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Author Topic: Why the darkcoin/dash/dashpay instamine matters  (Read 47769 times)
aleix
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August 18, 2016, 12:50:30 PM
Last edit: August 18, 2016, 01:11:06 PM by aleix
 #421

Ok I get it now. So it is no good. But can anyone explain why the price is rising? Manipulation? Adoption? Long term investing from whales?

It seems very illogical for this coin to rise that high if it has no positive attributes.

Last time I looked there were around 6 million coins and well over 3000 MasterModes. One needs 1000 coins for a MN, so that 3 to 4 million coins tied up in MN's.So a lot of the supply is tied up in MN's and not in the market. With a restricted supply we need relatively less demand to boost the price
Dash appears to be marketed slickly too.
So we have a slick marketing campaign and a small supply. Good ingredients for a rising price. Quite bullish.Though I'm not sure what these things mean in the long run

For me the key now is the decentralized budget. Now the new coins are distributed 45% miners, 45% masternodes and 10% for decetralized budget to improve the system (you can see the proposals here -> https://dashcentral.org/budget )

With this 10% now we have around $1 Million/year to pay professionals to improve the Dash Network. Meanwhile our alleged competition is doing nice and noobish collects.  

As I said, do not believe anyone here guys (even my own biased opinion, of course).

Do your own research.

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August 18, 2016, 01:02:33 PM
 #422


Ok I get it now. So it is no good. But can anyone explain why the price is rising?

It's rising because it's one of the most coherent monetary assets on coinmarketcap, being that it retains bitcoin's blokchain transparency while improving massively on its fungibility to the point that distinguishing characteristics between addresses are effectively eliminated.

Further, Dash has established a balanced approach between reserve and currency markets thats almost unmatched by any other cryptocurrency asset. That's to say that while some proportion of the coin supply is made available by holders on exchanges for trading, a significant proportion of the rest of it is deployed on the network and earns a return for its holders.

In other words, Dash has actually done something to put the full coin supply to work in a monetary sense, while a majority of its competitors remain obsessed with myopic technological gimmicks.
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August 18, 2016, 01:17:00 PM
 #423


Ok I get it now. So it is no good. But can anyone explain why the price is rising?

It's rising because it's one of the most coherent monetary assets on coinmarketcap, being that it retains bitcoin's blokchain transparency while improving massively on its fungibility to the point that distinguishing characteristics between addresses are effectively eliminated.

Further, Dash has established a balanced approach between reserve and currency markets thats almost unmatched by any other cryptocurrency asset. That's to say that while some proportion of the coin supply is made available by holders on exchanges for trading, a significant proportion of the rest of it is deployed on the network and earns a return for its holders.

In other words, Dash has actually done something to put the full coin supply to work in a monetary sense, while a majority of its competitors remain obsessed with myopic technological gimmicks.


No, you are just paying people to HODL.

"We are just fools. We insanely believe that we can replace one politician with another and something will really change. The ONLY possible way to achieve change is to change the very system of how government functions. Until we are prepared to do that, suck it up for your future belongs to the madness and corruption of politicians."
Martin Armstrong
aleix
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August 18, 2016, 01:31:10 PM
 #424


Ok I get it now. So it is no good. But can anyone explain why the price is rising?

It's rising because it's one of the most coherent monetary assets on coinmarketcap, being that it retains bitcoin's blokchain transparency while improving massively on its fungibility to the point that distinguishing characteristics between addresses are effectively eliminated.

Further, Dash has established a balanced approach between reserve and currency markets thats almost unmatched by any other cryptocurrency asset. That's to say that while some proportion of the coin supply is made available by holders on exchanges for trading, a significant proportion of the rest of it is deployed on the network and earns a return for its holders.

In other words, Dash has actually done something to put the full coin supply to work in a monetary sense, while a majority of its competitors remain obsessed with myopic technological gimmicks.


No, you are just paying people to HODL.

I think you need some time to educate yourself about Dash  Wink

https://dashpay.atlassian.net/wiki/display/DOC/Official+Documentation

https://www.dash.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/Dash-WhitepaperV1.pdf
https://www.dash.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/InstantTX.pdf
dinofelis
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August 18, 2016, 01:44:01 PM
 #425


Ok I get it now. So it is no good. But can anyone explain why the price is rising?

It's rising because it's one of the most coherent monetary assets on coinmarketcap, being that it retains bitcoin's blokchain transparency while improving massively on its fungibility to the point that distinguishing characteristics between addresses are effectively eliminated.

Further, Dash has established a balanced approach between reserve and currency markets thats almost unmatched by any other cryptocurrency asset. That's to say that while some proportion of the coin supply is made available by holders on exchanges for trading, a significant proportion of the rest of it is deployed on the network and earns a return for its holders.

This is in fact not really true.  The coins held in Master nodes are not production investment that earns interest as in a normal currency reserve system, where "saving" is in fact (delegated) investment in production capital.  In other words, "saved" money in a normal monetary economy are not "put in a box" but are again actively used by entrepreneurs to buy production capital.  That money keeps flowing, in other words, it is not locked up in a box as is the case in a Master node.

The "interest earning" in Master nodes is nothing else but a re-distribution of seigniorage by mining ; in other words, a tax on every currency holder, that goes in the pockets of Master node holders: a transfer of wealth from active users to "passive possessors".

In a normal economy, the interest earned comes from the risk taken.  A master node locked up doesn't take the slightest bit of risk but earns 45% of the seigniorage.

