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Author Topic: Scrypt Bitcoin Threads NOT Allowed  (Read 12686 times)
pyromaniac
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September 18, 2013, 09:36:40 PM
 #61

If you want to be taken seriously then stop with the "it's not fair that I didn't know about Bitcoins when they were cheap to buy/mine". If you want to *make a difference* then copy & paste plus minor alteration is not the way (it would be a bit like every band just copying the same #1 hit and changing the lyrics slightly and expecting they should all get the same fame).

Show me at least a few bitcoin clones, which were made with clear idea and had a few differences, except changed name, number of coins in block and total amount of coins. I know three: Litecoin, because it was first crypto currency, that uses scrypt, Ripple, because it is not bitcoin clone at all, and Primecoin (XPM), which uses unique algorithm and have scientific value. All other alternative crypto currencies are scam and useless trash.

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September 19, 2013, 12:04:34 AM
 #62

If you want to be taken seriously then stop with the "it's not fair that I didn't know about Bitcoins when they were cheap to buy/mine". If you want to *make a difference* then copy & paste plus minor alteration is not the way (it would be a bit like every band just copying the same #1 hit and changing the lyrics slightly and expecting they should all get the same fame).

Show me at least a few bitcoin clones, which were made with clear idea and had a few differences, except changed name, number of coins in block and total amount of coins. I know three: Litecoin, because it was first crypto currency, that uses scrypt, Ripple, because it is not bitcoin clone at all, and Primecoin (XPM), which uses unique algorithm and have scientific value. All other alternative crypto currencies are scam and useless trash.

BTE/bytecoin is the closest i kno of  Cool

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September 19, 2013, 03:01:05 AM
 #63

If you want to be taken seriously then stop with the "it's not fair that I didn't know about Bitcoins when they were cheap to buy/mine". If you want to *make a difference* then copy & paste plus minor alteration is not the way (it would be a bit like every band just copying the same #1 hit and changing the lyrics slightly and expecting they should all get the same fame).

Show me at least a few bitcoin clones, which were made with clear idea and had a few differences, except changed name, number of coins in block and total amount of coins. I know three: Litecoin, because it was first crypto currency, that uses scrypt, Ripple, because it is not bitcoin clone at all, and Primecoin (XPM), which uses unique algorithm and have scientific value. All other alternative crypto currencies are scam and useless trash.

BTE/bytecoin is the closest i kno of  Cool

Bytecoin is a straight up Bitcoin clone worth the attention of no one.

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September 19, 2013, 04:17:15 AM
 #64

This topic, being pinned and all, will give the BTC2 more publicity than 50 random posts about it ever could.

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September 19, 2013, 04:54:43 AM
 #65

This topic, being pinned and all, will give the BTC2 more publicity than 50 random posts about it ever could.

I think that by the time we get to BTC3 or BTC4 most will have already learned to ignore BTCn (where n is anything at all) - I might even consider offering a small bounty for the creation of BTC3 just to kill off this BTC2 and any such future silly rubbish.

With CIYAM anyone can create 100% generated C++ web applications in literally minutes.

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September 19, 2013, 10:36:30 AM
 #66

This topic, being pinned and all, will give the BTC2 more publicity than 50 random posts about it ever could.

I think that by the time we get to BTC3 or BTC4 most will have already learned to ignore BTCn (where n is anything at all) - I might even consider offering a small bounty for the creation of BTC3 just to kill off this BTC2 and any such future silly rubbish.

Development of the BTC3 is not needed as long as the  script-ASIC's be developed.  Wink
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September 19, 2013, 01:33:31 PM
 #67

Quote
As I argued, decentralization is economically infeasible. If mining is particularly profitable, more and more people will do it until it's just barely profitable. Then primarily those with some advantage (cheap power, optimized hardware, whatever) will increase mining and those with sub-optimal equipment or conditions will stop mining, leading to centralization.

Bitcoin, whether by luck or genius, got this right.

Then wtf is with this video : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Um63OQz3bjo .. remeber it !? Min 0.03 - " Fist Decentralized ...bla bla bla " ... So, back to the drawing board. The markets will decide in the end, no worries.
Sorry, If I was unclear. I was responding to this:
Quote
It's no decentralized with the arrival of ASIC at all.
And I was just using the same term he was using. In the sense that ASICs centralize Bitcoin, that particular kind of centralization is economically infeasible to prevent. Bitcoin is, of course, decentralized in many other important ways.
And so..to keep it decentralized Bitcoin Scrypt will do the job as there is no ASIC for it  Wink
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September 19, 2013, 05:11:45 PM
 #68

And so..to keep it decentralized Bitcoin Scrypt will do the job as there is no ASIC for it  Wink
It just won't work. It's economically infeasible. If it's profitable to mine under perfect conditions (best power costs, optimal choice of hardware, etcetera) then people will build large mining setups under optimal conditionals to make the unusual profits. This will keep happening until it's barely profitable to mine even under optimal conditions. When that happens, under less than optimal conditions, it will be unprofitable to mine. There is no known way to keep mining decentralized in this sense.

