brg444
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November 04, 2014, 04:17:55 AM |
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I don't see any businesses selling pirated songs or movies, because only the legal ones have value. I don't see Americans using Pesos. Nobody will sell a currency if it is not liquid enough to use in a brick and mortar store. Just like every other foreign currency, you will be asked to leave it at the border.
But my friend we are in CRYPTO world! If they want to force the use of cryptofiat upon every businesses in the country then let them do it. Let's use your analogy with Pesos(BTC). Remember there are no borders in CRYPTOworld. So imagine that I have this magical wallet that contains only Pesos(BTC). Any time I have to pay in an american brick and mortar store that only accepts USD(cryptofiat) my magic wallet automatically transfers my pesos(BTC) into USD(cryptofiat). The merchant receives cryptofiat, hands over the good to me and we are both happy!
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"I believe this will be the ultimate fate of Bitcoin, to be the "high-powered money" that serves as a reserve currency for banks that issue their own digital cash." Hal Finney, Dec. 2010
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cbeast
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November 04, 2014, 04:27:20 AM |
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I don't see any businesses selling pirated songs or movies, because only the legal ones have value. I don't see Americans using Pesos. Nobody will sell a currency if it is not liquid enough to use in a brick and mortar store. Just like every other foreign currency, you will be asked to leave it at the border.
But my friend we are in CRYPTO world! If they want to force the use of cryptofiat upon every businesses in the country then let them do it. Let's use your analogy with Pesos(BTC). Remember there are no borders in CRYPTOworld. So imagine that I have this magical wallet that contains only Pesos(BTC). Any time I have to pay in an american brick and mortar store that only accepts USD(cryptofiat) my magic wallet automatically transfers my pesos(BTC) into USD(cryptofiat). The merchant receives cryptofiat, hands over the good to me and we are both happy! Maybe you didn't notice that I was agreeing with you in the point that people will chose a 1:1 if they have a choice. Your magic wallet not may not exist if the cryptofiat is not exchanged outside of legal channels. All I'm saying is that we should expect states to ban 1:1 pegged cryptocurrencies at first.
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Any significantly advanced cryptocurrency is indistinguishable from Ponzi Tulips.
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brg444
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November 04, 2014, 04:28:12 AM |
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brg444, did you ever address the concern that a utility chain has the chance to permanently attract all tx fees to itself in the long run at the expense of BTC miners who need those tx fees? or is your answer simply that Bitcoin will pre empt that by adopting said innovation before that happens?
I did. Here is my example : if faster tx times is implemented WITHOUT security tradoff to the SC then it makes perfect sense that the mainchain would incorporate the feature natively. since you refuse this scenario, then indeed, as mentionned in the whitepaper, the scBTC might attract considerable, even the majority of the coin. BUT As there are no changes to parent chain consensus rules, everyone can switch in their own time without any of the risks associated with consensus failure. The price of scBTC will NOT riser faster than BTC's since a BTC can claim a 1:1 stake in the SC so they are effectively worth the same. In such a scenario, assuming there are still mining rewards being handed over, the miners will continue mining the BTC chain since they can claim the new, widely used, scBTC 1:1 from the BTC they mine. So essentially, withstanding some VERY particular and farfetched situation, even the last one to jump boat can claim his equivalent stake on the scBTC chain. Of course this implies a security issue in that effectively all of the users would have to export their cold wallets and what not over to the new blockchain. This is why I'm arguing that people will be very reluctant to follow such a mass exodus and that the more likely scenario is that when the mainchain developers realize that the market has voted for whatever feature is included in the sidechain they will fork it onto the mainchain so as to create a less risky transition. Remember that if the sidechain does induce this mass exodus it will need the consensus of all nodes and miners to become the mainchain and so I believe that in this situation, the nodes and miners will simply conclude that a fork of the existing mainchain is a safer proposition.
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"I believe this will be the ultimate fate of Bitcoin, to be the "high-powered money" that serves as a reserve currency for banks that issue their own digital cash." Hal Finney, Dec. 2010
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brg444
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November 04, 2014, 04:33:03 AM |
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I don't see any businesses selling pirated songs or movies, because only the legal ones have value. I don't see Americans using Pesos. Nobody will sell a currency if it is not liquid enough to use in a brick and mortar store. Just like every other foreign currency, you will be asked to leave it at the border.
