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AlexGR
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1708
Merit: 1049
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October 21, 2016, 06:56:22 PM |
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Since the latst 3 updates (at least) , my wallet takes forever to sync .Disk usage is ridiculously high and the computer slows down I have ubuntu 14.04 running on I5 with 8gb of memory and 300G of disk . I tried with another disk same problem
And now with 0.8.6 it cannot sync E1019 10:53:14.699769 core/blockchain.go:1170] Bad block #2462853 (0xd7929a629b2d1226ddab5c8be6c7949b4fa3cbcafa6f0871f99b437454969363) E1019 10:53:14.699794 core/blockchain.go:1171] gas used error (463960 / 454930) It's stucked there
( i have restarted from scratch geth removedb and after geth --cache 1048 --fast )
Any help
Thanks
Full chain is 300GB you say? The Ethereum chain is about 45 GB at the moment. You can still put the folder in a SSD disk at present. I don't have an ethereum wallet, but I'm wondering whether this thing is prunable or something...
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oneyesoneno
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October 22, 2016, 01:52:38 AM |
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is another Hardfork obvious ?
yeah the round 2 believe
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SanFrancisco
Member
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Activity: 76
Merit: 10
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October 22, 2016, 11:09:54 AM |
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is another Hardfork obvious ?
yeah the round 2 believe Ethereum had already two forks (DAO disaster). So, the next would be the third.
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Cryptozillah
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October 22, 2016, 11:25:32 AM |
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is another Hardfork obvious ?
yeah the round 2 believe Ethereum had already two forks (DAO disaster). So, the next would be the third. The third of many more probably. It is the only way to move forward. This aint some random softfork shitcoin, its something much more complicated. For every fork and every new attack Ethereum is getting stronger. The ones cheerleading about ETC being the original fork will soon be on the same way if they want to move forward. Soon there will be ET?, ET?, ET?, ET?, ET? chains. See the reason why ETC is a complete deathborn created by the hacker and his pump friends ? The only real chain is the one ETH devs working on atm, the number of the chain is totally irrelevant.
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Pelgoran98
Sr. Member
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Activity: 328
Merit: 250
It'd be nice.
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October 22, 2016, 01:36:50 PM |
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tbearhere
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 3206
Merit: 1003
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October 22, 2016, 02:07:26 PM |
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Sictalfia
Newbie
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Activity: 40
Merit: 0
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October 22, 2016, 02:18:36 PM |
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This morning a ton of websites and services, including Spotify and Twitter, were unreachable because of a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack on Dyn, a major DNS provider. Details of how the attack happened remain vague, but one thing seems certain. Our internet is frightfully fragile in the face of increasingly sophisticated hacks. Some think the attack was a political conspiracy, like an attempt to take down the internet so that people wouldn’t be able to read the leaked Clinton emails on Wikileaks. Others think it’s the usual Russian assault. No matter who did it, we should expect incidents like this to get worse in the future. While DDoS attacks used to be a pretty weak threat, we’re entering a new era. What Is DNS and Why Does It Make the Internet Break? Today, half of America’s internet shut down when hackers unleashed a large distributed denial of… Read more DDoS attacks, at the most basic level, work like this. An attacker sends a flurry of packets, essentially just garbage data, to an intended recipient. In this case, the recipient was Dyn’s DNS servers. The server is overwhelmed with the garbage packets, and can’t handle the incoming connections, eventually slowing down significantly or totally shutting down. In the case of Dyn, it was probably a little more complex than this. Dyn almost certainly has advanced systems for DDoS mitigation, and the people who attacked Dyn (whoever they are) were probably using something more advanced than a PC in their mom’s basement. Recently, we’ve entered into a new DDoS paradigm. As security blogger Brian Krebs notes, the newfound ability to highjack insecure internet of things devices and turn them into a massive DDoS army has contributed to an uptick in the size and scale of recent DDoS attacks. (We’re not sure if an IoT botnet was what took down Dyn this morning, but it would be a pretty good guess.) We are nevertheless getting a taste of what the new era of DDoS attacks look like, however. As security expert Bruce Schneier explained in a blog post: Over the past year or two, someone has been probing the defenses of the companies that run critical pieces of the Internet. These probes take the form of precisely calibrated attacks designed to determine exactly how well these companies can defend themselves, and what would be required to take them down. We don’t know who is doing this, but it feels like a large nation state. China or Russia would be my first guesses. This sort of attack is deeply different than the headline-grabbing DDoS attacks of years past. In 2011, hacker collective Anonymous rose to fame with DDoS attacks that pale in comparison to today’s attack on Dyn. Instead of taking out an individual website for short periods of time, hackers were able to take down a major piece of the internet backbone for an entire morning—not once but twice. That’s huge. If hackers are more easily able to amass extensive DDoS botnets, that means the internet as we know it becomes more vulnerable. Attacking major internet infrastructure like Dyn has always been a possibility, but if it becomes easier than ever to launch huge DDoS attacks, that means we might be seeing some of our favorite sites have more downtime than usual. These attacks could extend to other major pieces of internet infrastructure, causing even more widespread outages. This could be the beginning of a very bleak future. If hackers are able to take down the internet at will, what happens next? It’s unclear how long it could take for the folks at Dyn to fix this problem, or if they will ever be able to solve the problem of being hit with a huge DDoS attack. But this new breed of DDoS attacks is a scary problem no matter how you look at it.
