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101  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: January 18, 2016, 03:12:33 AM
You made a declarative statement. Do you care to explain why you say "I could like it again if it somehow returned to the original plan -- with 10 times as many users perhaps than it had in mid-2010" and "I cannot like the monster into which it has mutated." What has changed that you don't like?

I wrote that too before: it became a pyramid investment scheme and a tool for crime. 

Both developments were bad for mankind, and it is hard to tell which one will be more harmful in the end.  But the first one also ruined the technical experiment: it attracted a horde of scammers and unsavory characters, encouraged hoarding, created volatility that all but destroyed its usefulness as currency, made mining into a fabulously lucrative industrial activity that was inevitably centralized, gave birth to Blockstream and their plan to sacrifice bitcoin's original goal to the spurious goal of inflating the price, and more...
102  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Analysis and list of top big blocks shills (XT #REKT ignorers) on: January 18, 2016, 02:56:34 AM
As a developer for Bitcoin Classic, and co-Chief Architect along with jstolfi, you should have input into the message stored in the Classic "genesis block" that will be produced in a few months.

Oops, thanks for reminding me.  The Toomims tasked me with doing something momentous that will be the headline of /The Times/ on the launch date.  Maybe start a war, find Elvis, or commandeer a UFO to abduct the Pope from a nudist beach and demand ransom in bitcoin.

Only that it will not be a Genesis block, of course, but a Nativity block.
103  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: January 17, 2016, 11:26:02 PM
Funny how for someone not "believing" in bitcoin you still cling on religiously to what Satoshi intended/said/meant or not and based on a 8 years old WP.

As I wrote, it is not that Satoshi's words and ideas are "sacred", but they help understand why bitcoin is the way it is -- and see more clearly the features that may render it unsuitable for specific uses. 

And, as I may have written many times, I could have loved bitcoin as it was in 2009: an experiment on a new kind of payment system, run by an open set of uncoordinated anonymous volunteers, stabilized by its incentives, etc..  But I cannot like the monster into which it has mutated. 

I could like it again if it somehow returned to the original plan -- with 10 times as many users perhaps than it had in mid-2010, and with the price 10 times higher, at about 0.50 USD/BTC;  bit without speculative trading, and without for-profit mining...
104  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: January 17, 2016, 06:14:58 PM
Anything that's not the longest chain is an altcoin.

Actually:

  • The blockchain that you should trust is the valid blockhain that you can get that has the most proof of work.
  • A blockchain is valid if and only if the software you are running says that it is valid.
  • "The bitcoin blockchain" is the blockchain that you call "the bitcoin blockchain".

The question "in a persistent fork of the blockchain, which branch will be the real bitcoin?" is basically a religious question.  You should think about it as you would think of "in a schism of my Church, which side will be the True Church?".
105  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: January 17, 2016, 05:52:34 PM
And get we get pass this satoshi appeal to autority now?  As iCEBREAKER observed, Your big statist lie is that "Bitcoin was created to replace commercial banking, not central banking."

Is a car a good way to cross the Atlantic?  By plugging some holes and attaching some empty tanks at the bottom, a car may perhaps be made to float well enough to do it.  But it will never be as good for that task as a boat.  The reason is that, when the car was designed, every detail was chosen with one purpose in mind: travel on roads.  If the purpose had been to travel across the ocean, almost every detail would have been different -- as one can see by comparing the car to any boat.

The point is: to tell whether some artifact is a good choice for some purpose, it is worth checking what purpose it was designed for.  Sometimes a thing developed for one goal turns out to be very good, or even optimal, for some other goal; but those occasions are very rare.  Almost always, changing the purpose requires a complete redesign, starting from a blank page.

Bitcoin was not created to replace commercial banking or credit cards: it says that on the very first paragraph of the whitepaper.  It was not created to replace central banking either.  Nor to be a store of value, a high-value settlement system, a micropayment system, a lucrative investment, a tool for illegal trade, etc.. In fact, its goal was not even to create a new currency

As it says everywhere on the paper, starting with the title, Satoshi s goal was to create

Quote
an electronic payment system based on cryptographic proof instead of trust, allowing any two willing parties to transact directly with each other without the need for a trusted third party

The bitcoin protocol is the best solution that Satoshi found to accomplish that goal.  All its parts were chosen with that goal in mind.  If the goal had been something else, the design would have been different.  Or he may not have bothered to create it at all: since there were already pretty good solutions for those other goals, but not for that particular one.

The new currency was created only because Satoshi (and everybody else) did not know how to achieve that goal with existing currencies. 

