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Author Topic: [announce] Namecoin - a distributed naming system based on Bitcoin  (Read 596139 times)
biolizard89
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August 03, 2024, 08:41:24 PM
 #2041

My point was that if people use their hashing power to mine both btc and nmc then you probably have some heavyweights using computing power that an individual cannot compete with realistically.

Well yeah, we care more about security for the naming system than we do about making it easy for a small miner to solo-mine blocks. We *are* interested in improving the ability to pool-mine Namecoin (since that does affect security of the naming system), and we've worked with Luke Dashjr and Matt Corallo on draft specs for this, but for now it's an active research area and would require a hardfork (a contentious one, no less, unless some technical objections are solved).

Some coins use to split algorithms e.g. huc, xmy, dgb etc to force some fairness in mining and add security, but maybe the heavyweight miners i.e., btc merge miners adds something too, maybe security.

I just checked the Huntercoin specs and it accepts two parent PoW types: Bitcoin style and Litecoin style. Litecoin's PoW is a joke that no cryptographer would ever want to go near. Maybe that's OK for Huntercoin's threat model (no state actor is going to try to take over the Huntercoin blockchain) but it's not going to fly here. I also question whether Litecoin's hashrate is nearly high enough for it to provide meaningful AuxPoW security to its sidechains to begin with (even if we accepted the dubious proposition that stuffing a memory-hard key derivation function into Hashcash can be called a "PoW"), but I haven't looked.
PrimeHunter2023
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August 04, 2024, 05:52:49 PM
Last edit: August 04, 2024, 06:29:56 PM by PrimeHunter2023
 #2042

My point was that if people use their hashing power to mine both btc and nmc then you probably have some heavyweights using computing power that an individual cannot compete with realistically.

Well yeah, we care more about security for the naming system than we do about making it easy for a small miner to solo-mine blocks. We *are* interested in improving the ability to pool-mine Namecoin (since that does affect security of the naming system), and we've worked with Luke Dashjr and Matt Corallo on draft specs for this, but for now it's an active research area and would require a hardfork (a contentious one, no less, unless some technical objections are solved).



70% of the last 1000 mined blocks went to this address
https://chainz.cryptoid.info/nmc/address.dws?nc1q2ml905jv7gx0d8z5f7kl23af0vtrjk4j0llmwr.htm
which has 102k nmc.
That address doesn't look like a normal pool, their last outgoing transaction was 150k, and before that 100k.

Again, not as bad as bitcoin overall, but I don't even know how to address the cavalier attitude toward that kind of thing.

Another point you touch on "security of naming system" // Security in a currency, and its derivatives in this case, comes mostly from support from users.

For example the usd is threatened, more than anything, by Washington's heavy handedness. Reckless spending could be solved but not when the dollar is being used as a blunt object against weak countries. At this point any ethical u.s. citizen supports the end of the dollar.

Namecoin devs have to decide if they want to collapse as an oligarchy, or if they want to create a genuinely useful product, even at the expense of some of their glory....For example, one of many, as mentioned before, a simple clone/fork feature that lets any group breakaway at will.





Some coins use to split algorithms e.g. huc, xmy, dgb etc to force some fairness in mining and add security, but maybe the heavyweight miners i.e., btc merge miners adds something too, maybe security.

I just checked the Huntercoin specs and it accepts two parent PoW types: Bitcoin style and Litecoin style. Litecoin's PoW is a joke that no cryptographer would ever want to go near. Maybe that's OK for Huntercoin's threat model (no state actor is going to try to take over the Huntercoin blockchain) but it's not going to fly here. I also question whether Litecoin's hashrate is nearly high enough for it to provide meaningful AuxPoW security to its sidechains to begin with (even if we accepted the dubious proposition that stuffing a memory-hard key derivation function into Hashcash can be called a "PoW"), but I haven't looked.


If you want to have a cryptography discussion, I'm ready.

But it's not about 'state actors'. There are several countries that can empty any crypto wallet.

It's about the random people who see a coin they like and want to mine it but are not interested in selling their wife to slave traders so they can afford mining gear.

Some small guy likes namecoin? The message is "Come back when you have money".

Would you like to have a discussion on this thread about cryptography as it relates to cryptocurrency?


PrimeHunter2023
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August 04, 2024, 09:21:32 PM
Last edit: August 05, 2024, 08:34:50 PM by PrimeHunter2023
 #2043

Edit  to add /

Just for the heck of it, a simple roadmap that could easily lead to namecoin being the #1crypto

All of the top cryptos today are top mainly because of scamminess. I'm not aware of any $1b+ market cap coin that is mostly legitimate.

Namecoin is one of the only coins that could grow quickly without adding more scamminess.

Bitcoin is mostly hype and scam, but at a few points in its history it had substantive uses that grew it. Maybe ten years ago there were taskwork sites that paid people in bitcoin to do simple tasks. I spent hours a day on that and it gave me cash. A lot of other people the same. That was one of bitcoin's few legitimate currency moments.

Step 1) Implement clone/fork feature.

