cryptodevil
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2240
Merit: 1254
Thread-puller extraordinaire
|
|
September 02, 2019, 03:51:54 PM |
|
I understand that my judgement is not relevant for the matter, however, you question the only US Federal Judge's findings on this matter - the creator of Bitcoin.
It appears as if you are under the mistaken impression that the judge's statement about their partnership supports CSW's claim to be Satoshi: "One, Dr. Wright and David Kleiman entered into a 50 percent 50/50 partnership to develop Bitcoin intellectual property and to mine Bitcoin."^^^ This does not assert that said partnership created Bitcoin, only that they were supposedly developing Bitcoin-related IP at some point. Which bit of the judge's statement explicitly clarifying that they were not ruling on the matter of Satoshi Nakamoto's identity confuses you?
|
WARNING!!! Check your forum URLs carefully and avoid links to phishing sites like 'thebitcointalk' 'bitcointalk.to' and 'BitcointaLLk'
|
|
|
Hueristic
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 3948
Merit: 5362
Doomed to see the future and unable to prevent it
|
|
September 02, 2019, 03:59:41 PM |
|
I understand that my judgement is not relevant for the matter, however, you question the only US Federal Judge's findings on this matter - the creator of Bitcoin.
It appears as if you are under the mistaken impression that the judge's statement about their partnership supports CSW's claim to be Satoshi: "One, Dr. Wright and David Kleiman entered into a 50 percent 50/50 partnership to develop Bitcoin intellectual property and to mine Bitcoin."^^^ This does not assert that said partnership created Bitcoin, only that they were supposedly developing Bitcoin-related IP at some point. Which bit of the judge's statement explicitly clarifying that they were not ruling on the matter of Satoshi Nakamoto's identity confuses you? Not only that, he rules that CSW owes half of all proceeds from that partnership.
|
“Bad men need nothing more to compass their ends, than that good men should look on and do nothing.”
|
|
|
Iamtutut
|
|
September 02, 2019, 04:25:49 PM |
|
For me, this is enough evidence, Judge Reinhart is authority.
Psst, we got this ultimate authority thing called a blockchain. You can't fake it. You can't lie to it. You can't bend it to your will. It knows more than any judge ever will. There's no need to pricktease for years on end. It will allow you to prove anything you want in minutes as long as what you're claiming is - and here's the important part - true. Our special friend has found this out in relentless and excruciating detail in a stunningly elongated fashion. Some day he may even acknowledge it. I understand that my judgement is not relevant for the matter, however, you question the only US Federal Judge's findings on this matter - the creator of Bitcoin. And you want to be taken seriously? https://www.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.flsd.521536/gov.uscourts.flsd.521536.277.0.pdf"Two preliminary points. First, the Court is not required to decide, and does not decide, whether Defendant Dr. CraigWright is Satoshi Nakamoto, the inventor of the Bitcoin cybercurrency. 2 The Court also is not required to decide, and does not decide,how much bitcoin, if any, Dr. Wright controls today. For purposes of this proceeding, the Court accepts Dr. Wright’s representationthat he controlled (directly or indirectly) some bitcoin on December 31, 2013, and that he continues to control some today."
|
|
|
|
gentlemand
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2590
Merit: 3014
Welt Am Draht
|
|
September 02, 2019, 04:46:16 PM Last edit: September 02, 2019, 04:56:47 PM by gentlemand |
|
I understand that my judgement is not relevant for the matter, however, you question the only US Federal Judge's findings on this matter - the creator of Bitcoin.
And you want to be taken seriously?
The judge has explicitly stated he refused to be drawn on stating whether any of this is true. Please supply evidence where he confirms what you seemingly choose to believe. The evidence already supplied by others directly opposes your unusual belief and it comes straight from the source. Don't moan, berate or insult - give verifiable statements. The judge said he will not say whether Craigy has anything to do with the creation of Bitcoin. You are saying he has. I am ever so slightly more inclined to believe the person who, like, said it. If you can come up with evidence that says the judge does believe Craigy is Satoshi I'm sure the judge would be utterly fascinated to see it seeing as he did not say that.
|
|
|
|
|
tmfp
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 1932
Merit: 1737
"Common rogue from Russia with a bare ass."
|
|
September 02, 2019, 06:56:51 PM |
|
|
Extraordinary Claims require Extraordinary Evidence
|
|
|
gentlemand
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2590
Merit: 3014
Welt Am Draht
|
|
September 02, 2019, 07:05:01 PM |
|
I think it left amusing behind a long time ago and now it's flat out pitiful. How the collective self delusion can last for this long is beyond me. One of the things I dislike about crypto is how it made me despise the human race even more than I already did after watching them attempt to digest it. This shit don't help.
|
|
|
|
HardFireMiner
|
|
September 03, 2019, 07:22:17 AM |
|
I understand that my judgement is not relevant for the matter, however, you question the only US Federal Judge's findings on this matter - the creator of Bitcoin.