Understanding the original goal helps one see that bitcoin is actually terribly inadequate for most of the other purposes.  In particular: 

Bitcoin is not a viable replacement for commercial banking, because it is too expensive, slow, unsafe, complicated -- and lacks many features that bank customers want, like ability to reverse payments, customer assistance, credit, deposit insurance, etc..

And its capacity is too limited: it is OK for the few legal payments where a trusted intermediary is not available or really undesirable -- which a normal person may need a couple times per year, maybe.  It is totally insufficient for millions of people using it for all their payments (or, worse, for micropayments).  Perhaps that much volume could be handled by off-chain solutions or some "overlay network" -- but then there is no reason to use bitcoin: banks and credit cards are already great "off-chain" solutions.

If Bitcoin cannot replace commercial banking, much less all payments with national currencies, then it cannot replace central banking either.

Bitcoin is not a viable a longterm store of value, because it has no mechanism to stabilize its value.  (Even if it were truly scarce -- which it isn't -- there are plenty of things that are just as scarce but totally worthless.)

For its stated goal, it did not need such mechanism. All it needed was that the value would remain almost stable over a few days, between earning some coins and spending them in another payment. And its very use as a currency would endow it with some value, that would vary only slowly because usage would vary only slowly.

(Satoshi at one point refers to an hypothetical increase in usage of 20% per year as "crazy".  If it had increased at that "crazy" rate, and bitcoin had not been turned into a pyramid investment schema, the price today should be less than 0.50 USD/BTC.)

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as if the Genesis Text was about $2 ATM fees instead of TBTF bailouts

The most hilarious thing in the "bitcoin space" may be the belief that Satoshi was a libertarian and wanted to destroy banks, based entirely on that single headline in the genesis block. 

But the headline had a specific technical purpose, namely to prove that he had not been doing any pre-mining.  That purpose required it to be a headline of a major paper published on that same day.  So, which is less likely: that he patiently delayed the launch of bitcoin until a vaguely relevant headline came up; or that he rushed to launch the system when he saw that vaguely relevant headline on his newspaper? 

Or perhaps he just picked up the newspaper that he had on his desk, and typed in its main headline?

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unless you are satoshi maybe?

Let me say only that I am neither Dorian Satoshi Nakamoto nor Craig Steven Wright.  Wink
106  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: January 17, 2016, 03:22:09 PM
Hearn will be like a ticking time-bomb waiting to go off at R3C ... he's bitcoin's biggest asset right now. Can you imagine that arrogant little snipe not getting his way inside a corporate IT project, just waiting to slip the knife in or totally blow-up the project in a PR nightmare intended to destroy its credibility??

From his LinkedIn profile: "senior software engineer and tech lead at Google, where I worked for about 7.5 years on Maps/Earth, Gmail anti spam, signup abuse and login security"

From Gavin's profile: "Software Engineer - Silicon Graphics (SGI) 1988 – 1996 (8 years)"

By a strange coincidence, Gavin and Mike seem to be the only core devs with significant *professional*  software development experience...

I'd like to know a lot more about how the NYTimes journalist, Nathaniel Popper who wrote the Digital Gold fiction, was able to time the release of his Hearn hit piece exactly for R3C's benefit at the washington hearing?

Why do you think that there was any particular interest for R3 to do so?

There is some poetic justice in the price tanking because of Mike's rage-quit and the block size war.  There would have been no war and no rage-quit, if some segment of the community had not sided with Blockstream out of stupid greed -- because they imagined that Blockstream's plan would make the price of bitcoin go up, even though it meant giving up the very goal that motivated Satoshi to create it,and the only thing that justifies its existence.
107  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: January 16, 2016, 08:12:20 PM
By the way, there was another message by "Satoshi" recently, denying that he was Craig Wright -- and then adding "We are all Satoshi".  That last part is obviously something that Satoshi would not have written. I can only think that the hacker is aware that everybody is aware that the account has been compromised, and does not care to pretend anymore.

Theymos is the one who pointed out that that email was spoofed, and even posted the IP from which it was spoofed:

From https://np.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/3w6vy4/i_am_not_craig_wright_we_are_all_satoshi_satoshi/ :

Code:
Received: from mail.vistomail.com (cpe-104-231-205-87.wi.res.rr.com
    [104.231.205.87])        
    by smtp1.linuxfoundation.org (Postfix) with SMTP id 01BCADF
    for <bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org>;
    Thu, 10 Dec 2015 06:53:42 +0000 (UTC)

This IP is obviously a TW customer in Wisconsin, where Theymos lives.  How much more obvious does he have to make the joke?


Thanks!  So that last email is not relevant to the discussion of the other two.
108  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: January 16, 2016, 07:34:01 PM
have you written any interesting papers lately regarding bitcoin? It's a topic that I havent seen a lot of substantial academic research on.

No, nothing formally published yet.  

