d5000
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Decentralization Maximalist
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February 03, 2018, 11:53:00 PM |
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-snip-
The difference between bitcoin/satoshi and radix/fuserleer is in Satoshi's time people were not thinking of ICO's, but today the chances of someone launching a cynical clone of Radix with scam ICO is near 100%, and that would damage Radix a lot.
1) Don't compare an altcoin developer with Satoshi. The problem Satoshi solved is much larger than any contribution an altcoin can make. 2) Patenting, closed-source licenses and similar techniques do mainly one thing: they centralize development on one team/company. The downsides are not so obvious, but they exist: - What happens if the company goes bankrupt and nobody wants to "save" it, and they refuse to "liberate" the technology? The value of the coin would drop instantly to ZERO, because nobody could develop it anymore. - The innovation rate would be lower than in other competing, open technologies, because no developers from outside the team are incentived to participate (why should someone join a team where almost the whole profit has been made by others?). So even if the coin has some interesting feature, it will most likely be one of the "old, outdated" projects in short time. - There would be compatibility problems with open projects. The project would not benefit from the open technology stack, and it could only use a subset of potentially interesting and useful technologies. - Software patents are only valid in certain countries. A cloner would only have to move to a country where software patents are not accepted. So the whole effort of patenting some parts of the technology becomes futile. Thus, I would never recommend anyone to invest in a patented cryptocurrency.
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atlas21
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February 09, 2018, 10:49:31 PM |
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-snip-
The difference between bitcoin/satoshi and radix/fuserleer is in Satoshi's time people were not thinking of ICO's, but today the chances of someone launching a cynical clone of Radix with scam ICO is near 100%, and that would damage Radix a lot.
1) Don't compare an altcoin developer with Satoshi. The problem Satoshi solved is much larger than any contribution an altcoin can make. 2) Patenting, closed-source licenses and similar techniques do mainly one thing: they centralize development on one team/company. The downsides are not so obvious, but they exist: - What happens if the company goes bankrupt and nobody wants to "save" it, and they refuse to "liberate" the technology? The value of the coin would drop instantly to ZERO, because nobody could develop it anymore. - The innovation rate would be lower than in other competing, open technologies, because no developers from outside the team are incentived to participate (why should someone join a team where almost the whole profit has been made by others?). So even if the coin has some interesting feature, it will most likely be one of the "old, outdated" projects in short time. - There would be compatibility problems with open projects. The project would not benefit from the open technology stack, and it could only use a subset of potentially interesting and useful technologies. - Software patents are only valid in certain countries. A cloner would only have to move to a country where software patents are not accepted. So the whole effort of patenting some parts of the technology becomes futile. Thus, I would never recommend anyone to invest in a patented cryptocurrency. I do not fully agree with your worries. If the company goes bankrupt the company will be forced to sell all its assets, including the patented technology, to pay its debts. So the development would continue in a (probably centralised) way. If nobody wants to buy it. The patent technology would be sold very cheaply. I could buy it to make it open source. I read at their website that the patented technology would be made open source after the platform reaches a certain adaption rate. And i am not certain that you can invest in radix. You can buy the native stable coin, but why would you buy something that is not going to appreciate in value (1 token is approximately 1 usd)?
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okiefromokc
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February 16, 2018, 01:45:44 AM |
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And i am not certain that you can invest in radix. You can buy the native stable coin, but why would you buy something that is not going to appreciate in value (1 token is approximately 1 usd)?
Radix when launched will have its own integrated Decentralized EXchange (DEX). So you will be able to purchase as many Radix Tokens at $1 each as you want, using any of several top CMC coins or a select few of the fiat currencies. Granted the Radix native token is designed to be relatively stable, but you can earn additional tokens in 3 ways. The new supply is split 50/50 between account hodlers and nodes providing various services to the main Radix network. The 3rd way is you also earn fees for doing work with your nodes. So as you can see there are incentives to both hodl and run service nodes.
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13Darko
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February 17, 2018, 02:05:22 PM Last edit: February 17, 2018, 03:11:39 PM by 13Darko |
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-snip-
The difference between bitcoin/satoshi and radix/fuserleer is in Satoshi's time people were not thinking of ICO's, but today the chances of someone launching a cynical clone of Radix with scam ICO is near 100%, and that would damage Radix a lot.