You can say that in bitcoin too, there is inflation because of mining.  However, because in bitcoin, the full seigniorage goes to the miner, that miner will also be pushed by competition to BURN most of the seigniorage in PoW.  In DASH, because the miner will only receive 45% of the seigniorage, competition will only make him burn 45% of the seigniorage in PoW, and the rest goes in the pockets of Master nodes and the "gouvernors".  Now, that is EXTREMELY SIMILAR to central banking and their interest rates on issued currency feeding a whole bunch of elite with free money, taxed by inflation on all the others.

In bitcoin, at least, this "tax" is entirely (or almost entirely) burned by PoW, so there is not really a self-accumulation of wealth without risk by the "richies of the first hour(s)".

Also because of this lucrative locking up of a large part of the money supply in master nodes, the ACTUAL available market cap of DASH is way lower than is calculated, because the available coin supply is seriously lower than the total number of coins existing.  

But all this is not to point out that DASH is a kind of rip off.  There is simply no other way to do some form of automated secured coinjoin mixing with bitcoin technology: you need "trusted parties", and so you need to provide them with sufficient incentive to do so (the master nodes).  This implies re-centralisation, governance, and hence, taxes and lucrative happenings for the elite which get richer.

The remaining question is how many master nodes are under independent control.  If that number is too small, then the anonymity of the mixing becomes compromised too.


toknormal
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August 18, 2016, 02:30:26 PM
 #426


The coins held in Master nodes are not production investment that earns interest as in a normal currency reserve system...That money keeps flowing, in other words, it is not locked up in a box as is the case in a Master node.

So what ?

Whether the 'money' changes hands or not isn't the relevant point since the monetary objective is to earn a return for its holders and the technical objective is to provide some security for masternodes. If both those objectives are being met in a complimentary manner then there is a basis for value and demand. I think there's been enough of a track record now to put that debate to bed.

The "interest earning" in Master nodes is nothing else but a re-distribution of seigniorage by mining ; in other words, a tax on every currency holder, that goes in the pockets of Master node holders: a transfer of wealth from active users to "passive possessors".

You are right in that it's a redistribution of the mining rewards - and a very effective one at that. Characterise it as a "tax" if you like but it's a bit of a stretch since: A - all coin holders can benefit to the extent of their holding, whether they are above or below the mastenode collateral threshold and B - the configuration now has a track record of success across all stakeholder sectors including holders (through supporting the market valuation), developers (through the decentralised blockchain funding), commercial participants (through blockchain funding and growing wallet support) and miners (see growing network hashrate).

In DASH, because the miner will only receive 45% of the seigniorage, competition will only make him burn 45% of the seigniorage in PoW, and the rest goes in the pockets of Master nodes and the "gouvernors".  Now, that is EXTREMELY SIMILAR to central banking and their interest rates on issued currency feeding a whole bunch of elite with free money, taxed by inflation on all the others.

Except is IS'NT central banking since Dash lives in an open monetary ecosystem and is continuously traded against other cryptocurrency assets. That has led to more, not fewer holders over the last 2 years, contrary to the argument implied by that paragraph. What matters is that it works as a monetary medium and the data on all fronts are in its favour on that count: valuation, mining participation, industry support, masternode takeup, development growth etc.

Also because of this lucrative locking up of a large part of the money supply in master nodes, the ACTUAL available market cap of DASH is way lower than is calculated

Only if one is a clueless bitcointalk troll who likes to redefine 'marketcap' on a whim. (I'm not suggesting you're a troll, but you do appear to be equally creative with the term).

None of the Dash coin supply is "locked up". ALL masternode collateral is as mobile as any other part of the blockchain and I'm sure you already know that. If you fire up a wallet and send a transaction to an exchange, the wallet will not care where those funds are located as long as it has control of them, hence you'll see coin supply flowing to exchanges from collateralised addresses just as freely as non-collateralised ones.

The marketcap is therefore correctly reported. The fact that some holders have an incentive to not sell is not a basis that allows you to redefine marketcap - it's a basis for calling it a viable investment.

This implies re-centralisation, governance, and hence, taxes and lucrative happenings for the elite which get richer.

"The Elite" in this case being potentially every last Dash holder, given that they are able to invest in Dash's reserve market even with the smallest holding. You don't like the fact that large holders are incentivised to re-invest their returns in that same reserve market ? Tough ! I DO like it, at least a whole lot more than them not being so.

The fact is, as with any successful monetary asset, they are at least as incentivised to liquidate their profits since - as I've already pointed out - Dash lives in an open market. The valuation will therefore reach an equilibrium between them holding and liquidating. There is always a price at which decentralisation of holdings occurs and I think you'll find that some early whales are nowhere near as paunchy as they were a couple of years ago  Wink

arielbit
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August 18, 2016, 02:31:27 PM
 #427


Ok I get it now. So it is no good. But can anyone explain why the price is rising?

It's rising because it's one of the most coherent monetary assets on coinmarketcap, being that it retains bitcoin's blokchain transparency while improving massively on its fungibility to the point that distinguishing characteristics between addresses are effectively eliminated.

Further, Dash has established a balanced approach between reserve and currency markets thats almost unmatched by any other cryptocurrency asset. That's to say that while some proportion of the coin supply is made available by holders on exchanges for trading, a significant proportion of the rest of it is deployed on the network and earns a return for its holders.