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cryptodv
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October 22, 2016, 02:24:39 PM |
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This morning a ton of websites and services, including Spotify and Twitter, were unreachable because of a distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack on Dyn, a major DNS provider. Details of how the attack happened remain vague, but one thing seems certain. Our internet is frightfully fragile in the face of increasingly sophisticated hacks. Some think the attack was a political conspiracy, like an attempt to take down the internet so that people wouldn’t be able to read the leaked Clinton emails on Wikileaks. Others think it’s the usual Russian assault. No matter who did it, we should expect incidents like this to get worse in the future. While DDoS attacks used to be a pretty weak threat, we’re entering a new era. What Is DNS and Why Does It Make the Internet Break? Today, half of America’s internet shut down when hackers unleashed a large distributed denial of… Read more DDoS attacks, at the most basic level, work like this. An attacker sends a flurry of packets, essentially just garbage data, to an intended recipient. In this case, the recipient was Dyn’s DNS servers. The server is overwhelmed with the garbage packets, and can’t handle the incoming connections, eventually slowing down significantly or totally shutting down. In the case of Dyn, it was probably a little more complex than this. Dyn almost certainly has advanced systems for DDoS mitigation, and the people who attacked Dyn (whoever they are) were probably using something more advanced than a PC in their mom’s basement. Recently, we’ve entered into a new DDoS paradigm. As security blogger Brian Krebs notes, the newfound ability to highjack insecure internet of things devices and turn them into a massive DDoS army has contributed to an uptick in the size and scale of recent DDoS attacks. (We’re not sure if an IoT botnet was what took down Dyn this morning, but it would be a pretty good guess.) We are nevertheless getting a taste of what the new era of DDoS attacks look like, however. As security expert Bruce Schneier explained in a blog post: Over the past year or two, someone has been probing the defenses of the companies that run critical pieces of the Internet. These probes take the form of precisely calibrated attacks designed to determine exactly how well these companies can defend themselves, and what would be required to take them down. We don’t know who is doing this, but it feels like a large nation state. China or Russia would be my first guesses. This sort of attack is deeply different than the headline-grabbing DDoS attacks of years past. In 2011, hacker collective Anonymous rose to fame with DDoS attacks that pale in comparison to today’s attack on Dyn. Instead of taking out an individual website for short periods of time, hackers were able to take down a major piece of the internet backbone for an entire morning—not once but twice. That’s huge. If hackers are more easily able to amass extensive DDoS botnets, that means the internet as we know it becomes more vulnerable. Attacking major internet infrastructure like Dyn has always been a possibility, but if it becomes easier than ever to launch huge DDoS attacks, that means we might be seeing some of our favorite sites have more downtime than usual. These attacks could extend to other major pieces of internet infrastructure, causing even more widespread outages. This could be the beginning of a very bleak future. If hackers are able to take down the internet at will, what happens next? It’s unclear how long it could take for the folks at Dyn to fix this problem, or if they will ever be able to solve the problem of being hit with a huge DDoS attack. But this new breed of DDoS attacks is a scary problem no matter how you look at it. It's a conspiracy, first the U.S cedes control of the Internet to the U.N., now all is this shit!! I'm telling you, the Illuminati wants to control the internet. Be wary!!