1) Don't compare an altcoin developer with Satoshi. The problem Satoshi solved is much larger than any contribution an altcoin can make. 2) Patenting, closed-source licenses and similar techniques do mainly one thing: they centralize development on one team/company. The downsides are not so obvious, but they exist: - What happens if the company goes bankrupt and nobody wants to "save" it, and they refuse to "liberate" the technology? The value of the coin would drop instantly to ZERO, because nobody could develop it anymore. - The innovation rate would be lower than in other competing, open technologies, because no developers from outside the team are incentived to participate (why should someone join a team where almost the whole profit has been made by others?). So even if the coin has some interesting feature, it will most likely be one of the "old, outdated" projects in short time. - There would be compatibility problems with open projects. The project would not benefit from the open technology stack, and it could only use a subset of potentially interesting and useful technologies. - Software patents are only valid in certain countries. A cloner would only have to move to a country where software patents are not accepted. So the whole effort of patenting some parts of the technology becomes futile. Thus, I would never recommend anyone to invest in a patented cryptocurrency. I do not fully agree with your worries. If the company goes bankrupt the company will be forced to sell all its assets, including the patented technology, to pay its debts. So the development would continue in a (probably centralised) way. If nobody wants to buy it. The patent technology would be sold very cheaply. I could buy it to make it open source. I read on their website that the patented technology would be made open source after the platform reaches a certain adaption rate. What d5000 is not seeing is that most known and valuable Microsoft or Apple products are closed source, but it looks like everyone doesn't have any problems with that... But why is Radix closed source? They've patented the technology so: 1. others can't just steal their idea and a working product they've put so much time and work into for the past 5 years and this is an absolutely healthy move in my opinion; 2. banks can't copycat a superior tech to use it for their purposes (for free) but instead they will have to pay, which is very important, thus increasing the power of the Radix team and the ability to contribute further to the existing tech and mass adoption of it. But unlike these Microsoft or Apple products Radix is going to become opensource once it reaches some level of adoption and then everyone can verify its code is legit. As to the point that if the company goes bankrupt and the value of the coin will drop to zero: Radix will be a fully working product, so, from what I've learned, once a mainnet (aka the Universe) is launched you cannot modify (fork) or develop it any further, unless we're talking about modules like Marketplace, ChatRooms, WebBrowser, etc. which can just plug into an existing software. And I am not certain that you can invest in radix. You can buy the native stable coin, but why would you buy something that is not going to appreciate in value (1 token is approximately 1 usd)?
The real incentive to buy RDX tokens when the platform goes live is not to wait for the price increase but instead for the distribution of the newly generated by the system RDX tokens to the existing holders when demand increases (read the FAQ on their website). It won't be x100 ROI due to marketcap increase by the factor of x100, because: 1. RDX holders receive 50% of the new tokens (this number is not final yet though); 2. the system will everytime recalculate how much of the total number of tokens you have, decreasing the % of new tokens you receive. You can find a formula in a telegram chat if you wish to. Each boat rises equally. Just keep in mind that Radix is a complex solution for scalability-volatility-centralization-ease-of-use-adoption problems, everyone's been waiting for soooo long! Peace!
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Ix
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February 23, 2018, 01:05:07 AM |
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What d5000 is not seeing is that most known and valuable Microsoft or Apple products are closed source, but it looks like everyone doesn't have any problems with that... But why is Radix closed source? They've patented the technology so: 1. others can't just steal their idea and a working product they've put so much time and work into for the past 5 years and this is an absolutely healthy move in my opinion; I think the fear of this is a tad overblown. Ripple has 1 clone, NXT I think has 1 clone, ETH I believe has no clones and 1 fork. I'm out of the loop so I could be way wrong. On top of that, since Radix intends on not having a pyramid distribution, the incentive for cloning is much less. If there isn't a step by step manual of how to clone and make $$$billions$$$, not many will put up the effort when they can just market some "industry breaking tech" on a bitcoin clone or ETH token with a 2 or 3 page whitepaper describing how random industry XYZ needs the blockchain, and needs it baaaad and this token is named after that industry so $$$. 2. banks can't copycat a superior tech to use it for their purposes (for free) but instead they will have to pay, which is very important, thus increasing the power of the Radix team and the ability to contribute further to the existing tech and mass adoption of it. They presumably would only have to pay for whatever service your implying while the code is closed source. Centralization was hinted at before in some chat log leak about "users not caring about centralization" or some such in another emunie thread. This is hinting at it again. It's fine if Radix wants to go some centralized-ish route, though I don't personally see how it's a sustainable model if the code will be open sourced later.
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Fuserleer
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February 25, 2018, 12:17:36 AM |
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There's a 3rd reason for that patent that everyone misses...it's called a pinch, and is probably the most important of the 3.
Assume that our patent ISN'T granted.
Later some bank, or corporation, files a patent that infringes on our tech, and it DOES get granted. It happens, maybe they worded something slightly differently, had better lawyers due to more money, etc
Then they decide "Hey, lets go sue those Radix guys and destroy the business they have built, cus, y'know, we own their tech now!"
So they come along with a law suit and they have us dead to rights...
But they don't, we can show our patent submission and it's refusal. So if we really are infringing on their patent, then our patent should have been granted as it has an earlier date and theirs should have been refused.
Law suit dismissed!
With so many banks and corps filling patents and getting them granted, with tech that is arguably public domain in some cases, it made total sense as a defense.
I don't know why so many people have an issue with the patent, it's clearly defensive and allows us to monetise the tech to continue development long term from private licenses, regardless of the open source status for public, non-profit deployments.