Step 2) Pay a namecoin person to create namecoin forks for various social groups. In other words groups that would actually want and benefit from a closed internet and economy. This step might cost a few thousand dollars to start until the endpoint was reached i.e., free publicity through word of mouth and free news.

Step 3) Partner with Xaya/Chi to create taskwork coins based on developing narrow sciences with the work limited to those in a specific economy.

There is an important German concept of worldview or weltanschauung. Groups of similar people, on their own, develop sciences that are completely mysterious to other groups. When the group no longer has isolation/space to develop then their sciences consolidate and decay. They become "useful" to a larger group e.g. 'melting pot', but any further development is trivial.

AI is considered the modern ".com" because it has become such a profitable investment.

But the truth is that what is sold to the public as "AI" is globalist horseshit. Several experts in AI have tried to steer things in the proper direction, including at least one Eastern European cryptocurrency, but have failed.

Is it important to derail the current AI fraud and legitimize real AI as a science tool? It would need a lengthy discussion, but it is important, and the stakes are high.

Step 4) As long as there is a small but significant collective of groups using taskwork AI i.e., nmc + a huc style "human mining" then the corporate AI stupidity will dissolve on its own. There is no comparison of relative strength between the two systems.

Aside from that, if a person does not like steps 3 and 4, a person should look at what is happening to Europe.

The notion of federating groups has been widely studied.

The fake federation "European Community" was not arranged by an expert to succeed. It was carefully designed to fail, to descend into an authoritarian centralized blob.

There are not many viable escape paths for Europe, but namecoin style internets/economies would give people breathing room when things begin to decay.

There are certainly corporate or "globalist" actors who do not want free groups outside the control of the blob.

There is no single corporation or group or affinity that is causing this misguidance. "Colonizers" are often blamed, as are specific groups like Jews.

A good anti globalist film is Europa the Last Battle. 50 years ago, as a boy in Hebrew school, I would have called every point in the film anti semitic trash. Today I'm one of many Jews promoting the film.

Namecoin has powerful enemies, and it isn't a magic bullet, but it could be an important coin.

~

One important point about that movie is that it unfortunately picks on Jews, because we typically are no good at defending our interests sensibly. The exact same globalist point could be made in a film about British globalists, French globalists, etc. Problem is that globalist  gangsters in those groups are not as clumsy.

An honest version of Europa TLB would apportion responsibility more sensibly, accurately.
PrimeHunter2023
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August 06, 2024, 01:38:20 AM
 #2044


Another thing missing from recent discussion is the first step in getting non namecoin people to benefit from .bit sites.

You say to a person "There is an alternate internet you can use in parallel with icann".

And they say "What's on it?"

And you say "Well, right now 30 websites by fringe types ranting. For any typical internet thing, news, apps, music, commercial sites, etc you have to use icann".

There has never been a tangible product or service that would attract new people, aside from abstract notions about decentralization.

If namecoin had an infrastructure like dnt / District0x / https://district0x.io/ any group could drop not just a web and economy, but a range of things into their system.

Also something like that would attract more developers.

District0x is an abstraction with no central location, with a toxic focus on 'governance', and it's floundering, but if the general idea were added to namecoin it would improve.

The bottom line though is that most people join an economy for the money.

Namecoin generates money....which it feeds to whales.

There must be a solution? A way to use a large coins / e.g. btc / hashrate to secure things without letting that utility become a way for well off people to feed only themselves.

Huntercoin had a similar problem. A brilliant idea but it benefited only a few, and those few could not relinquish their monopoly on the benefit. Or maybe the technical challenges were hard in that case.

I do not have the resources to do much, a negative net worth, no dev skills, and I am not even in the top 500 nmc holders, but there should be people, whales, who will risk a little of what they have to break namecoin's inertia.

It sort of has the tone of an exclusive low budget club with an aristocracy who want to preserve the status quo.
biolizard89
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August 06, 2024, 03:06:33 AM
Merited by nutildah (4)
 #2045

OK so I read through the above posts 3 times and I still can't tell what concrete thing you are proposing. I see various rants about politics (not the kind of politics that Namecoin pertains to), but nothing about naming (which is what we do). I also can't tell who you are claiming constitutes an "oligarchy"/"aristocracy" in Namecoin (...the miners? ...the devs? ...random users on Reddit and Matrix?).

Regarding your claim that (I guess?) a single pool has 70% of hashrate, that's not what Metrics says. As of Aug 1, the largest pool is Antpool with less than 42% hashrate. https://metrics.namecoin.org/namecoin/period-timestamps-14-days/pool/charts/latest.txt

Namecoin is, generally speaking, not a vehicle for testing experimental blockchain features. To the extent that we do scientific research, it's mostly in layer 2, and occasionally on-chain only for things that are critically required for the naming system to work.