But my friend we are in CRYPTO world! If they want to force the use of cryptofiat upon every businesses in the country then let them do it. Let's use your analogy with Pesos(BTC). Remember there are no borders in CRYPTOworld. So imagine that I have this magical wallet that contains only Pesos(BTC). Any time I have to pay in an american brick and mortar store that only accepts USD(cryptofiat) my magic wallet automatically transfers my pesos(BTC) into USD(cryptofiat). The merchant receives cryptofiat, hands over the good to me and we are both happy! Maybe you didn't notice that I was agreeing with you in the point that people will chose a 1:1 if they have a choice. Your magic wallet not may not exist if the cryptofiat is not exchanged outside of legal channels. All I'm saying is that we should expect states to ban 1:1 pegged cryptocurrencies at first. I'm sorry, I indeed was not sure how to interpret your comment. Allow me to apologize for that. If, indeed, the cryptofiat cannot be exchanged outside of legal channel (something I'm quite certain is impossible) then I would also like to know how do you envision the cryptofiat securing its chain? One could suggest they could use coercion and violence to force miners of their country to merge mine it but in a global, crypto world, that is not sufficient and it would render them very vulnerable to a new crypto-future type of financial attack, don't you think?
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"I believe this will be the ultimate fate of Bitcoin, to be the "high-powered money" that serves as a reserve currency for banks that issue their own digital cash." Hal Finney, Dec. 2010
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cbeast
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November 04, 2014, 04:46:31 AM |
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I don't see any businesses selling pirated songs or movies, because only the legal ones have value. I don't see Americans using Pesos. Nobody will sell a currency if it is not liquid enough to use in a brick and mortar store. Just like every other foreign currency, you will be asked to leave it at the border.
But my friend we are in CRYPTO world! If they want to force the use of cryptofiat upon every businesses in the country then let them do it. Let's use your analogy with Pesos(BTC). Remember there are no borders in CRYPTOworld. So imagine that I have this magical wallet that contains only Pesos(BTC). Any time I have to pay in an american brick and mortar store that only accepts USD(cryptofiat) my magic wallet automatically transfers my pesos(BTC) into USD(cryptofiat). The merchant receives cryptofiat, hands over the good to me and we are both happy! Maybe you didn't notice that I was agreeing with you in the point that people will chose a 1:1 if they have a choice. Your magic wallet not may not exist if the cryptofiat is not exchanged outside of legal channels. All I'm saying is that we should expect states to ban 1:1 pegged cryptocurrencies at first. I'm sorry, I indeed was not sure how to interpret your comment. Allow me to apologize for that. If, indeed, the cryptofiat cannot be exchanged outside of legal channel (something I'm quite certain is impossible) then I would also like to know how do you envision the cryptofiat securing its chain? One could suggest they could use coercion and violence to force miners of their country to merge mine it but in a global, crypto world, that is not sufficient and it would render them very vulnerable to a new crypto-future type of financial attack, don't you think? Maybe so, but don't expect Keynesians to just throw in the towel. They will entice BTC owners with wonderful exchange rates. They will offer insurance. They will offer miners Quantitative Easing. All the while they will be hoarding BTC for reasons of National Security.
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Any significantly advanced cryptocurrency is indistinguishable from Ponzi Tulips.
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brg444
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November 04, 2014, 04:57:18 AM |
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Maybe so, but don't expect Keynesians to just throw in the towel. They will entice BTC owners with wonderful exchange rates. They will offer insurance. They will offer miners Quantitative Easing. All the while they will be hoarding BTC for reasons of National Security.
but there's a lunatic in Risto's thread saying BTC is the government's creation surely they'd want use using it no ?
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"I believe this will be the ultimate fate of Bitcoin, to be the "high-powered money" that serves as a reserve currency for banks that issue their own digital cash." Hal Finney, Dec. 2010
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Adrian-x
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November 04, 2014, 05:00:27 AM Last edit: November 04, 2014, 05:12:34 AM by Adrian-x |
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if most of the transactions occur on OT then the danger is even greater for miners considering unlike SCs they do not get to mine and profit from OT, correct?