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Gasotard
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October 22, 2016, 04:23:25 PM |
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https://www.reddit.com/r/ethereum/comments/58n6ok/miners_please_run_with_targetgaslimit_2000000/?st=iulezm9x&sh=503bd37dMiners: please run with --targetgaslimit 2000000 (geth) or --gas-floor-target 2000000. There's no reason to lower it further than this level; for some reason many miners are still targeting either 1m or 500k. Submitted 1 day ago * by vbuterinJust some guy - announcement Gas limit currently at 1.2m; it's been decreasing by ~100k per 4 hours for the past day and a half. Uncle rates back during full DoS spam at 2m were at ~0.25-0.3, so lowering the limit to 1.2m is excessive. Note that some client developers are considering a dynamic gas limit formula where the gas limit target would keep going up slowly, and then come back down every time they see a block that subjectively takes them more than 2 seconds to process. This would allow for an appropriate gas limit to be maintained to ensure network health without the need for manual intervention on the miners' part to change target gas limit flags; I support this proposal. Note on incentives: some erroneously believe that miners may have the incentive to vote the uncle rate down further because they want to lower the uncle rate to preserve their revenues. However, miners' revenues as a whole do not at present go down when uncle rates go up (because the difficulty targeting algorithm targets blocks per minute and not blocks + uncles per minute), and targeting a lower gas limit does not affect you any differently from any other miners. --targetgaslimit is a vote on global consensus parameters, not a private transaction policy setting. If miners are concerned about their own personal uncle rate, then their existing strategy of raising gas prices during DoS attacks does that job quite well.
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becoin
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 3431
Merit: 1233
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October 22, 2016, 04:41:51 PM |
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We don’t know who is doing this, but it feels like a large nation state. China or Russia would be my first guesses. US or UK would be my first guesses. They need a contingency plan to shut down Internet and introduce martial law when dollar-based financial system implodes and trillions of dollars and pounds in banks evaporate.
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Gasotard
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October 22, 2016, 04:44:45 PM |
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We don’t know who is doing this, but it feels like a large nation state. China or Russia would be my first guesses. US or UK would be my first guesses. They need a contingency plan to shut down Internet and introduce martial law when dollar-based financial system implodes and trillions of dollars and pounds in banks evaporate. The Sterling is already everaping at the moment. Its value has dropped over 20% in the last few months.
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mtnsaa
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1568
Merit: 1000
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October 22, 2016, 05:18:41 PM |
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We don’t know who is doing this, but it feels like a large nation state. China or Russia would be my first guesses. US or UK would be my first guesses. They need a contingency plan to shut down Internet and introduce martial law when dollar-based financial system implodes and trillions of dollars and pounds in banks evaporate. Lol, you guys with the tinfoil hats crack me up. The world and fiat economic system has been "collapsing" my whole life. Don't you guys get tired of fear mongering and post apocalyptic dabbling? I'm from a third world country, I've seen my region financial system "collapse", looting, blackouts, military securing the streets and nothing really happens if you are not an idiot, so don't worry too much. You guys from the first world can't even phantom the privileges you have right now so I can agree with you that any change will hit you hard now that I think about it. Anyway, everything will fall into place like it usually does without major problems, right now many tech oriented companies like Google, Amazon and many others are absolute giants so there's really no point of having banks, we as a society are reacting to these uncertain times but we'll adapt for the benefit of us all (the rich and powerful will benefit a little more as usual...). We've seen this happen to many sectors lately. Right now it's ridiculous for a bank to exist in the first place, let alone charge you money for securing yours. Amazon, Facebook, Google or Apple (and even Paypal) are much more capable and friendly than them with all their security and speed to handle your money. Imagine if they would adopt blockchain/interledger tech on top of that. You trust your whole life to them, money should be an afterthought. That's the crisis we have right now, a paradigm economic shift based on new tech. Just check the new Tesla self driving car and imagine what could imply to our day to day life. Millions of jobs will have to transition to something else and fast. Same for "bankers" and schemers, accountants and whatever useless office employee who does nothing all day.
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Pelgoran98
Sr. Member
Offline
Activity: 328
Merit: 250
It'd be nice.