It appears as if you are under the mistaken impression that the judge's statement about their partnership supports CSW's claim to be Satoshi: "One, Dr. Wright and David Kleiman entered into a 50 percent 50/50 partnership to develop Bitcoin intellectual property and to mine Bitcoin."^^^ This does not assert that said partnership created Bitcoin, only that they were supposedly developing Bitcoin-related IP at some point. Which bit of the judge's statement explicitly clarifying that they were not ruling on the matter of Satoshi Nakamoto's identity confuses you? I see you still have trouble in reading the whole hearing from 08-26-2019, I will try to help. Ms McGovern, Dr.Wright's lawyer:Your Honor, the Court ordered Dr. Wright to produce a list of public addresses, or actually the Bitcoin that was held as of 12/31/2013. So the issue before this Court is whether Dr. Wright has demonstrated an inability to comply with this order. The decisions that are addressing this shifted burden explain that it's composed of the following: An explanation as to why compliance is not possible; and a good faith effort to comply using all reasonable efforts possible. In response to the Court's order, Dr. Wright has provided the first 70 of those public addresses. There are over 16,000. In addition, Dr. Wright has disclosed his full holdings of Bitcoin as of December 31st, 2013, and has stated under oath exactly how much Bitcoin he holds as of that date, and has confirmed under oath that that Bitcoin has not moved. The explanation, the first part, Dr. Wright testified before Your Honor in a full-day evidentiary hearing under oath that the public addresses are contained in an encrypted file that cannot be accessed at this time. The testimony was unequivocal. When asked whether Dr. Wright specifically could provide a list of those public addresses, and, in fact, whether it was impossible for him to provide those public addresses at this time, he testified on page 22: Yes, it is. In addition, when asked specifically if he could provide the remaining list of public addresses beyond the first 70 that he provided, that if he could do it, would he do it. And he testified unequivocally: Yes, I would. Beyond that, Your Honor, he explained why it makes no sense that he wouldn't. From a credibility perspective, which is something that the plaintiffs have argued on this issue before this Court, this limited issue before this Court, the plaintiffs essentially have argued he cannot be believed. That's not evidence. In explaining why he would provide the list of public addresses if he could -- and, in fact, it strains credulity as to why he wouldn't do that -- he went into detailed explanation as to how the process worked. He specifically explained that in 2011, he disassociated himself with the file with Dave Kleiman's help for a number of reasons, the first of which was that he did not want to be associated with the name Satoshi Nakamoto. And the reason for that was because the invention that he testified under oath he created was being misused in terrible ways: As heroin markets, pedophilia centers and other things. So his testimony when asked, how is it possible that someone with that amount of Bitcoin wouldn't keep a file so that he could access the public addresses later, he explained he wanted total disassociation with it. It strains credulity, according to Dr. Wright, and it seems reasonable to believe him, that someone would want to be associated with that kind of an invention. So the rationale for disassociating himself with the file and the Bitcoin at that time is not incredulous. In addition, the value of the Bitcoin in 2011 is not what it is today. Today the numbers are staggering, there's no question about it. That wasn't the case then. Additionally, Dr. Wright explained that this process in which he encrypted the file and the reason why he cannot access it, it is impossible to access, is because Dave Kleiman is dead. In addition, the information that could possibly help him decrypt the file now, apart from the fact that he can't speak to his good friend, Dave Kleiman, is the fact that the files, the electronic devices and the information that Dave Kleiman had at his house has been discarded, overwritten, and is encrypted. Those are undisputed facts in this case. Dr. Wright further testified under oath that it is very possible, based upon the manner in which the encrypted file was set up, that the information to decrypt the file, process the algorithm that would allow him to generate the public addresses and provide that information could be available in January 2020. Discovery has been ordered; discovery is not complete. If, in fact, Dave Kleiman's devices are later decrypted and information becomes available when the forensic analyses are complete, and that information allows an earlier access, that may remedy the situation even earlier than January. In addition, Dr. Wright produced testimony, or provided testimony and produced information in an effort to demonstrate to this Court all reasonable efforts in good faith to comply with this Court's order. Dr. Wright instruction high-level staff at nChain to do everything that they could to provide what was a probabilistic list of the public addresses beyond the first 70 that were produced. The plaintiffs criticized that process, arguing that the information and the criteria that was used was in the control of Dr. Wright. Of course, it was. It was, in fact, the information that Dr. Wright had that was utilized to try to generate a list of the probabilistic public addresses that would be available. That information was explained by Steve Shadders, who testified under oath as to the procedures that he followed, and that he provided that information at the instruction of Dr. Wright, who was attempting to comply with this Court's order. The list of public addresses, a probabilistic list, was a attempt at a complete inclusive list of public addresses that Dr. Wright had beyond the first 70 produced. That list was provided to plaintiffs' counsel on June 28th at the close of the first evidentiary hearing. After the close of the evidentiary hearing, Your Honor, it was then produced to them in electronic file. At the cross-examination of Steve Shadders on August 5th, the second day of this Court's evidentiary hearing, there was absolutely no evidence provided that any analyses on that probabilistic list was done. Steve Shadders also testified and provide -- provided exclement (sic) explanation as to what the public address information would provide to the plaintiffs. We believe that's important, Your Honor, because the holdings that Dr. Wright had as of December 31st, 2013, have been provided, and the information regarding the public addresses, if, in fact, he had a list now that he could say, I've done everything I can to just remember the 16,000-and-some public addresses, wouldn't necessarily provide the plaintiffs with any additional information, because as Steve Shadders testified, as well as Dr. Wright testified, ownership cannot be determined by having a public address. Further, whether somebody mined with another person, even if it were possible during the relevant time period, which it was not, cannot be determined by having the public address. So the information that a public address can provide to the plaintiffs in this case should be considered by this Court in addressing the inability to provide that to plaintiffs at this juncture. It's our position, Your Honor, that the evidence shows, that the evidence demonstrates, that that information does not provide plaintiffs with information that merits the kind of allegations that are being made surrounding its, the plaintiffs', inability to obtain that information now. Plaintiffs