This is in fact not really true.  The coins held in Master nodes are not production investment that earns interest as in a normal currency reserve system, where "saving" is in fact (delegated) investment in production capital.  In other words, "saved" money in a normal monetary economy are not "put in a box" but are again actively used by entrepreneurs to buy production capital.  That money keeps flowing, in other words, it is not locked up in a box as is the case in a Master node.

The "interest earning" in Master nodes is nothing else but a re-distribution of seigniorage by mining ; in other words, a tax on every currency holder, that goes in the pockets of Master node holders: a transfer of wealth from active users to "passive possessors".

In a normal economy, the interest earned comes from the risk taken.  A master node locked up doesn't take the slightest bit of risk but earns 45% of the seigniorage.

You can say that in bitcoin too, there is inflation because of mining.  However, because in bitcoin, the full seigniorage goes to the miner, that miner will also be pushed by competition to BURN most of the seigniorage in PoW.  In DASH, because the miner will only receive 45% of the seigniorage, competition will only make him burn 45% of the seigniorage in PoW, and the rest goes in the pockets of Master nodes and the "gouvernors".  Now, that is EXTREMELY SIMILAR to central banking and their interest rates on issued currency feeding a whole bunch of elite with free money, taxed by inflation on all the others.

In bitcoin, at least, this "tax" is entirely (or almost entirely) burned by PoW, so there is not really a self-accumulation of wealth without risk by the "richies of the first hour(s)".

Also because of this lucrative locking up of a large part of the money supply in master nodes, the ACTUAL available market cap of DASH is way lower than is calculated, because the available coin supply is seriously lower than the total number of coins existing.  

But all this is not to point out that DASH is a kind of rip off.  There is simply no other way to do some form of automated secured coinjoin mixing with bitcoin technology: you need "trusted parties", and so you need to provide them with sufficient incentive to do so (the master nodes).  This implies re-centralisation, governance, and hence, taxes and lucrative happenings for the elite which get richer.

The remaining question is how many master nodes are under independent control.  If that number is too small, then the anonymity of the mixing becomes compromised too.




masternodes are already in plan even before they launched dash....hence the importance of the instamine to grab an astounding amount of dash
aleix
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August 18, 2016, 02:42:43 PM
 #428


Ok I get it now. So it is no good. But can anyone explain why the price is rising?

It's rising because it's one of the most coherent monetary assets on coinmarketcap, being that it retains bitcoin's blokchain transparency while improving massively on its fungibility to the point that distinguishing characteristics between addresses are effectively eliminated.

Further, Dash has established a balanced approach between reserve and currency markets thats almost unmatched by any other cryptocurrency asset. That's to say that while some proportion of the coin supply is made available by holders on exchanges for trading, a significant proportion of the rest of it is deployed on the network and earns a return for its holders.

This is in fact not really true.  The coins held in Master nodes are not production investment that earns interest as in a normal currency reserve system, where "saving" is in fact (delegated) investment in production capital.  In other words, "saved" money in a normal monetary economy are not "put in a box" but are again actively used by entrepreneurs to buy production capital.  That money keeps flowing, in other words, it is not locked up in a box as is the case in a Master node.

The "interest earning" in Master nodes is nothing else but a re-distribution of seigniorage by mining ; in other words, a tax on every currency holder, that goes in the pockets of Master node holders: a transfer of wealth from active users to "passive possessors".

In a normal economy, the interest earned comes from the risk taken.  A master node locked up doesn't take the slightest bit of risk but earns 45% of the seigniorage.

You can say that in bitcoin too, there is inflation because of mining.  However, because in bitcoin, the full seigniorage goes to the miner, that miner will also be pushed by competition to BURN most of the seigniorage in PoW.  In DASH, because the miner will only receive 45% of the seigniorage, competition will only make him burn 45% of the seigniorage in PoW, and the rest goes in the pockets of Master nodes and the "gouvernors".  Now, that is EXTREMELY SIMILAR to central banking and their interest rates on issued currency feeding a whole bunch of elite with free money, taxed by inflation on all the others.

In bitcoin, at least, this "tax" is entirely (or almost entirely) burned by PoW, so there is not really a self-accumulation of wealth without risk by the "richies of the first hour(s)".

Also because of this lucrative locking up of a large part of the money supply in master nodes, the ACTUAL available market cap of DASH is way lower than is calculated, because the available coin supply is seriously lower than the total number of coins existing.  

But all this is not to point out that DASH is a kind of rip off.  There is simply no other way to do some form of automated secured coinjoin mixing with bitcoin technology: you need "trusted parties", and so you need to provide them with sufficient incentive to do so (the master nodes).  This implies re-centralisation, governance, and hence, taxes and lucrative happenings for the elite which get richer.

The remaining question is how many master nodes are under independent control.  If that number is too small, then the anonymity of the mixing becomes compromised too.




masternodes are already in plan even before they launched dash....hence the importance of the instamine to grab an astounding amount of dash

This is another lie (a lie you like to repeat again and again). I know because I was there.

Anyone can read the Dash thread from day one to check.
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August 18, 2016, 03:00:44 PM
 #429

Whether the 'money' changes hands or not isn't the relevant point since the monetary objective is to earn a return for its holders and the technical objective is to provide some security for masternodes.

Of course not.  That is "greater fool theory".  The only monetary objective is to serve as a means of exchange in a stable economic environment.  Nobody holding dollars under his bed is expecting a "return for him holding dollars".