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October 22, 2016, 06:50:43 PM Last edit: October 23, 2016, 02:39:00 PM by Pelgoran98 |
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Who knows when the hackers will strike again and who they are, like that matters. And, where? You just have to hope there's some fix for it. God only knows what. Didn't you always know it would come to this? They're hijacking all our "smart" machines, appliances, security cameras, and the whole 'Internet Of Things," you name it. That has ALWAYS been the big fear and now it is here!! Look up "Internet Of Things." Here, I'll do it for you: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_of_things It's infinitely complex, if you ask me. This is like the warning shot across the bow of the Internet. Enjoy: https://www.cnet.com/news/internet-outage-dyn-ddos-attack-twitter-spotify/
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cryptodv
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October 22, 2016, 06:54:25 PM |
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We don’t know who is doing this, but it feels like a large nation state. China or Russia would be my first guesses. US or UK would be my first guesses. They need a contingency plan to shut down Internet and introduce martial law when dollar-based financial system implodes and trillions of dollars and pounds in banks evaporate. Lol, you guys with the tinfoil hats crack me up. The world and fiat economic system has been "collapsing" my whole life. Don't you guys get tired of fear mongering and post apocalyptic dabbling? I'm from a third world country, I've seen my region financial system "collapse", looting, blackouts, military securing the streets and nothing really happens if you are not an idiot, so don't worry too much. You guys from the first world can't even phantom the privileges you have right now so I can agree with you that any change will hit you hard now that I think about it. Anyway, everything will fall into place like it usually does without major problems, right now many tech oriented companies like Google, Amazon and many others are absolute giants so there's really no point of having banks, we as a society are reacting to these uncertain times but we'll adapt for the benefit of us all (the rich and powerful will benefit a little more as usual...). We've seen this happen to many sectors lately. Right now it's ridiculous for a bank to exist in the first place, let alone charge you money for securing yours. Amazon, Facebook, Google or Apple (and even Paypal) are much more capable and friendly than them with all their security and speed to handle your money. Imagine if they would adopt blockchain/interledger tech on top of that. You trust your whole life to them, money should be an afterthought. That's the crisis we have right now, a paradigm economic shift based on new tech. Just check the new Tesla self driving car and imagine what could imply to our day to day life. Millions of jobs will have to transition to something else and fast. Same for "bankers" and schemers, accountants and whatever useless office employee who does nothing all day. Interesting.
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thevictimofuktyranny
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1092
Merit: 1004
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October 22, 2016, 10:19:41 PM |
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Calm down guys, the attack on Ethereum was all about making profits through crimes. Get a dump going on through a huge theft or network attack, buy up at bottom of a panic dump of ETH and then sell it off when the price rebounds. Trying to connect it up too stuff happening outside of crypto currencies is silly
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MoneyJ
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October 22, 2016, 11:20:40 PM |
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If all goes well with ethereum this will be bigger than Bitcoin in my opinion. For now it has always experienced growing pains. If it is mature enough and embraced by majority fintech , it is going to be the Berkshire of cryptocurrency.
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STT
Legendary
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Activity: 4074
Merit: 1448
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October 23, 2016, 12:56:42 AM Last edit: October 23, 2016, 01:13:19 AM by STT |
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Why is ethereum superior to bitcoin, can it avoid the current cap bitcoin finds itself in or is it much faster to confirm securely a transaction. Something obvious like that maybe or a more subtle acummulative effect where it will surpass bitcoin eventually, its hard to beat the current standard which everyone defaults to in their support and usage. Litecoin didnt, thats probably peaked already so Im just saying it probably has to be better in some way to do prosper as well Ethereum is also being tested by enterprise software companies for various applications. Previously-established interested parties included Microsoft, IBM, and JPMorgan Chase.
The wiki is impressive but the price rose 10x this year so I guess that fits. Why is the price not shown on bitcoinwisdom, etc and eth is confusing and I guess ETH is the 'real' chain. Any confusion is bad for growth of usage in the wider population so just wondering as its all generally confusing to me :p Is this likely to be a consumer crypto standard or maybe more business orientated The world and fiat economic system has been "collapsing" my whole life. Don't you guys get tired of fear mongering and post apocalyptic dabbling? I'm from a third world country, I've seen my region financial system "collapse", looting, blackouts, military securing the streets and nothing really happens if you are not an idiot, so don't worry too much. You guys from the first world can't even phantom the privileges you have right now so I can agree with you that any change will hit you hard now that I think about it.
Anyway, everything will fall into place like it usually does without major problems, right now many tech oriented companies like Google, Amazon and many others are absolute giants so there's really no point of having banks, we as a society are reacting to these uncertain times but we'll adapt for the benefit of us all Banks are unique in an economy, they form part of money creation. They are first buyers for government debt if nothing else they wont go easily. We cant just switch over to amazon cards or whatever, those companies are relying on the currency standard which is part of government and taxes and so on. Maybe thats the net result of all this crypto standard, to allow more company and capitalist based economic transaction as we have fallen into politics and nationalist produced money. The losers there are those not in the political elite like your 3rd world country perhaps, I would much prefer we have capital with the people distributed by demand and enterprise. Any move away from fiat would be a massive deal and an end of an arc going back maybe a hundred years. The reason a small 3rd world economy is not as significant is that its already likely relying on other countries around it, so Zimbabwe they used fiat notes from south africa and to some extent gold or other tradable items. USA dollars failing would be a big deal, leaving no other alternative for many. It is a very privileged system, a big change to that status quo would be a life changing event for most of the planet
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