have not produced any evidence in this evidentiary hearing that defeats impossibility, Your Honor. There's been no witness provided that rebuts Dr. Wright's unequivocal testimony that he cannot provide the public addresses at this time. Plaintiffs' expert did not address that question. Instead, plaintiff spent most of the cross-examination of Dr. Wright on reviewing and reading verbatim lines in metadata with respect to e-mails and other documents. Apparently, the primary argument in response to impossibility or the inability to access the public addresses is something -- is simply or is nothing more than -- I'm not saying that it's -- should be taken lightly; credibility's important. The plaintiffs' entire theme on this issue before this Court is that Dr. Wright should not be believed. Supposition and belief is not evidence, and the rationale and the explanations that Dr. Wright has provided as to his inability, separate and apart from his unequivocal statements that he is unable to do it, makes sense. When asked if Dr. Wright has already sustained or has already suffered certain consequences as a result of these contempt proceedings, his answer to this Court was: Yes. Can't speak to his mother; he's having difficulty talking to his wife. These are serious allegations the plaintiffs have lodged in this case, and he's here today for that reason. He is being charged in this case in this -- on this issue before this Court with a willful violation of a federal court order, and he has testified and explained that he is taking that very seriously. Your Honor, we understand there's been a delay, and Your Honor asked Dr. Wright about that delay on June 28th and specifically asked if you knew about -- or that you knew that you weren't able to access the encrypted file with the public addresses at the time they were requested, why didn't you just say that? Why was there a period from February, March and April, when we were discovering that and reaching a full understanding of what you're testifying under oath now? And if we could go back, Your Honor, we would. If we could go back with a fuller understanding of what the issues are in this case, I'm sure the plaintiffs would. I don't think Ira would have wiped out the files with pictures of his children. Or perhaps there's something more. But at this stage, things have been done that wouldn't have been done, particularly in light of the fact that in 2014, when Dr. Wright contacted Dave Kleiman's father, he specifically said: There is important information in Dave Kleiman's devices, protect it, and the opposite was done. So during the period of time in which the issue of the public addresses was being discovered, there were a lot of other things happening, as well, in this case. There is a massive amount of discovery that has been conducted in good faith in this case. We don't mean to suggest, Your Honor, that we don't understand the issue before you, and I'm certainly not trying to detract the Court's attention on what the issue is. We understand it, and we're very -- taking it very seriously. But in terms of context and in terms of explanation, we think it's important to understand what that context is. So when you're unable to do something, and you're trying to understand exactly what the circumstances are about it, particularly in light of the fact that we have so many computers and so much data, and corporations and available resources, we wanted to make sure that, in fact, all of the information was put before the Court and it was accurate. If Dr. Wright did not wish to allow the plaintiffs access to the public addresses, he explained under oath that the last thing he would have done is provide the first 70, because that, in fact, as he explained, identifies him as Satoshi Nakamoto. Producing the rest of the public addresses provide -- causes absolutely no concern. And importantly, plaintiffs have offered no explanation as to why he wouldn't do it; why he would put himself, his credibility, the credibility of his counsel on the line if the public addresses don't do what the plaintiffs are claiming it does; and if he's already tried to comply by providing the first 70, and if he's asked his staff to give a list of every single public address that could possibly be his based upon the criteria that he was able to narrow. The explanation that the information may come in January 2020 is important in light of the fact that discovery is ongoing. But it's also important because we're not even done reviewing Dave's devices. We haven't gotten to the point, Your Honor, of even being able, from a defense perspective, to go beyond simply the identification of the files that were deleted. By court order, our forensic experts are reviewing that information, and we're not at the point where we can, as they say in today's parlance a lot, take a deep dive. But we're very anxious to do it, and we believe information, critical information, about this case is contained there. To take a leap and claim and argue that Dr. Wright should be foreclosed from a defense, a robust defense in this case, on claims of an oral general partnership, a default judgment for half the Bitcoin, some sort of punitive sanction stated publicly about his intentions regarding this Court's or regarding the inability to comply with this Court's order is simply not proportionate to the facts and circumstances that have been presented and the evidence that's been presented on this issue. Your Honor, I'd also like to say that this issue is not every issue in the case. We come before Your Honor and often hear the same mantra about things that aren't related to the issue before this Court. We believe it's very important, Your Honor, that the issue before this Court, which is a limited issue of a noncompliance of a discovery order, doesn't mean it's not important. Simply talking about the definition of what is before the Court not be conflated with other issues that have been presented to the Court on other facts and other allegations. In other words, Dr. Wright doesn't lose his right to due process to a jury trial because there have been some sort of credibility determination vel non in this case that he's no longer entitled to those things. In the absence of any evidence, Your Honor, that defeats impossibility, that's what we're left with. Your Honor asked if the parties, counsel for the parties, could think about appropriate remedies in this case for what has transpired concerning the inability to provide the public addresses and the timing of that. And, Your Honor, we are very, very mindful of the importance of mitigating potential harm. Exxon is ringing in my ears. But we do believe that it is important to keep in mind here that it is not a willful noncompliance that we are looking at here. The intentions were not to hide and deceive. If that were the case, common sense would dictate that you wouldn't say exactly how much Bitcoin you have as of 12/31/13, you wouldn't provide the first 70, and you wouldn't pull high-end staff away from other projects to provide a list, a probabilistic list, an all-inclusive list of the public addresses that they probably are in light of the fact that the admission under oath, which is not refuted, is that the Bitcoin hasn't moved. So in terms of the remedy, Your Honor, we believe this Court should determine first and foremost, in light of the absence of evidence regarding a willful violation as to what information the plaintiffs have not received, and, in fact, the prejudice to the plaintiffs if they don't receive that information at this time. If, in fact, the Bitcoin hasn't moved, and in light of the fact that discovery is not over, and with the very high possibility that this information will ultimately be