I only started to write a tech report on how a mining cartel with majority hashpower can force a change in the protocol, such as postponing the next halving, in spite of opposition by the "economic majority" -- by sabotaging the old chain while mining the new one.  But, after countless forum discussions, that attack is now well known, and I haven't got enough motivation to finish it.(1)

Other than that, the closest to a technical article I wrote is this post about bitcoin price bubbles.(2)

(1) Critics have two arguments to dismiss it.  First, they claim that any such attempt would cause a drop in the price that would negate the cartel's expected payoff. Second, they say that developers could change the PoW algorithm so as to render ASICs useless, and all users would shun the CartelCoin and use only the DevCoin.  I don't accept either argument, but since they depend on predicting the behavior of people, we have no way of proving our positions...

(2) That sum-of-bubbles model is less satisfactory after the Dec/2014 crash, unfortunately.  The most prominent "bubbles" became almost rectangular pulses: a sudden rise, a plateau, then a sudden drop.  In 2015 the price became even more irregular: there were three apparent bubbles (in February, June, and September) but their shapes were more complicated than the model that worked before 2014...
109  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: January 16, 2016, 05:47:41 PM
Satoshi's writing and that particular letter have something in common: Two spaces after a sentence ends. That's the "old" way of writing in the typewriter era where you hit space twice - and you carry over that habit to the PC keyb into the late 80s/90s. You do it too because you are of the "old guard". Younger people, hackers, script-kiddies, well... not only don't they know these things but they won't even spot the difference in order to emulate it. The two spaces, for me, increases the chance that it was original.

Oops, thanks for reminding me.  I must watch out and avoid that old habit, before someone figures out my true identity.

Quote
The writing style is quite neutral and it feels ok'ish though and in line with what Satoshi has said in the past.

Well, it is a matter of feeling; but I find the tone of that letter very unlike that of previous writings.  Too dramatic, almost hysterical.  But very much like the tone of Adam and other ardent small-blockians.  The personal and nominal attack against Gavin, in particular, was very strange for Satoshi, but very much like Adam's tone at the time.

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As for blockstream people doing it, you are saying that they hacked Satoshi accounts back when it happened and then they used them when convenient to promote their agenda? And how would they know that Satoshi wouldn't pull the curtain on them? [  ] It's a very long leap.

The hacker who got hold of Satoshi's email account may have been a smallblockian or Blockstream sympathizer, or may have offered his services to them. (How else would he profit from that "asset"?) 

Satoshi is either dead, or is much more worried about hiding his identity than about the fate of bitcoin (which he apparently abandoned in 2010). 

That, by the way, is another reason why I assumed that the letter was fake when it came out:  if he did not care to intervene in all the previous critical events, why would he come in just to take a side (the wrong one!) in a relatively minor technical dispute?

Quote
Especially after Satoshi came out and said he is not Dorian?

If his account was hacked back then, who knows why the hacker posted it.  Maybe he was sorry for the old man.  Presumably he is a bitconer, and thought that the claim was hurting bitcoin.

By the way, there was another message by "Satoshi" recently, denying that he was Craig Wright -- and then adding "We are all Satoshi".  That last part is obviously something that Satoshi would not have written. I can only think that the hacker is aware that everybody is aware that the account has been compromised, and does not care to pretend anymore.
110  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: January 16, 2016, 04:50:42 PM
Quote
I have been following the recent block size debates through the mailing list. .....
Satoshi Nakamoto
I had not seen that letter until now, but it looks like a lot of vague bla-bla without even a hint of a technical argument.
I'll eat my hat if that was written by any of the very skilled mathematician/cryptographer(s) that designed bitcoin.

That letter is fake.  It was not know at the time, but Satoshi's mail account has been taken over -- no one knows how or when.  That was proved last September, when "Satoshi" sent a dox extorsion email from that address to some prominent bitcoiner.

Anyway, the phrase "in the face of widespread technical criticism and through the use of populist tactics" is a dead giveaway of its source.  I only cannot guess who wrote it because there are several people at Blockstream, and many more among its supporters, who would have used those words, would not have any scruples in sending a forged message to support their agenda, and are naive enough to think that the trick would work.

The second paragraph, moreover, is totally at odds with the very idea that makes the protocol work.
111  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: January 16, 2016, 04:35:46 PM
The volatility IMO is due entirely to the hard fork. A big player (likely miner) sold at 450 because they know what is coming.

The most obvious explanation is Mike's ragequit, which got wide exposure in the media (NYT, Motherboard, TechCrunch, Reuters, ...)  It was also commented in Chinese forums.  I can't think of any other suiltable explanation for the sudden drop.
112  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Analysis and list of top big blocks shills (XT #REKT ignorers) on: January 16, 2016, 04:18:28 PM
I know by fact that the current bitcoin protocol by which I abided and invested was the one not allowing on chain mass adoption scaling coffee tipping bullshit whilst staying in the reach of low technology hardware so everybody got their access to it.

