahpku
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February 11, 2016, 02:04:05 PM |
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Ahh... Teh Bitcoin Consensurizing Mechanism, working like it should. Good... good...
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BlindMayorBitcorn
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Activity: 1260
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February 11, 2016, 02:05:43 PM |
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ETH is seeing the bubble meant to be for bitcoin. Everybody is "waiting for the consolidation" to get in...
Sounds familiar!? > ETH is 2011 all over again.
any doubts? We talk Lightning while they steal our thunder. Didn't see that coming.
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sAt0sHiFanClub
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February 11, 2016, 02:09:56 PM |
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ETH is seeing the bubble meant to be for bitcoin. Everybody is "waiting for the consolidation" to get in...
Sounds familiar!? > ETH is 2011 all over again.
any doubts? We talk Lightning while they steal our thunder. Didn't see that coming. In the next 3 weeks, we need the Bitcoin Core developers to work with us and clarify the roadmap with respect to a future hard-fork which includes an increase of the block size. They Think Its All Over tm
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sAt0sHiFanClub
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February 11, 2016, 02:12:00 PM |
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the general investing ecosystem is now at ease that a contentious HF is no longer on the table.
In the next 3 weeks, we need the Bitcoin Core developers to work with us and clarify the roadmap with respect to a future hard-fork which includes an increase of the block size. It depends on how you strong arm the miners I suppose.
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BldSwtTrs
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February 11, 2016, 02:17:54 PM |
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" There is a pressing need for an inclusive roadmap" LOL Yes we need more roadmaps. In 2017 people will still do roadmaps.
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