not really, just think of an exchange, they have many more transactions than the Bitcoin blockchain can process, they have there own servers and internal accounting system (it could there own PoS coin or somthing like the NASDAQ) all OT does is ensure that your balance is locked and released when cretin criteria are met with a N of M script your bitcoin can be moved. in this application it is similar or indistinguishable from a decentralized exchange using SC. An alternate currency for example - with OT would be a for profit company - say for example a micro transaction currency, what OT would provide is a trust free way to secure your BTC, there internal servers or blockchain ledger would manage the system - risk, demand and competition would keep scales appropriate, and there dev team could trim the block chain as needed. if there micro payment coin was in high demand there would be an exchange rate floated either on the market or set by the company. but the above example with a SC would run at the prototypical level, and be totally decentralized the design of the coin would most likely be merged mined to incentivise mining, over time it will generate more revenue for miners than Bitcoin, the result is there is a motivation to mine and secure the SC's as they grow, the Bitcoin chain can be MM but if it gets to a point where it docent generate enough revenue because the revenue is generated on the SC, it will leave bitcoin vulnerable to exploration or attack. this is the trade off with SC, the trade off with OT is market competition, you have to earn you way to the top, you cant boot strap you way up by getting something for nothing (mining) and risking Bitcoins incentive sachem. and regarding inflation on a SC. yes indeed there could be, but if there is then it becomes much like any other altcoin and this inflation does not affect the BTC ledger.
to be taken in context with the previous discussion, if the SC is more valuable it is a reason not to transfer back.
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Thank me in Bits 12MwnzxtprG2mHm3rKdgi7NmJKCypsMMQw
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brg444
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November 04, 2014, 05:15:08 AM |
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if most of the transactions occur on OT then the danger is even greater for miners considering unlike SCs they do not get to mine and profit from OT, correct?
not really, just think of an exchange, they have many more transactions than the Bitcoin blockchain can process, they have there own servers and internal accounting system (it could there own PoS coin or somthing like the NASDAQ) all OT does is ensure that your balance locked and released when cretin criteria are met with a N of M script your bitcoin can be moved. in this application it is similar or indistinguishable from a decentralized exchange using SC. An alternate currency for example - with OT would be a for profit company - say for example a micro transaction currency, what OT would provide is a trust free way to secure your BTC, there internal servers or blockchain ledger would manage the system - risk, demand and competition would keep scales appropriate, and there dev team could trim the block chain as needed. if there micro payment coin was in high demand there would be an exchange rate floated either on the market or set by the company. but the above example with a SC would run at the prototypical level, and be totally decentralized the design of the coin would most likely be merged mined to incentivise mining, over time it will generate more revenue for miners than Bitcoin, the result is there is a motivation to mine and secure the SC's as they grow, the Bitcoin chain can be MM but if it gets to a point where it docent generate enough revenue because the revenue is generated on the SC, it will leave bitcoin vulnerable to exploration or attack. this is the trade off with SC, the trade off with OT is market competition, you have to earn you way to the top, you cant boot strap you way up by getting something for nothing (mining) and risking Bitcoins incentive sachem. and regarding inflation on a SC. yes indeed there could be, but if there is then it becomes much like any other altcoin and this inflation does not affect the BTC ledger.
to be taken in context with the previous discussion, if the SC is more valuable it is a reason not to transfer back. so yes basically you just confirmed my two arguments. 1. OT is very much more centralized than SC 2. The danger of the majority of txs being handled off blockchain and removing the incentives for miners to mine any network is far greater than them potentially choosing to prefer mining a particular SC other than Bitcoin. Here is an example where I will use your argument against you. Consider two solutions : a fast transactions sidechain and a fast transaction OT coin. Using the first solution, the sidechain, miners are incentivized to mine both chains, the mainchain and the sidechain. In my own, more pragmatic world, they benefit from both as both work in synergy and the potential for the sidechain to take over the main one along with its mining power is slim to none. But just to entertain your scenario let us assume it does happen and an exodus to this new chain happen. Miners are still providing the security for a new mainchain and are incentivized to do so. Now using the second solution, the fast transactions OT coin. It could indeed be a cool solution for awhile but since we have to consider both extremes, then we should also assume that by some strech of the imagination users would somehow have no use for the BTC mainchain and want to use only the OT fast transactions coin. The problem with that scenario is that miners are left with no txs at all to mine. All the transactions are essentially occuring off-chain. Remember this is a scenario you have yourself championed and argued that once the block reward for BTC decreases or disappear then miners would be left with no incentive to secure the chain and would abandon it but this time, without any chain to turn to. Don't you think that's a bit problematic. Do you see why SC is the better option?
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"I believe this will be the ultimate fate of Bitcoin, to be the "high-powered money" that serves as a reserve currency for banks that issue their own digital cash." Hal Finney, Dec. 2010
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brg444
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November 04, 2014, 05:16:57 AM |
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to be taken in context with the previous discussion, if the altcoin is more valuable it is a reason not to transfer back.
FTFYCan you see how no matter what direction you go your logic fails you?