All the switch to scrypt does is make it easier to attack the currency because the currency can be attacked with commodity hardware that retains its value rather than specialized hardware that becomes worthless.

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September 19, 2013, 07:50:32 PM
 #69

And so..to keep it decentralized Bitcoin Scrypt will do the job as there is no ASIC for it  Wink
It just won't work. It's economically infeasible. If it's profitable to mine under perfect conditions (best power costs, optimal choice of hardware, etcetera) then people will build large mining setups under optimal conditionals to make the unusual profits. This will keep happening until it's barely profitable to mine even under optimal conditions. When that happens, under less than optimal conditions, it will be unprofitable to mine. There is no known way to keep mining decentralized in this sense.

All the switch to scrypt does is make it easier to attack the currency because the currency can be attacked with commodity hardware that retains its value rather than specialized hardware that becomes worthless.


The point is how far from optimal the average user is, the distance gets larger and larger the more specialised the setup can be. That distance is smaller with scypt and will be even smaller with future proof-of-work schemes should they still be feasible.
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September 19, 2013, 08:17:55 PM
 #70

The point is how far from optimal the average user is, the distance gets larger and larger the more specialised the setup can be. That distance is smaller with scypt and will be even smaller with future proof-of-work schemes should they still be feasible.
It's possible, but very very unlikely, that future schemes may make the difference small enough to not matter. But with scrypt, the distance is already large enough that it might as well be infinite and there's no reason to think it will get any smaller. It's hard to imagine a process that can best be done with random commodity hardware that people happen to tend to have lying around, especially since the capabilities of commodity hardware are changing constantly. Almost anything can be optimized.

In any event, it's academic -- since there's no value created to distribute, the question of the best distribution mechanism is irrelevant. Bitcoin, by offering capabilities not previously available, created new value that its mining scheme distributes. Any future coin that wants to distribute value some particular way must first find a way to create that value.



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September 19, 2013, 09:10:12 PM
 #71

Bitcoin Scrypt changes that and brings Bitcoin back into the hands of the people..."
100%. Because ASICs make Bitcoin mining only for the rich. I can already imagine a farms with the hundreds of these cards:


I can't.

KnC, HashFast, Cointerra, Alydian, Bitfury, yeah. BFL? By the time they deliver, based on past performance, ASICS will be at 14nm and the best process available will be at 5nm. Quantum tunneling will be solved with 1nm gates.

Not saying your concern is wrong, I'm just sayin' that particular dog ain't gonna hunt.
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September 19, 2013, 10:01:42 PM
 #72

The point is how far from optimal the average user is, the distance gets larger and larger the more specialised the setup can be. That distance is smaller with scypt and will be even smaller with future proof-of-work schemes should they still be feasible.
It's possible, but very very unlikely, that future schemes may make the difference small enough to not matter. But with scrypt, the distance is already large enough that it might as well be infinite and there's no reason to think it will get any smaller. It's hard to imagine a process that can best be done with random commodity hardware that people happen to tend to have lying around, especially since the capabilities of commodity hardware are changing constantly. Almost anything can be optimized.

In any event, it's academic -- since there's no value created to distribute, the question of the best distribution mechanism is irrelevant. Bitcoin, by offering capabilities not previously available, created new value that its mining scheme distributes. Any future coin that wants to distribute value some particular way must first find a way to create that value.




In theory that's fairly easy, the process should utilize as much of the instruction set as possible and reward other things like memory bandwidth and capacity. The scheme should also include rewards for hard-storage capacity and internet bandwidth. At this point the specialized hardware is commodity hardware.

Value still comes from the USD invested into the cryptocurrency, you of all people should realize this. Do you really think ripples would have a theoretical market cap of 1 billion USD right now if they weren't made to be a good deflationary "investment"?
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September 19, 2013, 10:46:45 PM
 #73

Value still comes from the USD invested into the cryptocurrency, you of all people should realize this. Do you really think ripples would have a theoretical market cap of 1 billion USD right now if they weren't made to be a good deflationary "investment"?
It's always hard to know what factors go into price. Obviously, supply is a key factor. But I think, and hope, that the major driver of value for both Ripple and Bitcoin is the expected long-term utility of those systems. Speculative value -- I want it because it's going up in price because people want it because it's going up in price -- tends to be volatile and unpredictable, reducing the utility of the currency as a means of exchange.