If you think it's "cavalier" that the Namecoin community wants to be a naming system as opposed to an economics experiment, I'm not really sure what to say. *shrug*
PrimeHunter2023
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August 06, 2024, 12:03:29 PM
Last edit: August 06, 2024, 02:12:30 PM by PrimeHunter2023
 #2046

OK so I read through the above posts 3 times and I still can't tell what concrete thing you are proposing. I see various rants about politics (not the kind of politics that Namecoin pertains to), but nothing about naming (which is what we do). I also can't tell who you are claiming constitutes an "oligarchy"/"aristocracy" in Namecoin (...the miners? ...the devs? ...random users on Reddit and Matrix?).


Why don't you tell me specifically which political issue/rant does not pertain to nmc, in your view, and I'll explain why it does, in my view.

Naming is one aspect of nmc. It would be more accurate to say it is a tool that creates an economy and a naming system together.

ol·i·gar·chy
/ˈäləˌɡärkē/
noun
a small group of people having control of a country, organization, or institution.


ar·is·toc·ra·cy
/ˌerəˈstäkrəsē/
noun
the highest class in certain societies, especially those holding hereditary titles or offices.
"the ancient Polish aristocracy had hereditary right to elect the king"

No different than most crypto, namecoin has a core group, including developers who volunteer their work. But as with most crypto that generousity is based on newcomers paying homage to the established group.



Regarding your claim that (I guess?) a single pool has 70% of hashrate, that's not what Metrics says. As of Aug 1, the largest pool is Antpool with less than 42% hashrate. https://metrics.namecoin.org/namecoin/period-timestamps-14-days/pool/charts/latest.txt


Yes, Right now it is 41%.

https://chainz.cryptoid.info/nmc/#!extraction




Namecoin is, generally speaking, not a vehicle for testing experimental blockchain features. To the extent that we do scientific research, it's mostly in layer 2, and occasionally on-chain only for things that are critically required for the naming system to work.



How can you say "Namecoin is, generally speaking, not...."

So you volunteer as a namecoin dev and that gives you a uniform and decorations?

You have a firm construct in your mind of what suits you, what namecoin should be, and 'volunteering' lets you take your power out and exercise it.

You are generous to volunteer, but your motives are murky, same as me and anybody else. I'll be careful not to poach deer in your kingdom.



If you think it's "cavalier" that the Namecoin community wants to be a naming system as opposed to an economics experiment, I'm not really sure what to say. *shrug*


Uhm, what???

Here is the quote you are abusing.

Quote
70% of the last 1000 mined blocks went to this address
https://chainz.cryptoid.info/nmc/address.dws?nc1q2ml905jv7gx0d8z5f7kl23af0vtrjk4j0llmwr.htm
which has 102k nmc.
That address doesn't look like a normal pool, their last outgoing transaction was 150k, and before that 100k.

Again, not as bad as bitcoin overall, but I don't even know how to address the cavalier attitude toward that kind of thing.

Obviously nmc includes a naming system.

Is catering only to bigger miners also inherent to it? Should a decentralized economy be built on feeding crypto whales? Most people either leave crypto, because of this cavalier attitude towards obliging poorer people to feed richer people, or they submit. I don't know how to address that, what to say. It's the norm in crypto.

~

ETA

Sorry if it sounds rude, but when a person's strength is their weakness it should be pointed out.

The core foundation of crypto today is the notion that developers are the kings and the peons must respect that.

What if you went to a mechanic and he said he would not fix your car unless you paint the car his favorite color? Should mechanics do that, just because they can get away with it?


Error reason: Happy Eyeballs MITM Failure
Error code: CF_HAPPY_EYEBALLS_MITM_FAILURE







biolizard89
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August 06, 2024, 06:00:59 PM
Merited by nutildah (2)
 #2047

Bullshit is an inverse PoW function, so I'm not going to comment on whatever the heck the above is. With one brief exception: everyone already knows my motives for being a cypherpunk developer; there's no murkiness there; it's literally stated on my personal website. I wish you luck finding a blockchain that's designed to be an economic experimentation vehicle, rather than a naming system, since it very much sounds like you're looking for the former, and Namecoin ain't it. Happy hacking.
PrimeHunter2023
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August 06, 2024, 07:26:59 PM
 #2048

Bullshit is an inverse PoW function, so I'm not going to comment on whatever the heck the above is. With one brief exception: everyone already knows my motives for being a cypherpunk developer; there's no murkiness there; it's literally stated on my personal website. I wish you luck finding a blockchain that's designed to be an economic experimentation vehicle, rather than a naming system, since it very much sounds like you're looking for the former, and Namecoin ain't it. Happy hacking.

Just to be clear, I am abrasive to everybody, and I appreciate the time you took responding. I remember chatting with you several years ago on Twitter and you were helpful and smart.

Nobody ever knows their own motives fully, and it's a good idea to examine them.

I'm not a hacker. I added the cf error blip just because it seems appropriate to mention when a network is flawed. Years ago I lived in a city with a newspaper that would hide certain kinds of comments, except from the person commenting. When people realized what the website was doing they began to joke about it until they stopped. Youtube has done the same to people, at least up to a few years ago. Once I posted a comment on the video of a political figure, and the comment was visible only on my computer. Other people have experienced the same on Youtube. Twitter is much more clever in accomplishing the same.

