shmadz
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February 16, 2016, 03:41:45 AM Last edit: February 16, 2016, 04:00:56 AM by shmadz |
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Did you see my earlier post on the topic that I linked for ease of reference?
No. I pretty much ignore anything you have to say. It's unfortunate. I'm sure sometimes you say something worth reading, but I've done the calculations; the massive amount of meaningless text that you spew is simply not worth the time to read. Now here's an opportunity for some non-contentious consensus. "Brevity is the soul of wit." - William Shakespeare
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blunderer
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February 16, 2016, 03:47:59 AM |
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... Brevity is the soul of wit.
Not plagiarism? Good Artists Copy; Great Artists Steal? --BrainyQuote.com (Who, consequently, was never called an asshole. Not like you) --Brainyqote.com
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BitUsher
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February 16, 2016, 03:52:05 AM |
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It's a good thing NMN (non-mining-nodes) have nothing to do with network security, talk about a wide open vulnerability...
Consequently, it's nice that the network's security isn't dependent on you "discouraging" people from running more than 1 node.
Quoted to lock in the fact that you are unaware of the importance of non-mining-nodes with security and the role they play. Please research this topic before spreading more misinformation. You are ignoring the fact that new nodes have to bootstrap from existing nodes and also ignoring the fact that SPV nodes that are dependent upon full nodes, also ignoring the fact that Juking the numbers gives us a false representation of how decentralized are the nodes we have, plus the fact that not having an economic agent on the other side of each of those nodes doesn't give developers crucial feedback to any potential bugs that are experienced to be reported... ect...
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blunderer
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February 16, 2016, 03:55:30 AM |
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.@Cconvert2G36: That's it, you're done, teh full node mythos. Abandon all hope, ye who enter here. It's the one tenet of Bitcoin dogma that must be defended and maintained -- bullshit like "economic majority has a voice" rests on it.
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Cconvert2G36
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February 16, 2016, 03:57:16 AM |
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It's a good thing NMN (non-mining-nodes) have nothing to do with network security, talk about a wide open vulnerability...
Consequently, it's nice that the network's security isn't dependent on you "discouraging" people from running more than 1 node.
Quoted to lock in the fact that you are unaware of the importance of non-mining-nodes with security and the role they play. Please research this topic before spreading more misinformation. You are ignoring the fact that new nodes have to bootstrap from existing nodes and also ignoring the fact that SPV nodes that are dependent upon full nodes, also ignoring the fact that Juking the numbers gives us a false representation of how decentralized are the nodes we have, plus the fact that not having an economic agent on the other side of each of those nodes doesn't give developers crucial feedback to any potential bugs that are experienced to be reported... ect... So... new nodes get bad data from a malicious NMN, they accept it? SPV nodes also just accept data from any random (possibly malicious) node on the network? Sounds like some serious security concerns here... Got any others?
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ChartBuddy
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February 16, 2016, 04:01:03 AM |
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shmadz
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February 16, 2016, 04:01:13 AM |
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... Brevity is the soul of wit.
Not plagiarism? Good Artists Copy; Great Artists Steal? --BrainyQuote.com (Who, consequently, was never called an asshole. Not like you) --Brainyqote.com Fixed - thanks.
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Cconvert2G36
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February 16, 2016, 04:04:11 AM |
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-snip- Juking the numbers gives us a false representation of how decentralized are the nodes we have, plus the fact that not having an economic agent on the other side of each of those nodes doesn't give developers crucial feedback to any potential bugs that are experienced to be reported... ect...
I was going to leave these be... but as you'll probably complain... This is just what you "wish was true". Fact is, a state actor with with the budget of a thursday office party could spin up a huge amount of malicious nodes... does that mean we're doomed?
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BitUsher
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February 16, 2016, 04:04:37 AM |
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Some Bitcoiners actually prefer radical transparency to paranoid defensiveness. Think about it.
Those aren't mutually exclusive... in fact , transparency is one thing I'm advocating to deflect these types of attacks. I'd be interested to hear more about this when you have some time. One must first understand the techniques: https://cryptome.org/2012/07/gent-forum-spies.htmThe ways to combat it mainly are trying to be as open and transparent as possible to prevent rumors and conspiracy theories. Try and be as clear and objective as possible to try and avoid the spread of misinformation. Try and avoid assuming bad faith among peers to avoid excessive paranoia from creating fear and distrust with a group(this can be difficult to do as there are individuals one may need to ignore and one needs to reasonably review the evidence), ignoring very unproductive and wasteful individuals who constantly troll or try and turn the conversation off-topic, and try and discuss the facts as much as possible without getting bogged down in spiteful attacks or personal attacks.
