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1121  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: April 04, 2015, 11:29:25 PM
Predict the price of Bitcoin on 1 April 2016 - win CBX (Crypto Bullion)
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1012254.msg10982182#msg10982182
Jorge! you actually believe btc will have a price in 1 year!!! That's a nice surprise! Smiley

There are still plenty of COBOL programs in vital use out there.  Grin

A bit more seriously, from all saw over the last 15 months, the only prediction that seems to work is based on the log-brownian model, and it says that the expected price at any time in the future is today's price.

The most likely future price in the may be somewhat lower than todays price in linear scale; but, in log scale (which will perhaps be used next year to pick the winner), today''s price is also the most likely future price.

So that was my first choice.  Unfortunately, someone else beat me to it, so I went for a second choice: extrapolating the trend of the last 15 months to April 1st 2016.

And, if bitcoin actually dies before that date, this forum will probably be closed; so it would be pointless to enter "$0"  Grin
1122  Bitcoin / Bitcoin Discussion / Re: BurtW arrested on: April 04, 2015, 10:36:32 PM
Aside (from the above): I wonder if the purpose of placing Burt in the fed pen for a couple days was their way of extracting from him some private keys

Or perhaps to make sure he did not have a chance to move any bitcoins, or give someone the keys to do so.

EDIT: I see that it was the reasons indeed, according to his wife.
1123  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: BFL fucked us over again [NSFW] on: April 04, 2015, 08:36:01 PM
Sorry for the off-topic, but I though that some of you may know one of these guys personally, or both, or him, and might be kind enough to shed light on the issue:
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=178336.msg10979611#msg10979611
Thanks...
I'm the one that suggested to theymos to start this thread: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=934268.0 (no, I'm not blowin' smoke up anybody's ass via stating such)

Oops, thanks!
1124  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: April 04, 2015, 07:16:29 PM
Predict the price of Bitcoin on 1 April 2016 - win CBX (Crypto Bullion)
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1012254.msg10982182#msg10982182
1125  Economy / Speculation / Re: Predict the price of Bitcoin on 1 April 2016 - win CBX (Crypto Bullion) on: April 04, 2015, 07:14:04 PM
$253.12 Spot price  Cool

Rats, there goes my idea.  Well then:

$81.01
1126  Economy / Speculation / Re: Predict the price of Bitcoin on 1 April 2015 - win CGB's on: April 04, 2015, 07:09:57 PM
I made a new thread just click it.

Oops sorry, stupid of me...
1127  Economy / Speculation / Re: Predict the price of Bitcoin on 1 April 2015 - win CGB's on: April 04, 2015, 06:53:20 PM
Predict the price of Bitcoin on 1 April 2016 - win CBX (Crypto Bullion)
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1012254.0

Great! But you may want to edit the thread title (or start a new thread), to attract more prophets...
1128  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: April 04, 2015, 05:43:47 PM
the gemini exchange [ ... ] it'll be sec regulated and insured

insured, in what sense? BTC deposits too, or just the dollars?  Do they say so in their site?  (The ETF will not be insured, they say so in the SEC filing.)
1129  Bitcoin / Hardware / Re: BFL fucked us over again [NSFW] on: April 04, 2015, 02:33:57 PM
Sorry for the off-topic, but I though that some of you may know one of these guys personally, or both, or him, and might be kind enough to shed light on the issue:
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=178336.msg10979611#msg10979611
Thanks...
1130  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: April 04, 2015, 09:39:10 AM
Popcorn excuse from a newly elected board member of the Bitcoin Foundation:
http://www.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/31e6jh/the_truth_about_the_bitcoin_foundation/
1131  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: April 04, 2015, 02:43:25 AM
Why do you presume you have the consensus on your side? Do you think a majority of the users/miners/pools will suddenly adopt your, or a like minded model?  You come across with great egotism and hubris, like you have all the answers. As if no-one has ever dared deliberate your concerns.

It seems you too jumped into the middle of the discussion?  I am not proposing anything, or trying to convince any miners or users about anything,  I am just pointing out that the common claim "a mining cartel with 51% power cannot change the protocol"  is based on simplistic and optimistic assumptions about what the cartel may want to achieve, how that "attack" would be carried out, and how the community would react to it. 

Claim:
  Even though the front door does not lock, burglars will not enter the store at night through it.

Proof:
  The door opens out, not in.  if a burglar tried to walk through the door, the door would stay shut and he would crash into it.  Since the door is harder than his bones, he would hurt himself badly.  His friends do not want him to get hurt, so they would call the cops to come and arrest him before he gets to the door. QED.

To me, the standard argument used to dismiss the "51% takeover risk" sounds about as logical and convincing as the above, sorry.
1132  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: April 04, 2015, 02:00:07 AM
As said before, the "small group" [ that could take control of bitcoin ] will be the top 4-6 miners, who already have enough power to overcome all the others.

That is a paradoxical thing about the bitcoin protocol: no matter how massive he mining network, there will always be a potential enemy with the all power needed to take control of it.  Just as, no matter how big of an army a country has, it will never be big enough to protect it from a military coup...

Yes but, notice, that countries with small armies, do exist.

Sure, a bigger army could , right now, tomorrow take over the whole world, and then a little country would not have the ability to "protect itself" but do you notice, that the people of Luxemburg, the people of Ireland, the people of New Zealand, manage to get to sleep just fine.  