The way to earn a return in a normal economy is to invest: that is, to put earned income not directly into consumption, but to have entrepreneurs use it to buy capital goods.  That's called saving.

Quote
You are right in that it's a redistribution of the mining rewards - and a very effective one at that.

Characterise it as a "tax" if you like but it's a bit of a stretch since: A - all coin holders can benefit to the extent of their holding, whether they are above or below the mastenode collateral threshold

How's that ?  By holding shares in a masternode or something ?

Remember that the coin creation is a necessary but evil part in a monetary system: the coin creation generates seigniorage which is considered unfair on one hand, and devaluates the holdings of currency by inflation.  But one has to go through a phase of coin creation in order to distribute the coin.  In bitcoin, the seigniorage is essentially burned with PoW, so the the tax of inflation, paid by everybody, doesn't profit anybody in particular (the miner spends it all on PoW in principle) but secures the chain.  This largely removes the "unfairness" idea of seigniorage (even though the inflation tax exists, but pays for the chain security).


Quote
In DASH, because the miner will only receive 45% of the seigniorage, competition will only make him burn 45% of the seigniorage in PoW, and the rest goes in the pockets of Master nodes and the "gouvernors".  Now, that is EXTREMELY SIMILAR to central banking and their interest rates on issued currency feeding a whole bunch of elite with free money, taxed by inflation on all the others.

Except is IS'NT central banking since Dash lives in an open monetary ecosystem and is continuously traded against other cryptocurrency assets.

I meant: getting free seigniorage for being part of the master node elite as a "tax" on the money creators (miners) and hence pocketing the loss of value by inflation without any risk taking is exactly what a central bank does with its interest rate.

I'm not implying the rest of a central banker's role, but pocketing part of the seigniorage is one of its principal functions.

Quote
That has led to more, not fewer holders over the last 2 years, contrary to the argument implied by that paragraph. What matters is that it works as a monetary medium and the data on all fronts are in its favour on that count: valuation, mining participation, industry support, masternode takeup, development growth etc.

Whether DASH has success in the market or not is not what I'm disputing.  I'm disputing the phrase where the DASH locked up in master nodes is compared to savings in a normal monetary economy.  It isn't savings, where the return comes from investment in production capital which augments the value of the economy.  It is locking up money to get seigniorage.  That was my point.  That's not the same.

Quote
None of the Dash coin supply is "locked up". ALL masternode collateral is as mobile as any other part of the blockchain and I'm sure you already know that.

I know that.  But it is locked up because of the seigniorage incentive.

Imagine that the FED tells you the following: *if you put a million dollars in a box here, then we will print you $100 000 a year for free*.  THIS is the economic equivalent to the master nodes.  Of course a lot of people holding millions of dollars are going to put that in boxes at the FED and are going to receive freshly printed dollars.   As long as this freshly printed dollar stuff is lucrative as compared to really INVESTING that money in *production capital*, effectively those dollars will remain in the boxes, and the ACTUAL CIRCULATING MONEY SUPPLY is way way lower than all the dollars existing in those boxes.

Imagine that there are 6 billion dollars but that 4 billion dollars is in those boxes.  As long as this system is working, you could actually burn those 4 billion dollar in boxes, as long as you keep sending $ 100 000 a year to all their previous owners.  Market-wise that is equivalent, because you've now set a THRESHOLD for people to take out their dollars out of these boxes: what they are going to do with it, risk aversion included, should reward them more than the risk-free $100 000 they get any way.

That is totally different from JUST holding a million dollars in a box with no specific seigniorage.  There is no threshold to put these back on the market.  There is no incentive to keep them in a box apart from thinking that this is the best store of value.  From the moment that there IS a positive investment available, these people WILL put their million into an investment.  But if you receive $ 100 000 "for free", the threshold to get them out of your box is much higher and as long as they are locked up, we can actually forget about them on the market.


Quote
The marketcap is therefore correctly reported. The fact that some holders have an incentive to not sell is not a basis that allows you to redefine marketcap - it's a basis for calling it a viable investment thats all.

Nope, exactly because of the threshold that I just explained.  You have to find a better investment than the free seigniorage to even get out one coin.  So until this threshold is reached, these coins are effectively locked up.

Quote
"The Elite" in this case being potentially every last Dash holder, given that they are able to invest in Dash's reserve market even with the smallest holding.

This is a mechanism I wasn't aware of.  Can I be, say, a master node share holder with, say, 10 DASH and obtain my interest, that is, my part of the 45% of the mining ?
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August 18, 2016, 03:26:03 PM
 #430


I'm disputing the phrase where the DASH locked up in master nodes is compared to savings in a normal monetary economy.  It isn't savings, where the return comes from investment in production capital which augments the value of the economy.  It is locking up money to get seigniorage.

If that privilege can be purchased by all and sundry then - by definition it isn't seigniorage is it. So I think that kind of blows the case slightly to pieces, regardless of how many times you like to cram that word into a single post.

All the same, people can and will characterise it how they like so be my guest. The fact is the network requires collateral for security and is able to pay a premium for it, so there's a trade to be made.

I meant: getting free seigniorage for being part of the master node elite as a "tax" on the money creators (miners) and hence pocketing the loss of value by inflation without any risk taking is exactly what a central bank does with its interest rate.