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BitUsher
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February 16, 2016, 04:12:57 AM Last edit: February 16, 2016, 04:26:58 AM by BitUsher |
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This is just what you "wish was true". Fact is, a state actor with with the budget of a thursday office party could spin up a huge amount of malicious nodes... does that mean we're doomed?
So... new nodes get bad data from a malicious NMN, they accept it?
New nodes bootstrap ~randomly from multiple peers, therefore it is important for us to maximize honest and decentralized nodes (1 unique node per economic agent) as much as possible to reduce the probability of this attack vector. If there are enough dishonest full nodes and a new node bootstraps to an alternate history than that could be a problem. SPV nodes also just accept data from any random (possibly malicious) node on the network?
It more complicated than this because different SPV wallets handle security differently. SPV wallets do not accept nodes randomly, but an SPV wallet can be convinced or tricked into trusting the wrong full node or the attacker can compromise the full node the SPV wallet depends upon... but it is more complicated than this as I said ... we really need to start discussing the individual wallets themselves to proceed further in the discussion.
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billyjoeallen
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Hide your women
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February 16, 2016, 04:17:40 AM |
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What do you think would happen in a BJA Commiepocalypse situation? Most Bitcoin companies in China are as committed and decent as any bitcoiner (cue lambie), but I'm not comfortable with having to trust a socialist dictatorship to not interfere. They don't have to nationalize anything. That's what you do in a country when you are used to having to justify your actions. The chinese government will only have to make a few phone calls. I don't see why they would do such a thing, but again, I don't like having to trust them. I agree with that. The problem is that they could shut us down or pressure the miners to adopt some "features" that benefit the Sate. I don't know what those features may be, or even if they would bother us at all, but the fact that they can do it is contrary to the design and principles of Bitcoin. you see if they have to add some "features" that the chinese gov wants its pretty easy and completely different from our problems at the moment. we would simply fork away. the reason we have so much discussion at the moment is just because both sides have arguments on their side, but in such a situation we would fork in 24h and thats it. You don't understand how it works. It's an open protocol. You can't stop them from just pointing at the new fork. You would have to fork away from SHA256, and that would mean mining from ground zero. A complete reboot. The end of Bitcoin alpha. We can't just fork away. Why is this so hard to grasp?
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bargainbin
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February 16, 2016, 04:21:56 AM |
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>Try and avoid assuming bad faith among peers to avoid excessive paranoia >The Gentleperson's Guide To Forum Spies - Cryptome We are strong, no one can tell us we're wrong Searchin' our hearts for so long Both of us knowing... Love is a battlefield
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Cconvert2G36
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February 16, 2016, 04:26:33 AM |
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This is just what you "wish was true". Fact is, a state actor with with the budget of a thursday office party could spin up a huge amount of malicious nodes... does that mean we're doomed?
So... new nodes get bad data from a malicious NMN, they accept it?
New nodes bootstrap ~randomly from multiple peers, therefore it is important for us to maximize honest and decentralized nodes (1 unique node per economic agent) as much as possible to reduce the probability of this attack vector. They drop/ban the peer after getting bad data... the horror. Er, wait, no... just working as designed. Next. SPV nodes also just accept data from any random (possibly malicious) node on the network?
It more complicated than this because different SPV wallets handle security differently. SPV wallets do not accept nodes randomly, but an SPV wallet can be convinced or tricked into trusting the wrong full node or the an attacker can compromise the full node the SPV wallet depends upon... but it is more complicated than this as I said ... we really need to start discussing the individual wallets themselves to proceed further in the discussion. Now we've meandered off into the security profiles of third party SPV wallets, the responsibility of their respective developers and users... not relevant to Bitcoin network security, the original focus of this discussion. NMN are important for the security of their users, not the network. You better talk to your buddies at BTCC about the whole 1 node per economic agent letter to santa principle.
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bargainbin
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February 16, 2016, 04:31:20 AM |
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... NMN are important for the security of their users, not the network.
You better talk to your buddies at BTCC about the whole 1 node per economic agent letter to santa principle.