provided to plaintiffs before trial, we don't believe, even assuming that the Court were to impose a sanction, that anything beyond a sanction for the period of time that was taken in reaching a full understanding of this issue should be imposed. In other words, the plaintiffs' counsel engaged in efforts that perhaps were not necessary and could be determined to have been wasted had that information been provided sooner, and we understand that. The same is true, Your Honor, on our side. And if that's the case, any remedy that the Court should impose reasonably should be limited to that reasonable amount of time that the plaintiffs spent working towards that ultimate understanding. We don't believe, Your Honor, that it would be fair to include the evidentiary hearing on that issue, and here's why. We highly doubt plaintiffs' counsel would have simply taken Dr. Wright's statement that the file is encrypted and he cannot access it without requesting an evidentiary showing. We believe, Your Honor, we would have needed that evidentiary showing, and we would have needed to engage in that process anyway. But for the period of time that Your Honor referenced on June 28th, where you specifically asked Dr. Wright about that time period, we believe any -- any sanction should be limited to that reasonable attorney's fee, which can be presented to Your Honor and addressed as to its reasonableness at a later time, and we do not believe, Your Honor, that that sanction should imply in any way a willful noncompliance with this Court's order, simply because the gravity with which that kind of finding carries would be unfair. In an ideal world, Your Honor, in light of the fact that discovery has not been completed, and Dr. Wright has testified as to the very high possibility that he will receive that information in January, we ask that you -- that the Court refrain from imposing any sanction at all, including a reasonable attorney's fee, until January 31st, 2020. I know what you're going to hear next. It's going to be a request for the highest sanction possible: Default judgment, strike pleadings, essentially determine the case over and claim game over. The law is not designed to set a litigant up for failure. And without evidence -- and there is none -- that Dr. Wright has willfully failed to comply with this Court's order, we believe, Your Honor, that even the suggestion of that kind of a sanction cannot be reconciled with our court of justice and with our system. We also recognize, Your Honor, that the Court has spent time, and the Court has put in effort in reaching a full understanding on this issue. I know Bitcoin's not new, but Shamir schemes, and Bitcoin, and protocol, and code, and all of those things wrapped together, and a deceased, the other main witness in this case who cannot speak and whose files are not available, because they're encrypted themselves or they've been erased, doesn't necessarily come up in one case all at the same time. So we're working through it, and we're working through it in good faith, Your Honor. I can say -- and we just have to glance over there to the right real quick, that everybody on this side is honored to be in front of this Court. Dr. Wright has come from the UK for a day because -- might not be the right word -- but in the form of an allocution recognizes what this Court has done. The mere fact that an explanation was provided in the manner in which provided is a testament to the kind of system that we have, which is a system of truth and arriving at it, and the ability to be able to explain things that are difficult to explain, even if they're not perhaps fully explained the first time because they're complicated.
THE HONORABLE BRUCE E. REINHART UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE
Therefore, as a remedial measure pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(b)(2)(A)(i), the Court deems the following facts to be established for purposes of this action: And, by the way, I find that no lesser sanction is sufficient than what I'm about to announce. One, Dr. Wright and David Kleiman entered into a 50 percent 50/50 partnership to develop Bitcoin intellectual property and to mine Bitcoin. Second, it is deemed proven that all Bitcoin mined by Dr. Wright prior to December 31st, 2013, was joint property of Dr. Wright and David Kleiman at the time it was mined. Because Dr. Wright's 10th affirmative defense relating to the statute of frauds challenges the existence of a partnership, it is inconsistent with these findings and these facts, so it is stricken. As a further punitive sanction, I deem the following facts: One, any Bitcoin-related intellectual property developed by Dr. Wright prior to David Kleiman's death is jointly and equally owned by Dr. Wright and by the plaintiffs. And, two, any Bitcoin mined by Dr. Wright prior to David Kleiman's death and any assets traceable to those Bitcoin is presently jointly and equally owned by the plaintiffs and Dr. Wright. Dr. Wright's third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, second seventh affirmative defenses assert that David Kleiman surrendered has legal rights in return for shares in a corporation. These affirmative defenses are inconsistent with the facts as I have deemed them, so they are stricken. I do not strike Dr. Wright's first, second, I think ninth, or 11th and 12th affirmative defenses. So I do not -- I do not strike all of his pleadings. I do not enter a default judgment. I leave in place the affirmative defenses relating to statute of limitations, latches, res judicata and the one I can't remember. In addition, Dr. Wright's April 18th motion which was in substance a motion for protective order was denied, the plaintiffs' June 3rd motion to compel was granted, and the current motion is also granted. Therefore, I will order that the plaintiffs are entitled to receive reasonable attorney's fees and expenses related to each of those motions.
https://wizsec.jp/20190826_kleiman_wright.pdfI hope you can identify the implications and consequence this case has. If not, oh well, maybe later. The above quote of judge Reinhart are facts established by the Court, your quote is not there so it is not relevant.
|
|
|
|
hv_
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2534
Merit: 1055
Clean Code and Scale
|
|
September 03, 2019, 07:39:56 AM |
|
The scaling by block capacity was always a no brainer. Then why ever limit the block size? Hmm? The limit only has sense in case of 0 Bitcoin value, at the beginnings. This is only spam protection where it costs 0 to send. Now it will be removed to enable true open competition between all the network participants. Any limit / rule you introduce has a dictatorship / comunism like origin / effect and is strong sign of central power (like a dev team + PoSM has). The less rules, the more open and true competition allowing a system is and its not governed by a central entity. Watch BSV, the roadmap is here and no need of Satoshi is included any longer, cause he initially set the rules in stone. That is actually the reason why so many start crying against, since they want that power, and want to alter rules. So open competition is not what core teams like ... Hal Finney seemed to understand it back in 2010. Actually there is a very good reason for Bitcoin-backed banks to exist, issuing their own digital cash currency, redeemable for bitcoins. Bitcoin itself cannot scale to have every single financial transaction in the world be broadcast to everyone and included in the block chain. There needs to be a secondary level of payment systems which is lighter weight and more efficient. Likewise, the time needed for Bitcoin transactions to finalize will be impractical for medium to large value purchases.