You're conveniently omitting the two dimensions of the 'deal' which make it work and - at the same time - render it nothing whatsoever resembling "seigniorage". Firstly, the tokens are created by a POW algo, not out of thin air. Secondly, both the miner AND the node-network contribute to the valuation of those tokens against other currencies - and thats the important part AGAINST OTHER CURRENCIES. The miner is effectively engaging in a trade with rest of the network stakeholders to support the value of the mining reward. That trade manifests itself as an equilibrium between network hashrate, network nodecount and exchange rate against other currencies.

Characterising this as "seigniorage" is about as useful as saying that the cost of combine harvesters is a tax on grain. i.e. technically correct and may prove interesting in bitcointalk trollthreads, but economically irrelevant.

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August 18, 2016, 03:51:55 PM
 #431

All the same, people can and will characterise it how they like so be my guest. The fact is the network requires collateral for security and is able to pay a premium for it, so there's a trade to be made.

The point is that only PART of the inflation and the associated seigniorage is "burned" in PoW, contrary to bitcoin, where (almost) all of it is burned.  Part of it is distributed to masternode owners, to 'bribe' them in holding their coins.  That lowers the effective market cap, and increases the value of a single coin, as less of them are on the market.

Quote
You're conveniently omitting the two dimensions of the 'deal' which make it work and - at the same time - render it nothing whatsoever resembling "seigniorage". Firstly, the tokens are created by a POW algo, not out of thin air.

Yes, but given the fact that the PoW is only financed by 45% of the inflation, there's 55% token creation which is not "burned" by PoW, and hence, pure seigniorage, like printing dollar bills where the effort to print them is negligible compared to their value.

PoW burns seigniorage.  That's the good thing about it: you "make" new money, but you spend it on PoW expenditures.  There is inflation, but nobody is profiting from it individually.  The inflation pays for the PoW, which secures the chain.

Quote
Secondly, both the miner AND the node-network contribute to the valuation of those tokens against other currencies - and thats the important part AGAINST OTHER CURRENCIES.

Mining, nor networking, contributes anything of "valuation".  It is the other way around.  It is the monetary belief that ALLOWS the expenditures on networking and mining.  The mining itself has a very small value (apart from securing the chain).

It is not because some idiot would spend suddenly $50 billion on mining, that the coin he's mining will get a market cap of $50 billion.  It is because the coin has instigated some monetary belief, that it can AFFORD to spend a lot on mining.

Quote
Characterising this as "seigniorage" is about as useful as saying that the cost of combine harvesters is a tax on grain. i.e. technically correct and may prove interesting in bitcointalk trollthreads, but economically irrelevant.

I think you have the valuation of a cryptocoin backward.  A cryptocoin's valuation is an infinitely recursive belief system (as is any monetary system).  If that belief system works, then it can pay itself a high level of mining.  In bitcoin, about all inflation is used for mining, because one wants nobody to profit from seigniorage.  In DASH, about 55% of the inflation goes to masternodes and the developers as seigniorage, and only 45% is burned as PoW.

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August 18, 2016, 04:12:03 PM
 #432


Part of it is distributed to masternode owners, to 'bribe' them in holding their coins.

Thats your characterisation. As I already pointed out to you, it falls apart because Dash is not a fiat currency. It is an electronic commodity which is freely traded on the open market against other equivalents so it requires to be economically viable for all parties concerned. It is not mandatory, exclusive government money and therefore "seigniorage" applies only by the most stretched analogy as the ones you're attempting to make.

Mining, nor networking, contributes anything of "valuation".  It is the other way around.

Really ?

Maybe we'd better ask the miners, holders, developers, commercial supporters & wallet developers which of them is the chicken and which is the egg. Good luck in getting that view endorsed Wink
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August 18, 2016, 04:41:34 PM
Last edit: August 18, 2016, 04:57:50 PM by arielbit
 #433


Ok I get it now. So it is no good. But can anyone explain why the price is rising?

It's rising because it's one of the most coherent monetary assets on coinmarketcap, being that it retains bitcoin's blokchain transparency while improving massively on its fungibility to the point that distinguishing characteristics between addresses are effectively eliminated.

Further, Dash has established a balanced approach between reserve and currency markets thats almost unmatched by any other cryptocurrency asset. That's to say that while some proportion of the coin supply is made available by holders on exchanges for trading, a significant proportion of the rest of it is deployed on the network and earns a return for its holders.

This is in fact not really true.  The coins held in Master nodes are not production investment that earns interest as in a normal currency reserve system, where "saving" is in fact (delegated) investment in production capital.  In other words, "saved" money in a normal monetary economy are not "put in a box" but are again actively used by entrepreneurs to buy production capital.  That money keeps flowing, in other words, it is not locked up in a box as is the case in a Master node.

The "interest earning" in Master nodes is nothing else but a re-distribution of seigniorage by mining ; in other words, a tax on every currency holder, that goes in the pockets of Master node holders: a transfer of wealth from active users to "passive possessors".

In a normal economy, the interest earned comes from the risk taken.  A master node locked up doesn't take the slightest bit of risk but earns 45% of the seigniorage.

You can say that in bitcoin too, there is inflation because of mining.  However, because in bitcoin, the full seigniorage goes to the miner, that miner will also be pushed by competition to BURN most of the seigniorage in PoW.  In DASH, because the miner will only receive 45% of the seigniorage, competition will only make him burn 45% of the seigniorage in PoW, and the rest goes in the pockets of Master nodes and the "gouvernors".  Now, that is EXTREMELY SIMILAR to central banking and their interest rates on issued currency feeding a whole bunch of elite with free money, taxed by inflation on all the others.