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September 20, 2013, 01:50:49 PM
 #74

+1
Bitcoin Scrypt is a shitty idea, what comes next. Ripple Scrypt ?
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September 20, 2013, 03:53:13 PM
 #75

All those coins are shitty ideas ...in the end they will go to their endless value => 0
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September 20, 2013, 04:50:08 PM
 #76

All those coins are shitty ideas ...in the end they will go to their endless value => 0
Bitcoins
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September 23, 2013, 02:12:42 AM
 #77

Most of the people don`t seem to grasp the idea that was behind this whole damn charade ...

"Bitcoin was supposed to be decentralised and run by the people, the general public. However due to ASIC, this now means that the network can really only be controlled by the rich and powerful, the governments and corporations and of course the ASIC manufactures.

Bitcoin Scrypt changes that and brings Bitcoin back into the hands of the people, if fact, pretty much anyone with a GPU can mine Bitcoin Scrypt and mine a nice wedge."
We allready have a coin that does this, it's called Litecoin.  Undecided

If the creator has such noble intentions, he would have supported Litecoin. This scrypt bitcoin only has one purpose, make the creator money. Nothing more, nothing less.


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September 26, 2013, 10:24:11 PM
 #78

I want to Sell 24.4 Bitcoin Scrypt @ 0.008 Bitcoin SHA-256 each, worth 0.1952 Bitcoin SHA-256
 

Bitcoin Address:
 
1PEYbY4EtAB6Zeg5hAGyVZmzk4hWLEcwXD
 

Send me your address Bitcoin 2.0 (scrypt) to make the deposit

bigplayermaster@hotmail.com



I hope you get banned,

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September 27, 2013, 02:53:31 PM
 #79

I hope you get banned,

No one is getting banned for mentioning Scrypt Bitcoin, I'm just giving everyone fair warning that I will be removing threads. This isnt about whether its a good coin or not, its about how making bitcoin2 threads reaches into the rest of the community, increasing the likelyhood that someone gets upset, and has the Alt Currencies section removed all together. There are a hundred alt coins that are out there that I don't support, however I don't really feel its my right to do anything about them, because they don't effect me or anyone else that doesn't support them in any way. Not allowing Scrypt Bitcoin was a decision made by more than a few members of the staff. Not a single person was on board with it, because its somewhat fradulent. I don't know who the dev is, so I can't have any biasses there. I know of two people who have made Scrypt Bitcoin threads, and I can honestly say I had not known them before I asked them to lock their threads. If I'm not disallowing it because I dislike the coin, or because I dislike its users, or because I dislike its dev, wouldn't the next logical step be that I don't dislike anything about Scrypt Bitcoin in general, besides what the staff and I have discussed, ie how its similar name would most certainly be used for fraud, deceit, and because it would just be annoying in general because of its name?

The point of the alt currencies section is that we remain our own secluded section, in the BITCOIN forums. If we start spilling out into the rest of the forums, the section is no longer secluded from the rest of the Bitcoin forums, and annoying the rest of the people who tolerate alt coins because they don't have to have anything to do with them.
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September 27, 2013, 04:11:22 PM
Last edit: September 27, 2013, 05:36:57 PM by BitcoinEXpress
 #80

@SaltySpitoon


The Alt Coin section won't be removed.

This section was created as an alternative trashcan to keep this crap out of the main Bitcoin Forum. Bitcointalk simply does not have enough mods to delete the flow of garbage that would flow into the main forums without it.

As far as Bitcoin Scrypt I couldn't care less as I have zero interest in it but I do know this, by leaving a "Stickied Thread" at the the top of the forum banning all discussion of it, you are creating a hundred times more interest in it than you would if you simply allowed it to die on its own.  

Additionally I can also tell you this for a fact, that *this* "Stickied Thread" (locked or not) is causing Bitcoin SHA-256 to attract some unwanted attention. A friend of mine that freelances and gets published quite regarly for Wired and TechCrunch was asking me about it. Honestly I hadn't looked into it till she asked me about it. She was mentioning something about an "internal strife to get Bitcoin back to its decentralized roots and away from ASIC control" which is not exactly true..... however I don't think that's the desired media attention BTC needs especially with sites of that reach. I have no idea if an article will appear, but people are noticing this thread.

There are two pssible options that would work to minimize BTC2.

1) Delete this thread and every thread that pops up about BTC2. There is nothing wrong with aggressive censorship of fraudulent activity.

or

2) Allow it to run, post a huge red fraud warning at the top of every thread and wait for it to die like every other Alt Piece of Shit.


By publicly banning it, you amplify its popularity 100x.

Again all of this, just opinion.


~BCX~

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