It's too bad there is no clean internet, no clean network connections, etc.

Namecoin is not on the path to solving that problem, but maybe it will go in that direction eventually.

This error persists so I will post it again.


Error reason: Happy Eyeballs MITM Failure
Error code: CF_HAPPY_EYEBALLS_MITM_FAILURE
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August 07, 2024, 10:40:50 PM
 #2049

Bullshit is an inverse PoW function

This is a great quote & if I use it in the future I'll credit it to you. You're exactly & succinctly correct: bullshitting is the opposite of having done any actual tangible work whatsoever. Anybody can bullshit, its free & has zero energy cost.

Keep up the good fight.

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 MΞTAWIN  THE FIRST WEB3 CASINO   
.
.. PLAY NOW ..
PrimeHunter2023
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August 08, 2024, 11:05:03 AM
Last edit: August 08, 2024, 02:15:47 PM by PrimeHunter2023
 #2050

Bullshit is an inverse PoW function

This is a great quote & if I use it in the future I'll credit it to you. You're exactly & succinctly correct: bullshitting is the opposite of having done any actual tangible work whatsoever. Anybody can bullshit, its free & has zero energy cost.

Keep up the good fight.

You are quite the cheerleader.

Why don't you sit on his lap and wiggle around a bit?

Namecoin has become a coin of empty cheerleaders.

Lots of empty rhetoric but no interest in fixing what is broken, because, according to one of the nmc devs



Namecoin is, generally speaking, not a vehicle for testing experimental blockchain features. To the extent that we do scientific research, it's mostly in layer 2, and occasionally on-chain only for things that are critically required for the naming system to work.

If you think it's "cavalier" that the Namecoin community wants to be a naming system as opposed to an economics experiment, I'm not really sure what to say. *shrug*



Error code: CF_HAPPY_EYEBALLS_MITM_FAILURE
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August 08, 2024, 07:52:42 PM
 #2051

Looked over some previous conversations on this thread, and it is slowly dawning on me that the goal of namecoin is not to create a decentralized naming system, but to prevent it.
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August 09, 2024, 05:24:44 AM
 #2052