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"I believe this will be the ultimate fate of Bitcoin, to be the "high-powered money" that serves as a reserve currency for banks that issue their own digital cash." Hal Finney, Dec. 2010
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Adrian-x
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November 04, 2014, 05:42:23 AM |
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to be taken in context with the previous discussion, if the altcoin is more valuable it is a reason not to transfer back.
FTFYCan you see how no matter what direction you go your logic fails you? OK you have to go around the sun a fiew more times, Altcoins don't lock in Bitcoin - someone gets to spend them, if one fulfills a function like fast transaction speed and is adopted it's because of market forces. Actual value as at risk.
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Thank me in Bits 12MwnzxtprG2mHm3rKdgi7NmJKCypsMMQw
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iCEBREAKER
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Crypto is the separation of Power and State.
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November 04, 2014, 05:43:16 AM |
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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/11206596/Dollar-smashes-through-resistance-as-mega-rally-gathers-pace.htmlDollar smashes through resistance as mega-rally gathers pace HSBC says we are at the early stages of a dollar bull run that will change the world You heard it here first, but nice of AEP to confirm. (New & Improved! Hat tip to da2ce7.)
The USD is entering the 'red giant' phase, having exhausted its primary fuel of gold and silver backing and now being powered by the less dense energy source of hydrocarbon hegemony. Although less productive, the economic bloat of malinvestment results in a higher apparent magnitude via the financialization process....
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██████████ ██████████████████ ██████████████████████ ██████████████████████████ ████████████████████████████ ██████████████████████████████ ████████████████████████████████ ████████████████████████████████ ██████████████████████████████████ ██████████████████████████████████ ██████████████████████████████████ ██████████████████████████████████ ██████████████████████████████████ ████████████████████████████████ ██████████████ ██████████████ ████████████████████████████ ██████████████████████████ ██████████████████████ ██████████████████ ██████████ Monero
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| "The difference between bad and well-developed digital cash will determine whether we have a dictatorship or a real democracy." David Chaum 1996 "Fungibility provides privacy as a side effect." Adam Back 2014
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brg444
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November 04, 2014, 05:47:02 AM |
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to be taken in context with the previous discussion, if the altcoin is more valuable it is a reason not to transfer back.
FTFYCan you see how no matter what direction you go your logic fails you? OK you have to go around the sun a fiew more times, Altcoins don't lock in Bitcoin - someone gets to spend them, if one fulfills a function like fast transaction speed and is adopted it's because of market forces. Actual value as at risk. and what has that got to do with the inflation debate? how does 1:1 sidechain inflate Bitcoin?
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"I believe this will be the ultimate fate of Bitcoin, to be the "high-powered money" that serves as a reserve currency for banks that issue their own digital cash." Hal Finney, Dec. 2010
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justusranvier
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November 04, 2014, 07:04:50 AM |
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Pffft! WTF do you think Bitcoin is supposed to run on when the inflation (block reward) is used up?
There is nothing 'radical' and 'experimantal' about transaction fees. They were part of the design. You, my friend, are engaging in the FUD here. The FUD is that artificial production quotas are necessary to keep transaction fees "high enough". It's the same economic fallacy every single cartel argues for - you can literally fill textbooks with the number of examples of people who run to the government to implement various methods for restricting supply because without a production quota some disaster or another will happen. I just saw Gavin say in the same AMA summary that TOR was the answer for security (highly dubious to me, but anyway...) while he proposed increasing the block rate. He forgot to mention that the 1MB block size falls just under what seems to be supportable by TOR at the moment. If you would have been paying attention, you'd have noticed that he said to broadcast your transactions over Tor, not download the entire blockchain over Tor. That's a pretty simple and neat solution that should be obvious to anybody who was serious about solving the problem. He forgot to mention that his proposal is exponential. As I read Gavin's article here, I almost think he is saying " Remeber that CFR thing? They got me. Run for the hills fellow Bitcoiners" It's that absurd to me. Andresen posited that the 50% annual growth rate he suggested would enable the distributed network to facilitate as many as 400 million transactions per day if implemented now. After 12 years, the bitcoin network’s estimated transaction capacity would reach 56 billion transactions per day, according to Andresen’s initial calculations. - 12 years is about 2x the current age of Bitcoin. - 56,000,000,000 transactions is about 90,000x the current 600,000 TPD. You can judge for yourself how much technology has advances between 2009 and 2015 and extrapolate that out then decide how, given the struggles Bitcoin has had meeting it's current 7TPS, it's going to swallow 650,000TPS. But don't worry...it's just 'initial calculations.' His proposal still has magic numbers in it, so it's no good. Another fallacy here in the FUD camp is that without a hardcoded limit the size of blocks will rise to infinity. Nobody tries to argue that we need a artificial limit on the number of loaves of bread that can be baked each day to stop bakers from producing an infinite number that nobody wants, but somehow when transistors are involved all well-known principles of supply and demand reverse themselves. It really isn't the case that anything "technology" (as cbeast puts it) operates in some alternate bizarro world of reversed economics.