In bitcoin, at least, this "tax" is entirely (or almost entirely) burned by PoW, so there is not really a self-accumulation of wealth without risk by the "richies of the first hour(s)".

Also because of this lucrative locking up of a large part of the money supply in master nodes, the ACTUAL available market cap of DASH is way lower than is calculated, because the available coin supply is seriously lower than the total number of coins existing.  

But all this is not to point out that DASH is a kind of rip off.  There is simply no other way to do some form of automated secured coinjoin mixing with bitcoin technology: you need "trusted parties", and so you need to provide them with sufficient incentive to do so (the master nodes).  This implies re-centralisation, governance, and hence, taxes and lucrative happenings for the elite which get richer.

The remaining question is how many master nodes are under independent control.  If that number is too small, then the anonymity of the mixing becomes compromised too.




masternodes are already in plan even before they launched dash....hence the importance of the instamine to grab an astounding amount of dash

This is another lie (a lie you like to repeat again and again). I know because I was there.

Anyone can read the Dash thread from day one to check.


here goes... get ready for some ass whoopin! and check the dates


Great, now that everything is stable, I'll be posting later about the vision of this project and milestones! Time to move on to actually implementing what I set out to do.

this is posted after the 48hr instamine

ka ching! Evan and his friends pocketed a lot of coins.... great indeed very great Evan *clap* *clap*

aaaaannd before he posted this (quote below)

Evan already forked DASH from 84 Million supply to about 21 Million

and you can see him posting, WTB 20,000 and WTB 10,000 DASH  <------ the greed of this guy knows no boundary  Grin

and then this! (the vision of this project and milestones)

In reply to: http://www.reddit.com/r/DRKCoin/comments/1yit1a/using_coinjoin_for_anonymity_is_errorprone/

I'm posting this here, for everyone's benefit. Thanks!

Quote
Hi, I am Gnosis, the Anoncoin developer working on implementing Zerocoin. First of all, I think it is excellent that there is so much interest in developing a fully anonymous currency. I am not just a developer but also a user, or I will be when an anonymous currency exists! When coin creators compete, the coin users win!
However, CoinJoin has been around for a while, and it has not seen much use for anonymity. There's a good reason for that: it's not very anonymous.
Quoting my bitcointalk post:
Quote
CoinJoin has questionable anonymity compared to Zerocoin. The reason is that with CoinJoin, two or more users must somehow partner up and forge a transaction together. They communicate over a secure channel to do this. The coins are only mixed among these "partners." Picking partners you can trust is a significant obstacle: how can you know that your partners will "forget" the mixing that happened? One may try to repeat this 10 times with randomly chosen partners, but how can you know that your partners are not all just sock puppets of one malicious entity (on an anonymous network, it is trivial to create as many fake users as you want )? If that is the case, then your efforts are in vain.
Compare this with Zerocoin, where you put your coins in an accumulator, and they are mixed with the coins of all users who have put coins into that accumulator, since the beginning of Zerocoin. There would be a different accumulator for different denominations of Anoncoins (1, 5, 10, 50 ANC, etc.).
To put it simply, the more users' coins your coins are mixed with, the more anonymity you have.
I cannot speak to Darkcoin's implementation (or planned implementation) of CoinJoin since I cannot seem to find any specs or code on their Github or their site. If anyone knows, please point me to them.
I look forward to a practical and secure solution for anonymity from the DarkCoin devs! Smiley

First off, these are fantastic questions. The answer to implementing this in such a way where it is very difficulty to exploit is by adding cost and verification.

Here’s the gist of how I envision DarkSend to work in the long run. Some of what I’m going to mention is done, some of it I’m working on currently. I’d love some ideas on possible attack vectors on my implementation, so we can make it as bulletproof as possible.

Pools

DarkSend adds various extensions to the Bitcoin protocol for implementing transaction pooling. Like normal Coinjoin the pools take transactions in stages. The stages currently are:

POOL_STATUS_IDLE
POOL_STATUS_ACCEPTING_INPUTS
POOL_STATUS_ACCEPTING_OUTPUTS
POOL_STATUS_SIGNING
POOL_STATUS_TRANSMISSION

So the users relay these items throughout the network as the stages happen. After all items are gathered into the pool, the transactions are merged together into one, remotely signed and then broadcasted.

Masters

To defeat propagation problems, master nodes are elected each new block. They are responsible for being the authority of what goes into the joined transaction each session. This is done in a tamperproof way, but I think it’s not important to the discussion.


So what is the cost?

There must be a cost to using this anonymous network, otherwise like you say there will be issues with millions of accounts popping up. I’m not dead set on which solution(s) to implement, but here’s a couple ideas:

Burnt Identities

Higher difficulty shares to the current block would be mined and then stored in the blockchain permanently. Multiple of these would be used for each transaction and would be “burnt” when misused, causing the attacker to have to mine them again.  

Verification?

To use the pools it will require unique unspend outputs, someone that wants to mess with the system would have to have a large pool of funds in many addresses. So to attack a pool with 100 slots, you would require funds dispersed to 99 addresses, on 99 nodes working in common.

Other possible fee-less solutions?

