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Author Topic: Mr. Unknown keeps getting bigger  (Read 1632 times)
mdude77 (OP)
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May 11, 2012, 12:27:49 AM
 #1

I'm not going to pretend I know what the 51% attack is, or how it works, but he, assuming it's one miner, is getting larger and larger every day. 

(I apologize if this is being hashed out elsewhere...)

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rjk
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May 11, 2012, 01:11:22 AM
 #2

"Unknown" isn't necessarily a single entity, and often consists of mis-identified known pool blocks.

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dafq is goin on


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May 11, 2012, 01:54:57 AM
 #3

And I guess some larger frams just go solo/mergedmined to pick up the extra 0.1% transaction fees, and also keep bandwidth down, as the daemons do not use up much. You might even use sattelite inet as backup, as the 1 second delay during backup times is not really bad. But another think. Is this the block from hell (got solved this moment (179628) Wink?! Wink

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May 11, 2012, 03:53:19 AM
 #4

Fear of the "unknown". It's a common human response.
But yeah, I'm really curious to understand exactly what makes up the unknown.
Who are they? What are their intentions?



jarsumarsu
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May 11, 2012, 05:05:15 AM
Last edit: May 11, 2012, 05:18:25 AM by jarsumarsu
 #5

Fpga/asic manufacturers piloting new products until they produce enough coins to them and the difficulty level rises enough, and then send their products to the people who have paid them a few weeks/months earlier.
Of course they want to be anonymous.
They also deny everything if they are asked about it  Wink
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May 11, 2012, 06:34:28 AM
 #6

Fpga/asic manufacturers piloting new products until they produce enough coins to them and the difficulty level rises enough, and then send their products to the people who have paid them a few weeks/months earlier.
Of course they want to be anonymous.
They also deny everything if they are asked about it  Wink
I love that conspiracy theory. I'll buy into that  Smiley

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lunchb0x
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May 14, 2012, 01:33:10 AM
 #7

If you go here http://blockchain.info/pools and scroll down to the unknown block section, you will see that it is not one person submitting all those blocks, but is a lot of different ip addresses. if you look at the ip with the most blocks submitted, you'll see that it doesn't even match the top 5 pools in terms of blocks per 24 hours.
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