haploid23
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June 08, 2014, 05:54:52 AM |
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So much paranoia on these forums, and so much forgetting about rational self-interest. What do you think happens to the fool who destroys the wealth of tens of thousands of hackers?
And what if they're coerced by an organization or government to run an attack, against their will? Or what if they're corrupt, and were offered much more money than what the pool brings? It would cost someone far less money to pay a pool to run a 51%, than it would cost to buy enough hardware to run a 51% attack. If these people or organization's goal was end bitcoin, paying a pool to do it would be so much cheaper than carrying it out themselves.
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QuestionAuthority
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You lead and I'll watch you walk away.
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June 08, 2014, 06:23:41 AM |
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Deepbit had controlling share in the network a couple of times and we survived. They won't do anything because it's in their best interest to play nice. Think about it a minute. They're holding a mass of btc profit from running a successful pool. They could continue making more money but instead they decide to make their holdings worthless by fucking with the network. Yeah, that makes sense. Calm down people, the sky isn't falling.
Their "mass of BTC profit" isn't from their pool. Their pool costs them money, it makes them nothing. It has, from day 1, made absolutely no economic sense for their pool to exist at all. Their private farm is as large or larger than any other pool as is, so the argument of letting others join them to reduce their variance is moot. They're too large for variance to make an impact on their monthly revenues. They're paying to run servers for people for nothing, unless they're skimming from the top. We have no idea what their business model is but it does make sense to lower their variance by allowing people to hop on their large private farm. Or their game plan might be to remove the competition (such as yourself) by stealing as many customers as possible and then creating a fee that is profitable. Skimming is very possible and, as you know, has been done many times before. Creating fear isn't going to change anything. Removing the PoW system and moving to Proof of Stake can fix the problem for good. But we can't change our beloved Bitcoin can we? Heaven forbid we fix basic design flaws like the PoW system or prune the fucking blockchain. That would be just awful. /endrant
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PalmerLaura
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IPSX: Distributed Network Layer
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June 08, 2014, 06:28:01 AM |
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The problem is that a lot of people are touting while they know nothing. P2P pool isn't a solution at all. The sole, and I really mean sole problem is the hardware that they own.
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Willisius
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I'm really quite sane!
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June 08, 2014, 06:28:46 AM |
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I doubt they would do anything malicious as well. But that's not the point. The point is that Bitcoin is trustless, yet I have to trust them.
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PalmerLaura
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IPSX: Distributed Network Layer
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June 08, 2014, 06:34:31 AM |
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If they were to try to pull a 51% attack with their pool and they didn't own a lot of hardware then the miners would quickly change to another pool.
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PalmerLaura
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IPSX: Distributed Network Layer
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June 08, 2014, 06:40:59 AM |
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The problem with them is that they own the hardware that people buy at cex.io. If we see that as a problem (which it might be, but we can't really say that without having more data) then p2p pools don't do anything to solve that problem.
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markus1000
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June 08, 2014, 06:53:55 AM |
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guys dont be naive. just because in the past pools that have controlled 51% or more didn't do anything, doesn't mean the people who control the pools will act in the interest of bitcoin in the future.
When there is opportunity to do something it will be done. Even better when you could earn a lot of money or destroy something big at the same time.
Bitcoin is a decentralized currency, and its not in its interest to have mining pools with a big market share. In the long run the the 51% vulnability has to be somehow removed.
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tomjohnson
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June 08, 2014, 07:10:09 AM |
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oh, it's very dangerous.
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e4xit
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June 08, 2014, 07:13:03 AM |
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You realise that you can do a "double spend attack" with less than 51% of the hashing power if you want to right?
Having 51% of thee hash power just gives you a greater than 51%'chance of it succeeding (therefore becoming 'worthwhile' to attempt...
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Not your keys, not your coins. CoinJoin, always.
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findftp
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Delusional crypto obsessionist
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June 08, 2014, 07:30:57 AM |
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FUD BUT FACT NOTICE
The real threat isn't a 51% attack, the real fear should be with more than 51% of the nethash they could force any revision to the client or protocol they wanted. If you didn't accept accept the new protocol or client, then goodbye wallet!
That should be what scares you, not some 51% attack.
/END FUD
~BCX~
No, not goodbye wallet. We would end up with two different blockchains.
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bryant.coleman
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June 08, 2014, 07:45:24 AM |
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Right now they are at 42%. The Bitcoin Foundation should issue a directive to the GHash guys, to split their pool to two or more smaller ones. Or it should support the other mining pools, so that they could wean away some of the miners from GHash.
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findftp
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Delusional crypto obsessionist
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June 08, 2014, 08:10:14 AM |
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Right now they are at 42%. The Bitcoin Foundation should issue a directive to the GHash guys, to split their pool to two or more smaller ones. Or it should support the other mining pools, so that they could wean away some of the miners from GHash.
I don't know what's worse. The bitcoin having that power or a pool at 51%
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Justin00
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★YoBit.Net★ 350+ Coins Exchange & Dice
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June 08, 2014, 08:15:35 AM |
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So if I read correctly, you guys are saying its time to move to LTC hehe ? i joke i joke
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Justin00
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★YoBit.Net★ 350+ Coins Exchange & Dice
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June 08, 2014, 08:16:13 AM |
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anyways if ghash a pool or a company ? i always thought ghash was part of cex.io or what ever its called ?
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freedomno1
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Learning the troll avoidance button :)
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June 08, 2014, 08:19:20 AM |
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I'm glad some hash decided to leave Ghash and move somewhere else we don't want to see a single network controlling more than 50%
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Believing in Bitcoins and it's ability to change the world
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devphp
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June 08, 2014, 08:24:59 AM |
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I'm glad some hash decided to leave Ghash and move somewhere else we don't want to see a single network controlling more than 50%
click on 24 hr - it shows 43% at this moment
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noSlave
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June 08, 2014, 08:25:43 AM |
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anyways if ghash a pool or a company ? i always thought ghash was part of cex.io or what ever its called ?
yes they are. And that's why it's not enough when miner leaving their pool. ....they own the hardware.
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cookiemonster7
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Cookie...Cookie.
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June 08, 2014, 08:32:01 AM |
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I sincerely doubt ghash.io would destroy their own business by manipulating the market after reaching 51% of hashing power. It is likely they already have safety measures put in place.
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- “Genius is fine for the ignition spark, but to get there someone has to see that the radiator doesn't leak and no tire is flat.”
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noSlave
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June 08, 2014, 09:01:06 AM |
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I sincerely doubt ghash.io would destroy their own business by manipulating the market after reaching 51% of hashing power. It is likely they already have safety measures put in place.
do you know the ppl behind Ghash.io? ;-)
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Fiftysven
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June 08, 2014, 09:15:01 AM |
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The main invention of Bitcoin is not having to trust a third party and now we should just hope that Ghash.io doesnt fuck it up? Makes sense.....
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