People who think 'Electronic Cash' simply means an asset designed for small daily payments (and need to have no fees and instant confirmations) need to read the Cypherpunk Manifesto: https://www.activism.net/cypherpunk/manifesto.htmlPrivacy is necessary for an open society in the electronic age. Privacy is not secrecy. A private matter is something one doesn't want the whole world to know, but a secret matter is something one doesn't want anybody to know. Privacy is the power to selectively reveal oneself to the world. Therefore, privacy in an open society requires anonymous transaction systems. Until now, cash has been the primary such system. An anonymous transaction system is not a secret transaction system. An anonymous system empowers individuals to reveal their identity when desired and only when desired; this is the essence of privacy. We must defend our own privacy if we expect to have any. We must come together and create systems which allow anonymous transactions to take place. People have been defending their own privacy for centuries with whispers, darkness, envelopes, closed doors, secret handshakes, and couriers. The technologies of the past did not allow for strong privacy, but electronic technologies do. Cypherpunks write code. We know that someone has to write software to defend privacy, and since we can't get privacy unless we all do, we're going to write it. We publish our code so that our fellow Cypherpunks may practice and play with it. Our code is free for all to use, worldwide. We don't much care if you don't approve of the software we write. We know that software can't be destroyed and that a widely dispersed system can't be shut down. Great post, this cannot be reiterated enough. To many of the people in this scene now know nothing of this and those chasing the Midas touch selectively forget. Great post to see when mixin privacy with annonymity - sigh And writing code - and using it in regulated env - like finance is - sigh again
|
Carpe diem - understand the White Paper and mine honest. Fix real world issues: Check out b-vote.com The simple way is the genius way - Satoshi's Rules: humana veris _
|
|
|
nutildah (OP)
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 3122
Merit: 8419
Happy 10th Birthday to Dogeparty!
|
|
September 03, 2019, 08:33:55 AM |
|
https://wizsec.jp/20190826_kleiman_wright.pdfI hope you can identify the implications and consequence this case has. If not, oh well, maybe later. The above quote of judge Reinhart are facts established by the Court, your quote is not there so it is not relevant. You're beyond reaching for straws at this point. Point me to the part of the judge's ruling where he said Craig was Satoshi. Point me to the part that says they collectively mined over zero bitcoins.
|
|
|
|
cryptodevil
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2240
Merit: 1254
Thread-puller extraordinaire
|
|
September 03, 2019, 09:54:21 AM |
|
Ms McGovern, Dr.Wright's lawyer:/snip Those are undisputed facts in this case.
*sigh* Ok, I'll assume you're just ill-informed when it comes to legal terminology, rather than being wilfully ignorant. When it is stated that facts are 'undisputed', it does not mean they are proven, it simply means that neither party contests them. As has been stated already, it is absolutely in the Kleiman family's interest to agree with Craig's assertions towards claimed IP and mined bitcoins. He asserts such in order to try and convince people he is Satoshi, remember, but went on to perjure himself with false evidence while trying to claim that Kleiman was, at various different times, either nothing to do with the assets or was merely holding them on his behalf. The assets in question, predominantly, the claimed vast quantities of bitcoin, have yet to even be proven as ever being in either of their control, with the 'Tulip Trust' story being rubbished by the judge as a fabrication. Craig has already been proven to have fraudulently claimed ownership of wallets which were subsequently shown to belong to other entities, such as MtGox. I have yet to come across a single piece of evidence proving that CSW possessed any bitcoin prior to 2013, have you? the Court deems the following facts to be established for purposes of this action: The above quote of judge Reinhart are facts established by the Court, your quote is not there so it is not relevant. Again, the key part of that sentence is, "for the purposes of this action". In that neither party disputed the claimed facts then they are accepted as being established for the purposes of this particular action only. It was never the intent of the court to work to disprove anything that both parties were in agreement with. Do you understand?
|
WARNING!!! Check your forum URLs carefully and avoid links to phishing sites like 'thebitcointalk' 'bitcointalk.to' and 'BitcointaLLk'
|
|
|
TheNewAnon135246
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2198
Merit: 1989
฿uy ฿itcoin
|
|
September 03, 2019, 01:51:16 PM |
|
The scaling by block capacity was always a no brainer. Then why ever limit the block size? Hmm? The limit only has sense in case of 0 Bitcoin value, at the beginnings. This is only spam protection where it costs 0 to send. Now it will be removed to enable true open competition between all the network participants. Any limit / rule you introduce has a dictatorship / comunism like origin / effect and is strong sign of central power (like a dev team + PoSM has). The less rules, the more open and true competition allowing a system is and its not governed by a central entity. Watch BSV, the roadmap is here and no need of Satoshi is included any longer, cause he initially set the rules in stone. That is actually the reason why so many start crying against, since they want that power, and want to alter rules. So open competition is not what core teams like ... Hal Finney seemed to understand it back in 2010. Actually there is a very good reason for Bitcoin-backed banks to exist, issuing their own digital cash currency, redeemable for bitcoins. Bitcoin itself cannot scale to have every single financial transaction in the world be broadcast to everyone and included in the block chain. There needs to be a secondary level of payment systems which is lighter weight and more efficient. Likewise, the time needed for Bitcoin transactions to finalize will be impractical for medium to large value purchases.
People who think 'Electronic Cash' simply means an asset designed for small daily payments (and need to have no fees and instant confirmations) need to read the Cypherpunk Manifesto: https://www.activism.net/cypherpunk/manifesto.htmlPrivacy is necessary for an open society in the electronic age. Privacy is not secrecy. A private matter is something one doesn't want the whole world to know, but a secret matter is something one doesn't want anybody to know. Privacy is the power to selectively reveal oneself to the world. Therefore, privacy in an open society requires anonymous transaction systems. Until now, cash has been the primary such system. An anonymous transaction system is not a secret transaction system. An anonymous system empowers individuals to reveal their identity when desired and only when desired; this is the essence of privacy. We must defend our own privacy if we expect to have any. We must come together and create systems which allow anonymous transactions to take place. People have been defending their own privacy for centuries with whispers, darkness, envelopes, closed doors, secret handshakes, and couriers. The technologies of the past did not allow for strong privacy, but electronic technologies do. Cypherpunks write code. We know that someone has to write software to defend privacy, and since we can't get privacy unless we all do, we're going to write it. We publish our code so that our fellow Cypherpunks may practice and play with it. Our code is free for all to use, worldwide. We don't much care if you don't approve of the software we write. We know that software can't be destroyed and that a widely dispersed system can't be shut down. Great post, this cannot be reiterated enough. To many of the people in this scene now know nothing of this and those chasing the Midas touch selectively forget. Great post to see when mixin privacy with annonymity - sigh And writing code - and using it in regulated env - like finance is - sigh again There is nothing wrong with the wish to remain anonymous (which is one of the components of privacy). If you think that the wish to remain anonymous is so terrible feel free to post a picture of your passport. Craig is currently playing the whole 'BSV is fully legally compliant and we love to obey the law!' card because of the Kleiman vs Wright case, trying to gain credibility. Remember when Craig announced that he was working on true fungibility and mixing for BCH? I do!