There is interesting research on protecting against sybil attacks that lends itself really well to a decentralized ledger, such as this paper:

http://dimacs.rutgers.edu/Workshops/InformationSecurity/slides/gamesandreputation.pdf

The idea is to build a social graph of the inputs and outputs of each entry and they should all know different people. If 99 of them all have the same “friends” that they associate with, then they’ll have to enter a different pool. Which will ensure the pool is not full of the nodes belonging to the attacker.

An application for machine learning?

I’m been making models for trading equities for over 7 years now. I ran a financial firm that sold the signals for a few years and I have experience with natural language processing using classifiers. So, I could make a classifier and actually embed it into Darkcoin to determine which pool a node should use, to separate out nodes that seem to be in common.

Other ideas?

I’m open to ideas on how to provide the best security to the network. I would love to hear what people have in mind.

I’ve been working on DarkSend about a month and we’ve already fixed the decentralization and propagation issues, this is just another bridge to cross in the future.

Thanks!

BOOM! a month after the launch date (instamine), accumulation and forking the coin...GREAT indeed Evan *clap* *clap*


postlude...
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August 18, 2016, 07:04:41 PM
Last edit: August 18, 2016, 07:14:43 PM by qwizzie
 #434

The Dash instamine of 2014 matters only to the Monero community, who feel threatened by Dash when they see Dash growing and growing like that.
You can even see when they feel threatened, its mostly on times Dash is rising in price when they feel pressed to bump this thread.

To the Dash market it obviously doesn't matter as can be observed from longterm Dash charts :



Lets face it, the Dash instamine doesn't matter, this thread doesn't matter and people posting in this thread don't matter
(and yes, that includes me).

Dash community moved on, Dash markets moved on .. Monero community got stuck on this issue. What else is new...  Roll Eyes

For those interested in reading up on the Dash instamine : https://dashdot.io/alpha/?page_id=118



  

Learn from the past, set detailed and vivid goals for the future and live in the only moment of time over which you have any control : now
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August 18, 2016, 07:15:02 PM
 #435

The Dash instamine of 2014 matters only to the Monero community, who feel threatened by Dash when they see Dash growing and growing like that.
You can even see when they feel threatened, its mostly on times Dash is rising in price when they feel pressed to bump this thread. ..v Lets face it, the Dash instamine doesn't matter, this thread doesn't matter and people posting in this thread don't matter
(and yes, that includes me).

  
Not true, if you read dash thread you will see I was there at the beginning to mine and he screwed on 2 failed launches until he got his instamine right. So try to keep your fact straight and don't try to rewrite history on these boards.

“Bad men need nothing more to compass their ends, than that good men should look on and do nothing.”
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August 18, 2016, 07:18:05 PM
 #436

The Dash instamine of 2014 matters only to the Monero community, who feel threatened by Dash when they see Dash growing and growing like that.
You can even see when they feel threatened, its mostly on times Dash is rising in price when they feel pressed to bump this thread. ..v Lets face it, the Dash instamine doesn't matter, this thread doesn't matter and people posting in this thread don't matter
(and yes, that includes me).

  
Not true, if you read dash thread you will see I was there at the beginning to mine and he screwed on 2 failed launches until he got his instamine right. So try to keep your fact straight and don't try to rewrite history on these boards.

says the person heavily involved in the Monero community  Roll Eyes
thanks for just proving my point.

Well i'm done wasting any more energy on this thread, you can all bump it all you want .. it just doesn't matter.

Learn from the past, set detailed and vivid goals for the future and live in the only moment of time over which you have any control : now
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August 18, 2016, 07:20:37 PM
 #437

The Dash instamine of 2014 matters only to the Monero community, who feel threatened by Dash when they see Dash growing and growing like that.
You can even see when they feel threatened, its mostly on times Dash is rising in price when they feel pressed to bump this thread. ..v Lets face it, the Dash instamine doesn't matter, this thread doesn't matter and people posting in this thread don't matter
(and yes, that includes me).

  
Not true, if you read dash thread you will see I was there at the beginning to mine and he screwed on 2 failed launches until he got his instamine right. So try to keep your fact straight and don't try to rewrite history on these boards.

says the person heavily involved in the Monero community  Roll Eyes
thanks for just proving my point.

Well i'm done wasting any more energy on this thread, you can all bump it all you want .. it just doesn't matter.

I have not held any XMR for 3 months. check my posts. I am completely open about my crypto.

“Bad men need nothing more to compass their ends, than that good men should look on and do nothing.”
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August 18, 2016, 07:38:43 PM
 #438

The Dash instamine of 2014 matters only to the Monero community, who feel threatened by Dash when they see Dash growing and growing like that.
You can even see when they feel threatened, its mostly on times Dash is rising in price when they feel pressed to bump this thread. ..v Lets face it, the Dash instamine doesn't matter, this thread doesn't matter and people posting in this thread don't matter
(and yes, that includes me).

  
Not true, if you read dash thread you will see I was there at the beginning to mine and he screwed on 2 failed launches until he got his instamine right. So try to keep your fact straight and don't try to rewrite history on these boards.

says the person heavily involved in the Monero community  Roll Eyes
thanks for just proving my point.

Well i'm done wasting any more energy on this thread, you can all bump it all you want .. it just doesn't matter.

I have not held any XMR for 3 months. check my posts. I am completely open about my crypto.

Any reasons in particular why you sold?
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August 18, 2016, 07:59:27 PM
 #439

Thats your characterisation. As I already pointed out to you, it falls apart because Dash is not a fiat currency. It is an electronic commodity which is freely traded on the open market against other equivalents so it requires to be economically viable for all parties concerned. It is not mandatory, exclusive government money and therefore "seigniorage" applies only by the most stretched analogy as the ones you're attempting to make.