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cbeast
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November 04, 2014, 07:10:35 AM |
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Another fallacy here in the FUD camp is that without a hardcoded limit the size of blocks will rise to infinity.
Nobody tries to argue that we need a artificial limit on the number of loaves of bread that can be baked each day to stop bakers from producing an infinite number that nobody wants, but somehow when transistors are involved all well-known principles of supply and demand reverse themselves.
It really isn't the case that anything "technology" (as cbeast puts it) operates in some alternate bizarro world of reversed economics.
I was just making test case for falsification there, not a position. Bread (or more often corn) can have a "subsidy" attack and it is done often by governments.
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Any significantly advanced cryptocurrency is indistinguishable from Ponzi Tulips.
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justusranvier
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November 04, 2014, 07:12:38 AM |
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how are those cheep coins working for you OT can be as decentralized as using a BitTorrent client to assess the BitTorrent network, 100% decentralized, and available without a prototypical change why so insistent SC are better? FYI inflation in value on a SC is what prevents one converting back into BTC, one want to use the value enabled by the SC, and if it isn't there you want to convert back the BTC. I will be honest I haven't looked into OT in much details but if I understand it right, can the same concern you guys parade around not be applied to OT as well? If OT gains traction and develops innovative utilities then is it not right that most txs would occur on their network and would be even more dangerous for the miners than SCs? OT is a contract processing system. It's used for managing financial instruments (liabilities). This is fundamentally different than Bitcoin, and most likely will not be used for the same things. Sure, you can use something like it to pay for you groceries in a store. But anyone who added OT to their cash registers could just as easily add direct Bitcoin payments. You'd be more likely to use OT to create, securitize, and repay a loan on a periodic schedule. This is something completely disjoint than what you'd do with Bitcoin.
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justusranvier
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November 04, 2014, 07:13:55 AM |
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Bread (or more often corn) can have a "subsidy" attack and it is done often by governments.
I agree the block subsidy is problematic. Since we can't get rid of it, the only solution is to grow large enough that it stops distorting mining so much.
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cbeast
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November 04, 2014, 07:22:30 AM |
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Bread (or more often corn) can have a "subsidy" attack and it is done often by governments.
I agree the block subsidy is problematic. Since we can't get rid of it, the only solution is to grow large enough that it stops distorting mining so much. Okay I see your point, but you have to have some subsidy to bootstrap. It is on a predictable trajectory, so the math is known. Whatever projections you can design without a subsidy should be easy enough to adjust with a known math function.
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Any significantly advanced cryptocurrency is indistinguishable from Ponzi Tulips.
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tvbcof
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November 04, 2014, 07:28:48 AM |
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...
It really isn't the case that anything "technology" (as cbeast puts it) operates in some alternate bizarro world of reversed economics.
Fair enough about Gavin's recent words, but broadcasting transactions can be done covertly in a variety of ways because they are tiny. I wish to have it be the case that actually operating the infrastructure (you remember 'peer 2 peer', right?) is similarly defensible. To wit, there is nothing 'artificial' about the transaction rate of the system. This element in particular is key to both the makeup of the infrastructure providers and their ability as a group to thwart potential attacks. Everyone has their own ideas about what the above means for block size. I am on the radical low end of the spectrum to be sure. Part of this is because I've had to fuck with network traffic for commercial enterprises which gives me my own perspective on how data moves around (and does not move around.) I also happened to be proven dead right about some of the 'conspiracy theories' associated with traffic movement complements of Ed Snowden and his revolations did little to usher me into the gentle and loving arms of corp/gov. At the end of the day I'll vote with my feet if I sense that Bitcoin is heading in the wrong direction. That already happened to some extent at the beginning of the year. Fortuitously I also wanted fiat for some other projects around that time as well...and I had hit a pre-determined target on liquidating some of my holdings so I cannot pin the whole thing on the threat of unhealthy growth. But it absolutely WAS a factor and but for the fact that I didn't need the money I might have prematurely exercised some dumping due specifically to the activities of the Bitcoin Foundation group.