|
|
|
|
Hueristic
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 3948
Merit: 5362
Doomed to see the future and unable to prevent it
|
|
September 03, 2019, 03:05:28 PM |
|
Great post, this cannot be reiterated enough. To many of the people in this scene now know nothing of this and those chasing the Midas touch selectively forget.
Great post to see when mixin privacy with annonymity - sigh And writing code - and using it in regulated env - like finance is - sigh again Reading your posts is like -sigh But that has been rectified.
|
“Bad men need nothing more to compass their ends, than that good men should look on and do nothing.”
|
|
|
BitcoinFX
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2646
Merit: 1722
https://youtu.be/DsAVx0u9Cw4 ... Dr. WHO < KLF
|
|
September 03, 2019, 09:41:04 PM |
|
...snip...
So, seeing as Craig has not provided such cryptographic proof, what evidence do you have which would even serve to show he was aware of Bitcoin prior to 2013?
...snip...
The most likely point in time is ironically shortly after the real Satoshi Nakamoto launched bitcoin, here ... January 2009 Archives by thread ... - https://www.metzdowd.com/pipermail/cryptography/2009-January/thread.htmlBitcoin v0.1 released Satoshi Nakamoto- https://www.metzdowd.com/pipermail/cryptography/2009-January/014994.html[heise online UK] Secure deletion: a single overwrite will do it Dave Kleiman - https://www.metzdowd.com/pipermail/cryptography/2009-January/015029.html- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Craig_Steven_WrightWright, Craig; Kleiman, Dave; Sundhar R.S., Shayaam (2008). "Overwriting Hard Drive Data: The Great Wiping Controversy". In Sekar, R. (ed.). Information Systems Security: 4th International Conference, ICISS 2008, Hyderabad, India, December 16–20, 2008, Proceedings. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 243.- https://www.vidarholen.net/~vidar/overwriting_hard_drive_data.pdf... So, right place, wrong time and/or wrong place, right time ... "OP Ed: How many wrongs make a Wright?" etc.,
|
|
|
|
|
hv_
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2534
Merit: 1055
Clean Code and Scale
|
|
September 04, 2019, 06:27:23 AM |
|
The scaling by block capacity was always a no brainer. Then why ever limit the block size? Hmm? The limit only has sense in case of 0 Bitcoin value, at the beginnings. This is only spam protection where it costs 0 to send. Now it will be removed to enable true open competition between all the network participants. Any limit / rule you introduce has a dictatorship / comunism like origin / effect and is strong sign of central power (like a dev team + PoSM has). The less rules, the more open and true competition allowing a system is and its not governed by a central entity. Watch BSV, the roadmap is here and no need of Satoshi is included any longer, cause he initially set the rules in stone. That is actually the reason why so many start crying against, since they want that power, and want to alter rules. So open competition is not what core teams like ... Hal Finney seemed to understand it back in 2010. Actually there is a very good reason for Bitcoin-backed banks to exist, issuing their own digital cash currency, redeemable for bitcoins. Bitcoin itself cannot scale to have every single financial transaction in the world be broadcast to everyone and included in the block chain. There needs to be a secondary level of payment systems which is lighter weight and more efficient. Likewise, the time needed for Bitcoin transactions to finalize will be impractical for medium to large value purchases.
People who think 'Electronic Cash' simply means an asset designed for small daily payments (and need to have no fees and instant confirmations) need to read the Cypherpunk Manifesto: https://www.activism.net/cypherpunk/manifesto.htmlPrivacy is necessary for an open society in the electronic age. Privacy is not secrecy. A private matter is something one doesn't want the whole world to know, but a secret matter is something one doesn't want anybody to know. Privacy is the power to selectively reveal oneself to the world. Therefore, privacy in an open society requires anonymous transaction systems. Until now, cash has been the primary such system. An anonymous transaction system is not a secret transaction system. An anonymous system empowers individuals to reveal their identity when desired and only when desired; this is the essence of privacy. We must defend our own privacy if we expect to have any. We must come together and create systems which allow anonymous transactions to take place. People have been defending their own privacy for centuries with whispers, darkness, envelopes, closed doors, secret handshakes, and couriers. The technologies of the past did not allow for strong privacy, but electronic technologies do. Cypherpunks write code. We know that someone has to write software to defend privacy, and since we can't get privacy unless we all do, we're going to write it. We publish our code so that our fellow Cypherpunks may practice and play with it. Our code is free for all to use, worldwide. We don't much care if you don't approve of the software we write. We know that software can't be destroyed and that a widely dispersed system can't be shut down. Great post, this cannot be reiterated enough. To many of the people in this scene now know nothing of this and those chasing the Midas touch selectively forget. Great post to see when mixin privacy with annonymity - sigh And writing code - and using it in regulated env - like finance is - sigh again There is nothing wrong with the wish to remain anonymous (which is one of the components of privacy). If you think that the wish to remain anonymous is so terrible feel free to post a picture of your passport. Craig is currently playing the whole 'BSV is fully legally compliant and we love to obey the law!' card because of the Kleiman vs Wright case, trying to gain credibility. Remember when Craig announced that he was working on true fungibility and mixing for BCH? I do! Jep - but that's not against tracability IF YOU NEED IT to prove against regulatory instances where your ownings came from. Otherwise you ll get rekt or blacklisted anyway
|
Carpe diem - understand the White Paper and mine honest. Fix real world issues: Check out b-vote.com The simple way is the genius way - Satoshi's Rules: humana veris _
|
|
|
BitcoinFX
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2646
Merit: 1722
https://youtu.be/DsAVx0u9Cw4 ... Dr. WHO < KLF
|
|
September 04, 2019, 08:10:14 AM |
|
...snip... Remember when Craig announced that he was working on true fungibility and mixing for BCH? I do! Jep - but that's not against tracability IF YOU NEED IT to prove against regulatory instances where your ownings came from. Otherwise you ll get rekt or blacklisted anyway Mixing (on or off chain) is probably the worst way to do privacy, anonymity, or to prevent traceability etc., This only provides plausible deniability, at best. What people don't currently realize is "Oblivious Transfers", won't even add 'true' fungibility. - SWIM - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FungibilityDefinition of oblivious;
1 : lacking remembrance, memory, or mindful attention 2 : lacking active conscious knowledge or awareness —usually used with of or to
Synonyms;
clueless, ignorant, incognizant, innocent, insensible, nescient, unacquainted, unaware, unconscious, uninformed, unknowing, unmindful, unwitting This is a very interesting topic. If a solution was found, a much better, easier, more convenient implementation of Bitcoin would be possible.