Security based on encouraging people to do the right thing. What can possibly go wrong? (If you riddle out "economic agent" & "economic majority" (as defined in Bitcoin wiki), drop me a line.)
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BitUsher
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February 16, 2016, 04:35:17 AM |
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You better talk to your buddies at BTCC about the whole 1 node per economic agent letter to santa principle.
Yes , Todd, Back , and others like myself criticized them for spinning up 100 bitcoin core nodes. I already cited this... It doesn't matter who is doing it , it isn't a good idea and reflects a deep misunderstanding why we need individual humans on the other end of full nodes in a decentralized manner. Please don't take my word for it, ask someone you trust like Gavin if its a good idea for one person to spin up 100s of full nodes or not.
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shmadz
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February 16, 2016, 04:41:28 AM |
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... NMN are important for the security of their users, not the network.
You better talk to your buddies at BTCC about the whole 1 node per economic agent letter to santa principle.
Security based on encouraging people to do the right thing. What can possibly go wrong? (If you riddle out "economic agent" & "economic majority" (as defined in Bitcoin wiki), drop me a line.) Yeah, the Byzantine problem is provably unsolvable. The incentive-based solution of bitcoin has only been proven to work for the last 6 years. Take a look at the incentives in the current system of money issuance and tell me there's no problem.
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Cconvert2G36
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February 16, 2016, 04:42:46 AM |
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You better talk to your buddies at BTCC about the whole 1 node per economic agent letter to santa principle.
Yes , Todd, Back , and others like myself criticized them for spinning up 100 bitcoin core nodes. I already cited this... It doesn't matter who is doing it , it isn't a good idea and reflects a deep misunderstanding why we need individual humans on the other end of full nodes in a decentralized manner. Please don't take my word for it, ask someone you trust like Gavin if its a good idea for one person to spin up 100s of full nodes or not. I never said it was a "good" or "bad" idea, just largely irrelevant to network security, which works via PoW. Good thing, that.
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BitUsher
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February 16, 2016, 04:44:51 AM |
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You better talk to your buddies at BTCC about the whole 1 node per economic agent letter to santa principle.
Yes , Todd, Back , and others like myself criticized them for spinning up 100 bitcoin core nodes. I already cited this... It doesn't matter who is doing it , it isn't a good idea and reflects a deep misunderstanding why we need individual humans on the other end of full nodes in a decentralized manner. Please don't take my word for it, ask someone you trust like Gavin if its a good idea for one person to spin up 100s of full nodes or not. I never said it was a "good" or "bad" idea, just largely irrelevant to network security, which works via PoW. Good thing, that. Users are part of the network. Many of these attacks are coordinated. Thus a compromised or malicious mining node coordinating with a pool of NMN could attack a user, or a malicious pool of NMN could coordinate a 0 conf attack, ect....There are many edge cases and fringe attacks that you aren't considering at all.... in network security you need to prepare for the edge cases (even if they are unlikely ) because an attacker will use an assortment of them or a specific one that is tailored to an attack during a vulnerable moment. Additionally, you are ignoring the critical role a human plays in using the wallet, whether they know it or not they are playing the role or a "debugger" or "tester" to report problems to a developer. If you spin up 100 nodes that simultaneously gives a false sense of security and less people testing the software. P.S... Everyone should ignore the user "bargainbin" , look at his post history and you can see he constantly wastes people time by asking the same questions over and over, and trolls to create dissent. He/She isn't genuine and intends to do our ecosystem harm.
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bargainbin
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February 16, 2016, 04:46:12 AM |
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... NMN are important for the security of their users, not the network.
You better talk to your buddies at BTCC about the whole 1 node per economic agent letter to santa principle.
Security based on encouraging people to do the right thing. What can possibly go wrong? (If you riddle out "economic agent" & "economic majority" (as defined in Bitcoin wiki), drop me a line.) Yeah, the Byzantine problem is provably unsolvable. The incentive-based solution of bitcoin has only been proven to work for the last 6 years. Take a look at the incentives in the current system of money issuance and tell me there's no problem. Honestly don't understand what you're trying to say. What I'm trying to grasp is the reasoning behind non-mining nodes, which are neither a part of satoshi's white paper nor make any sense (above being the only real (albeit impractical) wallet). Not sure how real money plays into this. Explain please.
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ChartBuddy
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February 16, 2016, 05:01:04 AM |
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