View first quote on Erath {Un-Erase-Able data in Link}
https://erath.vercel.app/site/U2FsdGVkX18025RGMIpJUPLR5YyXoXnzh787%2Fpslj2WFIRckT8YGi9Kthi4vuAnQ3o27DVAjAZvylQrV5eUbKrcMQjTlwq4GOlcOLe11fUDnd37rtOkccjpGj0zI4ogCGJFgZLfe6zuujidkF8%2F6eSFXrB6vc61hwDERL1U9DaRg481W3U949yvMLwksF6KyQD1uNek9M9SI9L7UIH9hmkkBuU88gN9G3dcB1KcM3K9rubTCqHggLKUw6XxbKhmPMBUQNTRT4C%2F9ddyuBnyKThgCNFp65%2BCb4ZqYiZcS35GcxYyp6Ac0X%2BskuEt3XfMz54Ip1adWs%2FbzfqKuINeoyq5tj6wrbUnAkkAa0sJKwCZubAwgJulyB11SZSv8lYUkvpoJstevP9yW0X32q5zamNRYnFCOtXFaNxEfRZYUUyt6AQGp3zHO8Bw43fuTc%2FCzAw17%2FtUAPKb%2BaVw6UpzYXWtQftUCiXzqdds6H35GvXfBjXyTFRWv0Q1kzk6Mk%2FLiIV4ViqTR7%2FOZLonb6H8rK66sopOaVtcw%2FruuJpBCSk0UPmyRTxlLs05yGciBalrzOxOdqkYQ9%2BZrHXc5pg6ZdkIot8Wbk4YLwnbCMdSqY0uS16Gg5pmo3oISn0C1MjNqyKDKEuYa75Yx4z9%2BvPmbwJhq1iHCFzc7Raz5r9ijdjEeAkZ10KqTJWl8NuU4xfbOAsDpWkUZ0cnoUTLcGwIj9jYD%2B8zi0yKNHaKwzZ9eFod2TEz1TlaAIs4Oan%2FdY1u%2FsVCqnrLDpozt7n5Fpccf20vy9%2BB5HEFYeTVVBOlzr4dF7YjZsJgKMtV4YiiPIv1waAxmJJ9BtRvXvYW7yGa%2Bx3ZLVh%2FDT%2B24KhWa9WKDsQ8dtytpoSh1hZTXYmx1WbIiceABMzW9Sf8TODRmWSH4ZXJvgeytFniCpSyzl%2Bb1CO3zXZZp2AhlIM2VjswO5HQidn8t%2Fup9GK4q6jSeSYS5EcrM4KV1%2Fh%2FOPV4AxUq5g3Ahmd5ppcoOjv5mSVLal%2BBnt%2Fgpm5AfeJGGJnL1swJH18tnUiQtredZ8uD0INSrRo2XeuIJhBk5hapgunOZ%2FwSTdGKeYXfWOoQxzE1ZqK1LiZFMhZZBISQKMExgrIHlck5ye%2BnPinVylPb%2FBNhMXih%2BGbbAA5sR4M%2BB2OJo90n0IudhRZsFlMQ2FUzFSZhgW7MFf8kMNZdAXspw6yg4pWaLQ8XywDB5Xvh9gfywvww3JTuIrhSvI4TpTaaPephaKbGXimL8nR68Dkir4apRejYMW%2BHGV8AnVniSgqur5uAzjd0nMcQ%2F%2FGgyaB6pFsQ7Rw9zY0ur8mWGxBTTddKYmOE9obbB7XFD%2B7g3GoTrEoXiEFktL2tqw7vJpuFsfL1dTP9kIthKl5ceC3sUf2%2BHhayH%2FMYtlfEonXXhd3knx3GSybv3Lj8XrZd0aFjzocgrbA%2BQB388yvX3Ce6CwNm%2Bf5cW6aGOTaoEPX1S5mVcD0JEeB3D0i9up7s3VYVSytcRINcyNtn026%2B2psPE4UXGZLgfY99hy4roLFrGcgW6bQvnb3%2BGqZ86UBU7R0z3Rvquobz5cOMoDiQ%2BTgN2qO18zqbMS3c%2B0RNLzZShfXjOLbZpW9IEaHxj2zQDI4VfRKvU4XQD4RPGCFhFQ3vVVz6d0ABdKhBteOeXU6slADpXeWr0BYRc3U821dnyTVu2j4KUrnyXnnJ7jt4qjJM2Fn1%2BQLVSTWDEV5Oi4IMhl3x8silS8icBqQnXA3bSuoM3HkuefURots4KDUPPiaXQlOyttYhmYNelNZpiPJPxlkC9G2dbSSzdpgLIKytEubC4d6wzrregNmxmhtKXGgWhxSFb4etyFx3wuYJv6PzV1VWJdJqauUiEmi0sQ1qjEPHRXcnTHssrSGajh%2B8YxjbPEiT9W4yjVsrHS0cHxgwJdMXrRdTGVYRE88xCc37gvhlE189%2FfPB2%2BftjBWsfhHXnkJwWL6ypetFLOKdOj9gZoyXpgyszOiKIuF5ox6hH2R4O9f1YaVMjynQFhBuqZDQsYxv5XWchRWyxlI%2FrFQyIzF9HusRfdU5PNa2Sj%2F6Ca%2BuPKd6Yu%2Fdk3txkmyU3mD8qCkR0zhLoUNgZs68d5svtu%2BzH0siN2Hj3w%2Fvsc0FTwxjJJBuuqKi5PNu6RedbYYxh9%2BC%2BIelvEt15Zc8sC4P%2FJrm8NGQLlBjHDASXxZZsvzsFH4GOXhKNK6Hat7e4q4c5w58sX3Pewr4X3w%2FE%2Bartyqhs1feBFXvs57hLUxEp4AIWxDmwxikgcGuV%2F0lFBHicyJJ6NBc8MSdQfTPBuJHVI1ZB3sdePZfjj4l%2B7kn%2B%2B1nHvpSnG0r9CYBD7I1BTT%2Boj%2FpOduyk1UA9LmURhfvrgL8NvLFebWBfmMUXRU5rX1afROXZZyQXfAA9KGIcln80K8cGuvc0FUAJaMIYpGSKJFRMcrx9MQFuKfcQy948%2FEvhWUg0Z%2F35bRo%2BFAG7mNxnC2CKjq%2BKD6anoAktlDAJ8ykyDWEK1mTJazc41xDrIVQ4Db0qRIcXENjGHXwoDRp%2B3p3wgPaY%2FjUDM2cH38fTHQ5pBIf06YgbGPqIw%2FjsBZrNrJX8bUTtg6strrPM1KN3Cy%2F80KuDqUkNQpIH4nflJ0tMl0TEjTqXi08hUYzuszWRENNCL2htRQ8SrJCa%2FmeQmZCWpay%2BX0mTXkI6Mx%2BG%2F4yuYZiGtepHj9I9dVNF2sA%2Fsh6cuDlZa2Xo2rJdvL8sW1v6prW%2FAfC3gxJeb77IXLqmQidGBLz6H41CzTDpbz%2F%2BFZQFFL3%2BgsFMhb5blp5PeDkRHr8SapfPu17pmS4Bzaq%2FXQ7t2Kgun8AX1zrow5UlEHXIvpsWtHexA7WxcxhFTFAdp4SL%2FMUD%2FGOdGVnSBbKuZ7uYHDkFPH7tpJMjXlmi4N5wz6IuaOdU2vh1SKJBIA7l0jjHkqat1yyVngBqG6GQekL0NA%3D%3D
PrimeHunter2023
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August 09, 2024, 12:34:47 PM
Last edit: August 09, 2024, 05:38:36 PM by PrimeHunter2023
 #2053

View first quote on Erath {Un-Erase-Able data in Link}


Not going to click the link, I have enough mystery bugs already, but I see it is about Islam.

https://www.virustotal.com/gui/url/838db940f25b895bcffd8857171e0b0ea39612ccb27e619e0d1154474ddc7350/details

But some history.