You should have read the contract whitepaper before signing it. 

There was no mention of a block size limit there.  There was no mention of transactions piling up in a queue, fighting with each other through "smart" fee estimation algorithms and RBFs. On the contrary, it was assumed that miners would confirm, into the next block, every transaction that paid a fee sufficient to make that worthwhile.

More importantly, there was no mention of a clique of developers having control of the protocol and deciding what the miners should do.  According to the protocol, the only players that have any power over the system are the miners (which Satoshi called "nodes"), who vote with their hashing power.  And this is not an accident, but an essential feature of the design, that no one knows how to change without breaking it.

Granted, Satoshi did not foresee that 70% of the mining would be concentrated into 4 Chinese companies. Raising the block size limit and letting the miners decide the fees, while conceptually the right thing to do, will not work in that context. However, the concentration of mining, by itself, already means bitcoin is broken. 

Basically, the block size war is like a dispute among pilot and co-pilot about whether the plane that ran out of fuel in mid-Atlantic should be flown normally or upside-down while it falls.
113  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: January 15, 2016, 10:30:25 PM
Hey, what is happening?  Back below $380?

I thought that bitcoin was a honey badger in a titanium armor, protected by patahashes of math and a bajillion moogawatts of electric juice. 

But then a single whiny blog post, by a young loner who had already left the stage, brings the price down by 20% in a few hours? 

How is that?

[/troll]
114  Economy / Speculation / Re: RE : Wall Observer on: January 15, 2016, 09:31:06 PM
To save Bitcoin we must execute a benevolent, temporary 51% attack on Chinese pools

News for you: at this moment, the top 2 Chinese pools, Antpool and F2pool, have 28 + 23 = 51% of the  total hashpower; so all the rest together has only 49%.  With BTCC and BW.com that is 28 + 23 + 16 + 4 = 71% of the total haspower is in China.

Quote
vote to change Core to blacklist them (or use any similar method, I don't know - I'm not a programmer ;3)

That is trivial to program.  However, if you use any rule to select the "right" blockchain other than "the one that has the majority of the hashpower", including blacklisting some miners, you are no longe using the bitcoin protocol.  What you are using is a centralized payment system -- an incredibly stupid and inefficient one.
115  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: Analysis and list of top big blocks shills (XT #REKT ignorers) on: January 13, 2016, 02:39:49 PM

The Toomim brothers.
116  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: January 12, 2016, 12:50:46 AM
Luke-Jr predicts death of bitcoin in 2016

 Grin

(Because he sees that miners will never agree to reducing the block size to 500 kB.)
117  Bitcoin / Development & Technical Discussion / Re: Increasing the blocksize as a (generalized) softfork. on: January 11, 2016, 02:35:01 AM
This seems to be the same idea, but using an "extension record" approach instead of a separate blokchain:

Original comment by /u/seweso on reddit

My understanding of the proposal

Comparison to the hard fork approach
118  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: January 05, 2016, 01:11:32 AM
By the way, there is no excuse for the cost to be quadratic.  That is one of the many crocks in the BitcoinCore implementation, that will take more crocks to work around.  Like the Segregated Witnesses proposal,  malleability and its partial patches, blockchain voting to increase the limit, etc..
Jorge, do you have a link to how this issue arises and, ideally, how it might be solved?

This is what I found; maybe you can follow those leads.

https://www.reddit.com/r/bitcoinxt/comments/3scvx8/bitcoinxt_logs_from_first_2_days_of_testnet/cwwfho6

https://www.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/3cgft7/largest_transaction_ever_mined_999657_kb_consumes/csvaqc5
119  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: January 05, 2016, 01:03:28 AM
Curious, professor, to have your take on current efforts to de-crock the Satoshi codebase going on here -> http://thebitcoin.foundation

That's a weird site. 

I suppose that calling themselves "The Bitcoin Foundation", even though they are not connected to the better-known Shrem Karpelès & Friends Foundation, is their idea of a joke, or a statement of something.

I can't say much about the code.  I would have to read more, but I cannot find a  more specific statement of their goals. Their mailing list shows some continuing activity, but rather modest, it seems. 


What else can I say? I wish them well.  Cleaning code is always a Good Deed, like collecting trash from beaches or recovering decayed neighborhoods...
120  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: January 01, 2016, 03:38:33 AM
May your "academic interest only" continue through 2016.  Cheesy

Thanks! Happy new year, wisdom and all the best to everybody!  Cheesy
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