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sig spam anywhere and self-moderated threads on the pol&soc board are for losers.
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NewLiberty
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November 04, 2014, 08:09:37 AM |
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you're not reading properly. a SC with a sidecoin can also accept scBTC. it's the scBTC that have the 2wp, as you say. therefore, any miner mining the SC gets 3 revenue streams; scBTC and sidecoin tx fees and sidecoin block rewards. this is why they will MM and eventually directly mine if enough scBTC appears on the SC.
I don't believe this is quite exact. A SC with a sidecoin will reward BTC locked into this sidechain with a deterministic amount of scBTC (not 1:1). For example 1 BTC will get you 5000 scBTC. From that point on these sidecoins have a floating exchange rate. If the sidechain fails to attract speculators/users than the exchange rate is more expensive ex: it now cost you 10000 scBTC to redeem 1 BTC. For that reason, sidecoins are exactly like altcoins the dev can design the peg and the SC with any properties he wants. he could design the exact scenario i outline; a SC with a 1:1 peg for BTC <--> scBTC that also issues a block reward for a new sidecoin while at the same time processing scBTC and sidecoin tx for fees. this would definitely attract MM initially, and if highly successful, defecting Bitcoin miners who direct mine the SC. The moment an additional coined is issued on the sidechain that cannot be redeemed 1:1 with BTC ALL the coins on that sidechain become sidecoins. What is the best way to assure that your SC dev does not change this 1:1 ratio after BTC have been burned to the SC, fork non-conspiring miners out, burst mine the ratio up to 1:100 and then having 99% of the SC coins, cash in 99% of the BTC on the chain? Doesn't this make it just that much easier to scam BTC? There is no peg. There is no spoon.
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Odalv
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November 04, 2014, 08:15:25 AM |
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@cypherdoc - SC is not simple to understand
transacting in SC can be separated in 3 steps 1. entering SC 2. using SC 3. exiting SC
steps #1 and #3 => entering and exiting is 2-way-peg a) 2-way-peg can be done by - trusted entity (human or server will convert between MC and SC) => it can be you (cypherSC) - Federated peg (N humans or oracles will create transactions on MC and SC -> locking and unlocking BTC and scBTC) - Co-signed (N humans or oracles ) and SPV proof from SC will be required to convert between MC and SC - bitcoin (bitcoin protocol wlll exchange BTC <-> scBTC) - ... and many more b) Then there is step #2 "using SC". This is separated from creating 2wp. Using SC will require mining. This can be done by - MM merge mining - trusted entity (server will confirm blocks) - using Federated miners (those can by differnet from those who created Federated peg) - Oracle/s - bitcoin timestamping - SNARK - ... and many more
c) Block in SC can be new blockchain concept (aka, 'faster transactions', 'different monetary policy', 'better privacy', 'more extensive scripting', 'contracts', 'different cryptography', 'different mining models' and so on).
edit: 2wp, mining, blockchain concept are orthogonal. They create new 3-dimensional world.
that is how i understand it. but as far as you pumping the Federated server model, this is from the paper itself pg 7: Although it is possible to use a simple trust-based solution involving fixed signers (see Appendix A) to verify locking of coins, there are important reasons to avoid the introduction of single points of failure:
Trusting individual signers does not only mean expecting them to behave honestly; they must also never be compromised, never leak secret key material, never be coerced, and never stop participating in the network.
Because digital assets are long-lived, any trust requirements must be as well. Experience has shown that trust requirements are dangerous expectations even for timespans on the order of months, let alone the generational timespans we expect financial systems to last. 180
Digital currencies were unable to gain traction until Bitcoin was able to eliminate single points of failure, and the community is strongly averse to the introduction of such weaknesses. Community mistrust is reinforced by financial events since 2007; public trust in the financial system and other public institutions is likewise at historical lows.Simplified version of exchange. 1. I can create bid/ask Merger as SC. - it can be implemented as central authority server b/c it cannot move coins (I'll remove feature send coins from this mergerSC) - merger can only pair bids and asks (new featue I'll add) => Merger will create proof (Merger creates signature that he found signed bid by A that match signed ask by B) => in fact merger mines blockchain as list of trades. 2. now I can create 2-way-peg (Federated Peg, Oracle or by Bitcoin protocol) - I can deposit asset into Merger - I can withdraw asset from Merger because I can create proof from merger-blockchain. - Merger can be easy audited 3. Merger feature cannot be implemented on MC b/c it requires to remove feature "send coins" and new blockchain concept.
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