"The Third Reich, meaning "Third Realm" or "Third Empire", referred to the Nazi claim that Nazi Germany was the successor to the earlier Holy Roman Empire (800–1806) and German Empire (1871–1918)."

At the early times of the Roman empire the emperor needed a way to pacify hostile tribes.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gladiator_(2000_film)

https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/religion/maps/primary/josephusjesus.html

.etc...


Edit to add a competing view

What were the three Reichs?
The history of the nation state known as the German Reich is commonly divided into three periods:
German Empire (1871–1918)
Weimar Republic (1918–1933)
Nazi Germany (1933–1945)

Which means the British empire could be seen as the second, or third depending on perspective, empire/reich.


Status: Unable to connect
Error reason: Happy Eyeballs MITM Failure
Error code: CF_HAPPY_EYEBALLS_MITM_FAILURE


Hence, despite being Jewish, I recommend the Europa, TLB documentary.

https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.abj5593

https://www.sciencemagazinedigital.org/sciencemagazine/07_january_2021/MobilePagedArticle.action?articleId=1756858#articleId1756858

Looked over some previous conversations on this thread, and it is slowly dawning on me that the goal of namecoin is not to create a decentralized naming system, but to prevent it.
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August 11, 2024, 01:07:23 PM
Last edit: August 11, 2024, 02:06:44 PM by PrimeHunter2023
 #2054

One last observation regarding biolizard's comment, then I'll give it a rest.

Quote
Litecoin's PoW is a joke that no cryptographer would ever want to go near. Maybe that's OK for Huntercoin's threat model (no state actor is going to try to take over the Huntercoin blockchain) but it's not going to fly here.

Let's start with the simple truth.

No competent mathematician or cryptographer would say that there is a math function that produces random numbers. Many dishonest mathematicians and cryptographers do say that though, for the same reason others often oppose a truth to favor a powerful gang.

The common digital currency PK algorithms cannot be bruteforced using regular computers, but they can be solved using common sense.

All of these algorithms produce a series of overlapping patterns e.g. 'curves', and a person can use that fact to solve a specific value within a broader PK ecosystem.

Overwhelming evidence points to a significant number of groups, and possibly individuals, as having the practical skill developed such that they can steal coins at will.

The U.S. government, and other, are aware of this and provide elaborate cover for these pirates.

The rationale appears to be that those bureaucrats profiting from the deception want to continue it as long as possible, for their own benefit, while the pirates know that as long as they don't get greedy they can bleed the public slowly and usg will provide cover.

It has become ridiculous the stories about North Korean hackers breaking into secure systems and stealing bitcoin.

When North Korea needs to assemble a bicycle their first step is to request Chinese advisors. But hack bitcoin? No problem.

Regarding scrypt, the only relevance is that it was used in Litecoin which some see as a Chinese coin.

So as long as the game goes on, China and the U.S. and a few others will be able to use cryptography to finish conquering their victims, whether Tlinquit or Tibetan, Uyghur or Iroquois.

A year or two ago the U.S. government put out a notice that China was approaching the ability to crack and interfere with realtime encrypted satellite communications.

The core of the "big player" game has nothing to do with freedoms or liberty. Very much the opposite.

It's the centuries old competition between Britain and China over which can eat/exterminate more tribal societies.

Does Namecoin play a role? Yes. As long as namecoin can be used to attract and identify those interested in using digital infrastructure to help indigenous tribes, and as long as it can prevent such a digital infrastructure from evolving, it will be serving its British and Chinese globalist masters.

If you want to discuss cryptographic flaws more specifically, raise the subject again.

A few more examples to make the point.

1) Anybody who has been on the icann internet since 2006 and followed certain issues know that for a long time there was a lot of evidence that N Korea's first 'nuclear' explosion was really a pile of conventional explosives. Want the truth today? Google and icann would rather you not have it.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/10/13/AR2006101300576.html

https://www.google.com/search?q=korea+peninsula+defense+spending

2) Want details on the Hartree-modified Wilhelmi protocol which the UK has said must remain secret until 2095? Ask Google and icann. Oh wait, don't bother.


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biolizard89
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August 12, 2024, 08:00:54 AM
Merited by nutildah (4)
 #2055

Wow, lots of spam in this thread this week. Skipping over the inverse PoW....

Bullshit is an inverse PoW function

This is a great quote & if I use it in the future I'll credit it to you. You're exactly & succinctly correct: bullshitting is the opposite of having done any actual tangible work whatsoever. Anybody can bullshit, its free & has zero energy cost.

Keep up the good fight.

The analogy is actually a bit more complex than that: while PoW is asymmetric in the sense that it's highly expensive to produce a PoW but trivially easy to verify it, bullshit is asymmetric in the opposite direction: not only is it trivially easy to produce bullshit, but it's *also* highly expensive to debunk it.