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Viper1
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February 25, 2018, 12:35:07 AM |
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I don't know why so many people have an issue with the patent
I've been watching the progress on this a little so I don't know all the details. Is it going to be open source, i.e. following the spirit of what crypto is supposed to be about? If yes, than you can then hit anyone that takes the code to start their own coin with a lawsuit and/or blackmail them to pay you a fee. Basically, it all just looks like greed like any other bank/corporation out there and not in the spirit of crypto.
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BTC: 1F8yJqgjeFyX1SX6KJmqYtHiHXJA89ENNT LTC: LYAEPQeDDM7Y4jbUH2AwhBmkzThAGecNBV DOGE: DSUsCCdt98PcNgUkFHLDFdQXmPrQBEqXu9
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Ix
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February 25, 2018, 03:08:50 AM |
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Then they decide "Hey, lets go sue those Radix guys and destroy the business they have built, cus, y'know, we own their tech now!"
So they come along with a law suit and they have us dead to rights... Having an open source code base released prior to their patent is a pretty dead-to-rights prior art defense.
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atlas21
Newbie
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February 26, 2018, 10:11:56 PM |
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There's a 3rd reason for that patent that everyone misses...it's called a pinch, and is probably the most important of the 3.
Assume that our patent ISN'T granted.
Later some bank, or corporation, files a patent that infringes on our tech, and it DOES get granted. It happens, maybe they worded something slightly differently, had better lawyers due to more money, etc
Then they decide "Hey, lets go sue those Radix guys and destroy the business they have built, cus, y'know, we own their tech now!"
So they come along with a law suit and they have us dead to rights...
But they don't, we can show our patent submission and it's refusal. So if we really are infringing on their patent, then our patent should have been granted as it has an earlier date and theirs should have been refused.
Law suit dismissed!
With so many banks and corps filling patents and getting them granted, with tech that is arguably public domain in some cases, it made total sense as a defense.
I don't know why so many people have an issue with the patent, it's clearly defensive and allows us to monetise the tech to continue development long term from private licenses, regardless of the open source status for public, non-profit deployments.
Why are you giving this example? Although you say ' assume it isnt granted' i am confused. The radix technology is patented not?
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Peachy
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March 09, 2018, 01:33:54 PM |
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There's a 3rd reason for that patent that everyone misses...it's called a pinch, and is probably the most important of the 3.
Assume that our patent ISN'T granted.
Later some bank, or corporation, files a patent that infringes on our tech, and it DOES get granted. It happens, maybe they worded something slightly differently, had better lawyers due to more money, etc
Then they decide "Hey, lets go sue those Radix guys and destroy the business they have built, cus, y'know, we own their tech now!"
So they come along with a law suit and they have us dead to rights...
But they don't, we can show our patent submission and it's refusal. So if we really are infringing on their patent, then our patent should have been granted as it has an earlier date and theirs should have been refused.
Law suit dismissed!
With so many banks and corps filling patents and getting them granted, with tech that is arguably public domain in some cases, it made total sense as a defense.
I don't know why so many people have an issue with the patent, it's clearly defensive and allows us to monetise the tech to continue development long term from private licenses, regardless of the open source status for public, non-profit deployments.
Why are you giving this example? Although you say ' assume it isnt granted' i am confused. The radix technology is patented not? Filed, but not yet granted. Patents can take years to grant (yet another broken/slow process looking for potential disruption).
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RADiX (formerly eMunie): The future of money
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Buchi-88
Legendary
Online
Activity: 3948
Merit: 2638
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June 15, 2018, 03:19:58 PM |
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No official BCT ANN Thread?
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Snail2
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June 22, 2018, 02:48:51 PM |
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No official BCT ANN Thread?
It's in alpha on a testnet. Why and what would they announce? BTW you can find plenty of announcement/beta announcement topics for eMunie here on BTT, so just pick one . Probably this is the oldest: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=220530.0
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justAgame
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June 22, 2018, 05:07:36 PM |
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everything you need to know is posted on telegram channel. thats enough for now
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jubalix
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July 06, 2019, 02:23:47 AM |
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There's a 3rd reason for that patent that everyone misses...it's called a pinch, and is probably the most important of the 3.
Assume that our patent ISN'T granted.
Later some bank, or corporation, files a patent that infringes on our tech, and it DOES get granted. It happens, maybe they worded something slightly differently, had better lawyers due to more money, etc
Then they decide "Hey, lets go sue those Radix guys and destroy the business they have built, cus, y'know, we own their tech now!"
So they come along with a law suit and they have us dead to rights...
But they don't, we can show our patent submission and it's refusal. So if we really are infringing on their patent, then our patent should have been granted as it has an earlier date and theirs should have been refused.
Law suit dismissed!
With so many banks and corps filling patents and getting them granted, with tech that is arguably public domain in some cases, it made total sense as a defense.
I don't know why so many people have an issue with the patent, it's clearly defensive and allows us to monetise the tech to continue development long term from private licenses, regardless of the open source status for public, non-profit deployments.
Exactly right, this is a very smart rear guard action it will make it soooo much easier to being "shut" down by legal threats. See Banks even if they have little grounds can bury you with the costs of a law suits and perhaps stop you in the intermi with injunctions. So this is a very *very* smart move by Dan inmho.
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