Originally, a coin can be just a chain of signatures. With a timestamp service, the old ones could be dropped eventually before there's too much backtrace fan-out, or coins could be kept individually or in denominations. It's the need to check for the absence of double-spends that requires global knowledge of all transactions.
The challenge is, how do you prove that no other spends exist? It seems a node must know about all transactions to be able to verify that. If it only knows the hash of the in/outpoints, it can't check the signatures to see if an outpoint has been spent before. Do you have any ideas on this?
It's hard to think of how to apply zero-knowledge-proofs in this case.
We're trying to prove the absence of something, which seems to require knowing about all and checking that the something isn't included.
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zero-knowledge_proof- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-interactive_zero-knowledge_proof
|
|
|
|
HardFireMiner
|
|
September 04, 2019, 11:23:11 AM |
|
...snip... Remember when Craig announced that he was working on true fungibility and mixing for BCH? I do! Jep - but that's not against tracability IF YOU NEED IT to prove against regulatory instances where your ownings came from. Otherwise you ll get rekt or blacklisted anyway Mixing (on or off chain) is probably the worst way to do privacy, anonymity, or to prevent traceability etc., This only provides plausible deniability, at best. What people don't currently realize is "Oblivious Transfers", won't even add 'true' fungibility. - SWIM - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FungibilityDefinition of oblivious;
1 : lacking remembrance, memory, or mindful attention 2 : lacking active conscious knowledge or awareness —usually used with of or to
Synonyms;
clueless, ignorant, incognizant, innocent, insensible, nescient, unacquainted, unaware, unconscious, uninformed, unknowing, unmindful, unwitting This is a very interesting topic. If a solution was found, a much better, easier, more convenient implementation of Bitcoin would be possible.
Originally, a coin can be just a chain of signatures. With a timestamp service, the old ones could be dropped eventually before there's too much backtrace fan-out, or coins could be kept individually or in denominations. It's the need to check for the absence of double-spends that requires global knowledge of all transactions.
The challenge is, how do you prove that no other spends exist? It seems a node must know about all transactions to be able to verify that. If it only knows the hash of the in/outpoints, it can't check the signatures to see if an outpoint has been spent before. Do you have any ideas on this?
It's hard to think of how to apply zero-knowledge-proofs in this case.
We're trying to prove the absence of something, which seems to require knowing about all and checking that the something isn't included.
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zero-knowledge_proof- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-interactive_zero-knowledge_proof I see you cited satoshi and wiki, however, you failed to understand what satoshi meant, i will try to help, I cited the (5) reference, about the 2 colored balls ( https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/demonstrate-how-zero-knowledge-proofs-work-without-using-chalkias) This example requires two identical objects with different colours such as two coloured balls.
Imagine your friend is red-green colour-blind (while you are not) and you have two balls: one red and one green, but otherwise identical. To your friend they seem completely identical and he is skeptical that they are actually distinguishable. You want to prove to him they are in fact differently-coloured, but nothing else; in particular, you do not want to reveal which one is the red and which is the green ball.
Here is the proof system. You give the two balls to your friend and he puts them behind his back. Next, he takes one of the balls and brings it out from behind his back and displays it. He then places it behind his back again and then chooses to reveal just one of the two balls, picking one of the two at random with equal probability. He will ask you, "Did I switch the ball?" This whole procedure is then repeated as often as necessary.
By looking at their colours, you can of course say with certainty whether or not he switched them. On the other hand, if they were the same colour and hence indistinguishable, there is no way you could guess correctly with probability higher than 50%.
Since the probability that you would have randomly succeeded at identifying each switch/non-switch is 50%, the probability of having randomly succeeded at all switch/non-switches approaches zero ("soundness"). If you and your friend repeat this "proof" multiple times (e.g. 100 times), your friend should become convinced ("completeness") that the balls are indeed differently coloured.
The above proof is zero-knowledge because your friend never learns which ball is green and which is red; indeed, he gains no knowledge about how to distinguish the balls.