Alas, I regret to inform you that I didn't come up with the analogy, I just picked it up from my social graph long ago. I don't know who first came up with it, but a quick Twitter search shows that JJ from Handshake (whom I've worked with in the past) said in 2020 that someone had previously told him the analogy, but he didn't seem to remember who told him either. I think I first heard it before 2020 (but it's hard to be sure), and I don't think either JJ or I am the other's source (again, hard to be sure). Anyway, it seems to be popular lore among cypherpunks by now. If you ever find out who first said it, please let me know, but in any event, crediting me is unnecessary: I'm just a relay.
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August 12, 2024, 09:09:27 AM
 #2056

The analogy is actually a bit more complex than that: while PoW is asymmetric in the sense that it's highly expensive to produce a PoW but trivially easy to verify it, bullshit is asymmetric in the opposite direction: not only is it trivially easy to produce bullshit, but it's *also* highly expensive to debunk it.

That makes sense. Guess that's why its not practical to secure a blockchain with bullshit.

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 MΞTAWIN  THE FIRST WEB3 CASINO   
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August 12, 2024, 10:40:29 AM
Last edit: August 12, 2024, 12:17:17 PM by PrimeHunter2023
 #2057

Wow, lots of spam in this thread this week. Skipping over the inverse PoW....

Bullshit is an inverse PoW function

This is a great quote & if I use it in the future I'll credit it to you. You're exactly & succinctly correct: bullshitting is the opposite of having done any actual tangible work whatsoever. Anybody can bullshit, its free & has zero energy cost.

Keep up the good fight.

The analogy is actually a bit more complex than that: while PoW is asymmetric in the sense that it's highly expensive to produce a PoW but trivially easy to verify it, bullshit is asymmetric in the opposite direction: not only is it trivially easy to produce bullshit, but it's *also* highly expensive to debunk it.

Alas, I regret to inform you that I didn't come up with the analogy, I just picked it up from my social graph long ago. I don't know who first came up with it, but a quick Twitter search shows that JJ from Handshake (whom I've worked with in the past) said in 2020 that someone had previously told him the analogy, but he didn't seem to remember who told him either. I think I first heard it before 2020 (but it's hard to be sure), and I don't think either JJ or I am the other's source (again, hard to be sure). Anyway, it seems to be popular lore among cypherpunks by now. If you ever find out who first said it, please let me know, but in any event, crediting me is unnecessary: I'm just a relay.


The analogy is actually a bit more complex than that: while PoW is asymmetric in the sense that it's highly expensive to produce a PoW but trivially easy to verify it, bullshit is asymmetric in the opposite direction: not only is it trivially easy to produce bullshit, but it's *also* highly expensive to debunk it.

That makes sense. Guess that's why its not practical to secure a blockchain with bullshit.

Some irony there.

Would either of you speculate on the view that Namecoin is being carefully used not to encourage a decentralized naming system, but to prevent one?

Looking back over Namecoin's history, a common thread seems to be a subtle misdirection of any effort to bring the coin to a wider audience.

Any comment? Or it's just more "bullshit"?

~

Seems to be a core group has popped up every time since 2013 that anybody has tried to promote Namecoin.
Then carefully politely shot them down til they disappeared.

sqbit?

Many others if a person reads the thread carefully.

I'd love to hear suggestions on how we could do a better job on this.

Perhaps, some additional work on the features of the coin, that would appeal to the greater audience. If there is no displeasure with the idea of the more "financial" coin.

I don't see much reason to try to compete with Bitcoin, if that's what you mean by "financial".  Bitcoin already works extremely well at what it does.  Remember the Unix philosophy.  Smiley

a) Some work on the features enabling greater swiftness of the transactions (segwit, lightninings, the like). Regular info updates on this work.

We recently activated CLTV; up next in the consensus fork department is AAA, then CSV, and then I think we'll activate SegWit.  That said, we pretty much always follow what Bitcoin does, so if by some chance SegWit is still being held up in Bitcoin, I think it's somewhat unlikely that we'll try to activate before Bitcoin.

I really like Lightning, and we have some plans where Lightning will be highly useful.

b) Clearly, visibly, outlined emphasis on those privacy/security features, which differentiate the n. from the other coins, or put it in the same league with the more advanced ones (in terms of privacy, security)

Privacy/security is a strong focus for me at the moment.  On the privacy front, while I was in London for QCon last month, I met up with Riccardo Spagni from Monero to discuss collaboration plans; I'm also engaging with the Tor people.  On the security front, one of the use cases that we're really pushing is TLS... hopefully an announcement will be made soon on this front.

c) It appears that at the moment namecoin mostly covers the narrow field: "bit" domains, etc. So, some additional emphasis can be made on the other things, and the website design can embody this (more simple finance-oriented sections separated from the more specialized bit/dns-oriented sections).