Seigniorage is not limited to fiat currencies.  Seigniorage is the value one gets "for free" (that is, without counter party in delivered goods and services and without risk taking) when issuing monetary units.  That is, seigniorage is the market value of the issued monetary tokens, minus the cost of making them.  Seigniorage is in general perceived as unfair.  The main example is of course with fiat money, but in mining crypto, it is the market value of the coin minus the cost of the mining.  In perfect competition with a PoW system, the cost of proof of work will be almost equal to the value of the mined coins (from the moment there is a margin, there is an opportunity and an extra miner will get in to reap the margin, increasing the difficulty for all until almost no margin is left).

Quote
Mining, nor networking, contributes anything of "valuation".  It is the other way around.

Really ?

Maybe we'd better ask the miners, holders, developers, commercial supporters & wallet developers which of them is the chicken and which is the egg. Good luck in getting that view endorsed Wink


Of course it is the belief system value of the coin that determines the mining cost, and not the other way around.  That's even explained in the Satoshi paper.  It is not the mining that gives value to the coin.  It is the coin that can afford to pay for mining.   That's an elementary part of crypto coin economics.

Otherwise, it would be simple: invest in a $50 billion per year mining equipment, and no problem, your market cap will go into the trillions...

The market value of a coin is belief and nothing else.  But that is also the case for the dollar, and even for gold (apart from a tiny usage value).  The market value of a coin doesn't find its origin in the cost of mining, at all.

But there is a happy link: a cheap coin doesn't need a heavily protected block chain, simply because it isn't worth it.  If the market cap is low, then the incentive to attack the chain is low, and hence no strong mining protection (difficulty) is necessary.  On the other hand, if the market cap is high, there is a much higher incentive to do a 51% attack, and hence, such a chain needs a higher difficulty.  As the difficulty is paid by the seigniorage, and the seigniorage on a high value coin is higher, there is this happy circumstance that the protection by difficulty adapts automatically to the coin value.... until the inflation rate becomes too small if there is no other incentive such as a fee market or tail emission.
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August 18, 2016, 09:23:28 PM
 #440


Ok I get it now. So it is no good. But can anyone explain why the price is rising?

It's rising because it's one of the most coherent monetary assets on coinmarketcap, being that it retains bitcoin's blokchain transparency while improving massively on its fungibility to the point that distinguishing characteristics between addresses are effectively eliminated.

Further, Dash has established a balanced approach between reserve and currency markets thats almost unmatched by any other cryptocurrency asset. That's to say that while some proportion of the coin supply is made available by holders on exchanges for trading, a significant proportion of the rest of it is deployed on the network and earns a return for its holders.

This is in fact not really true.  The coins held in Master nodes are not production investment that earns interest as in a normal currency reserve system, where "saving" is in fact (delegated) investment in production capital.  In other words, "saved" money in a normal monetary economy are not "put in a box" but are again actively used by entrepreneurs to buy production capital.  That money keeps flowing, in other words, it is not locked up in a box as is the case in a Master node.

The "interest earning" in Master nodes is nothing else but a re-distribution of seigniorage by mining ; in other words, a tax on every currency holder, that goes in the pockets of Master node holders: a transfer of wealth from active users to "passive possessors".

In a normal economy, the interest earned comes from the risk taken.  A master node locked up doesn't take the slightest bit of risk but earns 45% of the seigniorage.

You can say that in bitcoin too, there is inflation because of mining.  However, because in bitcoin, the full seigniorage goes to the miner, that miner will also be pushed by competition to BURN most of the seigniorage in PoW.  In DASH, because the miner will only receive 45% of the seigniorage, competition will only make him burn 45% of the seigniorage in PoW, and the rest goes in the pockets of Master nodes and the "gouvernors".  Now, that is EXTREMELY SIMILAR to central banking and their interest rates on issued currency feeding a whole bunch of elite with free money, taxed by inflation on all the others.

In bitcoin, at least, this "tax" is entirely (or almost entirely) burned by PoW, so there is not really a self-accumulation of wealth without risk by the "richies of the first hour(s)".

Also because of this lucrative locking up of a large part of the money supply in master nodes, the ACTUAL available market cap of DASH is way lower than is calculated, because the available coin supply is seriously lower than the total number of coins existing.  

But all this is not to point out that DASH is a kind of rip off.  There is simply no other way to do some form of automated secured coinjoin mixing with bitcoin technology: you need "trusted parties", and so you need to provide them with sufficient incentive to do so (the master nodes).  This implies re-centralisation, governance, and hence, taxes and lucrative happenings for the elite which get richer.

The remaining question is how many master nodes are under independent control.  If that number is too small, then the anonymity of the mixing becomes compromised too.




masternodes are already in plan even before they launched dash....hence the importance of the instamine to grab an astounding amount of dash

This is another lie (a lie you like to repeat again and again). I know because I was there.

Anyone can read the Dash thread from day one to check.


Just a heads up...he gets paid to lie! He should have said" OHhh the good old days with Vertoe and the coin before it became a dishwasher detergent " ...no agenda other than calling the poster a imitation hero member... Smiley

That's coming from a guy that pumped dash and called the otoh bottom with my new account...check the history.

Cheers dash holders and old friends
Jack

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