This example cannot be applied to bitcoin since it is interactive. You convince just the colorblind friend and nobody else. And, by the way, even in this case, there is no way you show him are there any unspent coins inside those colored balls. This is what you failed to understand. You will say that you provided the link for Non-interactive zero-knowledge proof and Pairing-based cryptography and it's further implementation to ZCash protocol. I will say that this is not needed. 0-conf is not needed in Bitcoin. From Bitcoin whitepaper: And another quote from satoshi on this forum: Bitcoin TX's may be fast, bitcoin can even scale(BSV), however, they are not instant and were not designed to be so. Failed delivery, rerouting, damage in delivery (malicious maltreating included) or simply delayed all arise with Bitcoin transactions. Cool tournament, by the way.
|
|
|
|
hv_
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2534
Merit: 1055
Clean Code and Scale
|
|
September 04, 2019, 11:51:13 AM |
|
...snip... Remember when Craig announced that he was working on true fungibility and mixing for BCH? I do! Jep - but that's not against tracability IF YOU NEED IT to prove against regulatory instances where your ownings came from. Otherwise you ll get rekt or blacklisted anyway Mixing (on or off chain) is probably the worst way to do privacy, anonymity, or to prevent traceability etc., This only provides plausible deniability, at best. What people don't currently realize is "Oblivious Transfers", won't even add 'true' fungibility. - SWIM - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FungibilityDefinition of oblivious;
1 : lacking remembrance, memory, or mindful attention 2 : lacking active conscious knowledge or awareness —usually used with of or to
Synonyms;
clueless, ignorant, incognizant, innocent, insensible, nescient, unacquainted, unaware, unconscious, uninformed, unknowing, unmindful, unwitting This is a very interesting topic. If a solution was found, a much better, easier, more convenient implementation of Bitcoin would be possible.
Originally, a coin can be just a chain of signatures. With a timestamp service, the old ones could be dropped eventually before there's too much backtrace fan-out, or coins could be kept individually or in denominations. It's the need to check for the absence of double-spends that requires global knowledge of all transactions.
The challenge is, how do you prove that no other spends exist? It seems a node must know about all transactions to be able to verify that. If it only knows the hash of the in/outpoints, it can't check the signatures to see if an outpoint has been spent before. Do you have any ideas on this?
It's hard to think of how to apply zero-knowledge-proofs in this case.
We're trying to prove the absence of something, which seems to require knowing about all and checking that the something isn't included.
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zero-knowledge_proof- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-interactive_zero-knowledge_proof I see you cited satoshi and wiki, however, you failed to understand what satoshi meant, i will try to help, I cited the (5) reference, about the 2 colored balls ( https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/demonstrate-how-zero-knowledge-proofs-work-without-using-chalkias) This example requires two identical objects with different colours such as two coloured balls.
Imagine your friend is red-green colour-blind (while you are not) and you have two balls: one red and one green, but otherwise identical. To your friend they seem completely identical and he is skeptical that they are actually distinguishable. You want to prove to him they are in fact differently-coloured, but nothing else; in particular, you do not want to reveal which one is the red and which is the green ball.
Here is the proof system. You give the two balls to your friend and he puts them behind his back. Next, he takes one of the balls and brings it out from behind his back and displays it. He then places it behind his back again and then chooses to reveal just one of the two balls, picking one of the two at random with equal probability. He will ask you, "Did I switch the ball?" This whole procedure is then repeated as often as necessary.
By looking at their colours, you can of course say with certainty whether or not he switched them. On the other hand, if they were the same colour and hence indistinguishable, there is no way you could guess correctly with probability higher than 50%.
Since the probability that you would have randomly succeeded at identifying each switch/non-switch is 50%, the probability of having randomly succeeded at all switch/non-switches approaches zero ("soundness"). If you and your friend repeat this "proof" multiple times (e.g. 100 times), your friend should become convinced ("completeness") that the balls are indeed differently coloured.
The above proof is zero-knowledge because your friend never learns which ball is green and which is red; indeed, he gains no knowledge about how to distinguish the balls.
This example cannot be applied to bitcoin since it is interactive. You convince just the colorblind friend and nobody else. And, by the way, even in this case, there is no way you show him are there any unspent coins inside those colored balls. This is what you failed to understand. You will say that you provided the link for Non-interactive zero-knowledge proof and Pairing-based cryptography and it's further implementation to ZCash protocol. I will say that this is not needed. 0-conf is not needed in Bitcoin. From Bitcoin whitepaper: And another quote from satoshi on this forum: Bitcoin TX's may be fast, bitcoin can even scale(BSV), however, they are not instant and were not designed to be so. Failed delivery, rerouting, damage in delivery (malicious maltreating included) or simply delayed all arise with Bitcoin transactions. Cool tournament, by the way. Sounds reasonable - thx for that compilation
|
Carpe diem - understand the White Paper and mine honest. Fix real world issues: Check out b-vote.com The simple way is the genius way - Satoshi's Rules: humana veris _
|
|
|
hilariousetc
Legendary
Offline
Activity: 2912
Merit: 3050
Join the world-leading crypto sportsbook NOW!
|
|
September 04, 2019, 12:07:40 PM |
|
I understand that my judgement is not relevant for the matter, however, you question the only US Federal Judge's findings on this matter - the creator of Bitcoin.
It appears as if you are under the mistaken impression that the judge's statement about their partnership supports CSW's claim to be Satoshi: "One, Dr. Wright and David Kleiman entered into a 50 percent 50/50 partnership to develop Bitcoin intellectual property and to mine Bitcoin."^^^ This does not assert that said partnership created Bitcoin, only that they were supposedly developing Bitcoin-related IP at some point. Which bit of the judge's statement explicitly clarifying that they were not ruling on the matter of Satoshi Nakamoto's identity confuses you? What did they make the basis of the case that he actually owned bitcoins at that point? Just his word? I see you still have trouble in reading the whole hearing from 08-26-2019, I will try to help. Ms McGovern, Dr.Wright's lawyer:In response to the Court's order, Dr. Wright has provided the first 70 of those public addresses. There are over 16,000. In addition, Dr. Wright has disclosed his full holdings of Bitcoin as of December 31st, 2013, and has stated under oath exactly how much Bitcoin he holds as of that date, and has confirmed under oath that that Bitcoin has not moved.
So basically all he's done is claim he has x amount and provided the public address of such which anyone could do, but no actual proof of him ever actually owning or having access to them and them being in a trust is the excuse as to why he can't? Is there a list of addresses he's publicly claimed to have owned?
|
|
|
|
|