See my above comment on the Unix philosophy.  There are lots of blockchains that specialize in being a currency (mainly Bitcoin); we specialize in naming.  That said, I see plenty of room for diversification into identity-related applications.  Daniel Kraft's NameID is a really cool proof of concept; I have some ideas on how it could be improved.  There are several other use case ideas that have been thrown around, and just no one has had a chance to work on them yet.

I am not sure, though, if my ideas make any sense, and are not just a waste of time and efforts for the devs.

No worries.  Smiley

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=6017.1260

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=6017.720

Now Google is giving me near impossible capchas to log into bitcointalk, aside from the happy eyeballs error.

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August 12, 2024, 12:20:10 PM
 #2058

The analogy is actually a bit more complex than that: while PoW is asymmetric in the sense that it's highly expensive to produce a PoW but trivially easy to verify it, bullshit is asymmetric in the opposite direction: not only is it trivially easy to produce bullshit, but it's *also* highly expensive to debunk it.

That makes sense. Guess that's why its not practical to secure a blockchain with bullshit.
FWIW there's an alternate formulation (which I like less) of this general concept called Brandolini's Law. According to Wikipedia it was coined in 2013. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brandolini%27s_law

Would either of you speculate on the view that Namecoin is being carefully used not to encourage a decentralized naming system, but to prevent one?

Looking back over Namecoin's history, a common thread seems to be a subtle misdirection of any effort to bring the coin to a wider audience.

Any comment? Or it's just more "bullshit"?

I mean, if you actually provided a specific claim rather than... whatever the hell the above is, I might be inclined to engage. But since you didn't, no, I'm not going to engage with inverse PoW.

That said, the people in a cypherpunk channel I hang out in did appreciate the comic relief about EC math, so thanks for that.
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August 12, 2024, 01:24:09 PM
 #2059

Would either of you speculate on the view that Namecoin is being carefully used not to encourage a decentralized naming system, but to prevent one?

No, that sounds ridiculous. Besides, a decentralized naming system already existed before Bitcoin: Tor.

Looking back over Namecoin's history, a common thread seems to be a subtle misdirection of any effort to bring the coin to a wider audience.

Any comment? Or it's just more "bullshit"?

Definitely the latter. I just appreciate that there's any activity in this thread at all. What I've seen over the years is people try to influence development for their own personal gain. Would be nice if there was a more user-friendly ".bit" browser extension to access Namecoin domains. But the thing is Tor already does a pretty good job of being un-censorable.

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.
 MΞTAWIN  THE FIRST WEB3 CASINO   
.
.. PLAY NOW ..
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August 12, 2024, 02:31:02 PM
Last edit: August 12, 2024, 02:50:53 PM by PrimeHunter2023
 #2060

~

Would either of you speculate on the view that Namecoin is being carefully used not to encourage a decentralized naming system, but to prevent one?

No, that sounds ridiculous. Besides, a decentralized naming system already existed before Bitcoin: Tor.

Looking back over Namecoin's history, a common thread seems to be a subtle misdirection of any effort to bring the coin to a wider audience.

Any comment? Or it's just more "bullshit"?

Definitely the latter. I just appreciate that there's any activity in this thread at all. What I've seen over the years is people try to influence development for their own personal gain. Would be nice if there was a more user-friendly ".bit" browser extension to access Namecoin domains. But the thing is Tor already does a pretty good job of being un-censorable.

Tor is a proven honeypot, if you force me to acknowledge that.

We can discuss dpr evidence from freeross if you like.
~



Would either of you speculate on the view that Namecoin is being carefully used not to encourage a decentralized naming system, but to prevent one?

Looking back over Namecoin's history, a common thread seems to be a subtle misdirection of any effort to bring the coin to a wider audience.

Any comment? Or it's just more "bullshit"?

I mean, if you actually provided a specific claim rather than... whatever the hell the above is, I might be inclined to engage. But since you didn't, no, I'm not going to engage with inverse PoW.

That said, the people in a cypherpunk channel I hang out in did appreciate the comic relief about EC math, so thanks for that.

It's easy to con some people with platitudes that suggest you are hiding a superior motive.

Do you have an explanation for why Namecoin should not compete with Bitcoin that will get past my 60 year old bullshit detector?

My genuine impression is that you are deliberately trying to limit the popularity of decentralized naming, e.g. nmc.

~

Just to be clear, there is a world of difference between a small space for mostly drugs e.g. tor, and a wide space for the survival of threatened groups e.g. decentralized secure names.
\
~

Regarding your besties being entertained by my ec math

Quote
RSA Security in September 2013 issued an advisory recommending that its customers discontinue using any software based on Dual_EC_DRBG.[8][9] In the wake of the exposure of Dual_EC_DRBG as "an NSA undercover operation", cryptography experts have also expressed concern over the security of the NIST recommended elliptic curves,[10] suggesting a return to encryption based on non-elliptic-curve groups.

As mentioned before, I'm not a cryptographer nor mathematician but I have common sense. PKC is a total fraud./ I've had discussions on this topic going back many years and I know the bullshitstorm you guys can cook up. Bring it on.
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