Whether big armies are good or bad is not the point.  The point is that, no matter how big or small is the network (or the army), the risk of one part of it taking power and defeating the rest is about the same.  In other words, a bigger network (or army) may offer more protection against attacks from outside, but not against attacks from inside.  There have been military coups in countries of all sizes, from tiny Pacific(!) islands to large countries like Brazil, Pakistan, Indonesia, ...
1133  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: April 04, 2015, 12:25:29 AM
^What is it that you fail to grasp about "your BTC will be worthless unless you use the new client"?  What good is a coin you can't spend?

lol,
 - you have to spend $100,000,000 USD to prevent me make one transaction what is worth $1
 - you have to spend a lot of money forever(every day) just to prevent me from make transactions

You jumped in midway through the discussion... More like, "after 2016-03-01 we will freeze the coins of anyone who has not upgraded to our version of the software.  That may cost us a few BTC per day in lost fees, but we will continue making the same revenue from block rewards that we are making now, even if we ultimately fail to impose the switch; all this so that we don't lose 300 million dollars per year because of the halving".
1134  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: April 03, 2015, 11:28:35 PM
An attacker that controls more than 50% of the network's computing power can, for the time that he is in control, exclude and modify the ordering of transactions. This allows him to:

    Reverse transactions that he sends while he's in control
    Prevent some or all transactions from gaining any confirmations
    Prevent some or all other generators from getting any generations

The attacker can't:

    Reverse other people's transactions
    Prevent transactions from being sent at all (they'll show as 0/unconfirmed)
    Change the number of coins generated per block
    Create coins out of thin air
    Send coins that never belonged to him


Sigh. Yes:

A man with a gun can poke holes in other people.

He cannot print dollar bills with it.  

However, ...
1135  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: April 03, 2015, 11:20:30 PM
yes jorge take it to the technical discussion section you coward.

Oh, I already did, here in bitcointalk and on reddit.  The replies were the same: "the majority miners will not do that because it would render the coin valueless" and "if they do that, the faithful would move to an ASIC-incompatible clone".

Sorry, but the first claim is terribly naive wishful thinking (just look at how cartels act in other markets, e.g. international banks), and the second "defense" would be just a ridiculous form of economic suicide by a small set of irreducible ideologues.
1136  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: April 03, 2015, 11:11:51 PM
Overstock's 2014 financial report filed with the SEC

Quote
At present we do not accept bitcoin payments directly, but use a third party vendor to accept bitcoin payments on our behalf. That third party vendor then immediately converts the bitcoin payments into U.S. dollars so that we receive payment for the product sold at the sales price in U.S. dollars.

Quote
Cryptocurrency-denominated assets were $340,000 [ about 1500 BTC ] and zero at December 31, 2014 and 2013, respectively

(They also had 180 million dollars in cash at year end.)

Overstock's CEO Patrick Byrne on Q4 2014 Results - Transcript

Quote
for example Bitcoin, Bitcoin cost us directly, we figure about 400 grand to get integrate and live with all the people we had on it such. We might allocate another 400 grand to that and $800,000 it was a bit of disappointment, incidentally Bitcoin I thought we will do at least $6 million or $7 million this year. And after the first month of sales, that seem possible I thought at least four would come domestically four or five and then there will be a few, couple of few international and the truth is nothing international showed up and almost no international sales and the domestic sales came in at $3 million.

1137  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: April 03, 2015, 09:51:55 PM
You have failed to understand what consensus is when you refer to participants as rebels. ASIC tech and the "cartel" are at the mercy of the network participants not the other way around.

In essence making all existing ASIC use for BTC obsolete and make the old BTC network compromised and useless.

Sorry, I believe that you failed to understand.  All the ASIC and mining installations will remain perfectly usable with the 25 M chain, and would mine it because there would be no other chain that they can mine.

Ater the "Red Button" solution there will be two fully functional versions of bitcoin, but one will have a 300 PH/s network, the other will have a puny CPU network.  Even "hero miners" with older ASIC miners in the attic will be unable to come to the help of the second one.

Quote
BTC network used to fund accounts would be under suspicion of double spent coins due to the "cartel" having over 51% and closer to 100% network control.  BTC network as it was known will have become defunct.

Whether the attack succeeds or not, the concentration of hashing power in the "Big Bitcoin" network will be the same as it was before the fork point.  The change to the halving schedule will not affect the possibility of double-spend.  In fact, that possibility already is not negligible now. (Imagine that some hacker steals 500 kBTC from the US or Chinese government, who is determined to get them back.)

The risk of double-spend will be much higher in the "Small Bitcoin" CPU-only network, since an external agent could gain majority mining power with a relatively small investment.
1138  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: April 03, 2015, 09:27:56 PM
so in the end it comes to admins of big pools. they have the power, yes. and like that guy said in the tweets and like everybody witnessed it with a version of a client that contained a serious bug (not remember which version), they will solve it on IRC.

You mean, the CEO of Bitcoin will step in, turn the network off, and decide which minority of the miners is the good one?  Cheesy

Seriously, the defense against a 51% attack cannot depend on a trusted group of core developers, or a "good" minority of miners prevailing over the majority.

Besides, the core developers with the "raid siren button" work for the Bitcoin Foundation, and some of the largest miners like KnC and BTC-China are among its directors and largest financial supporters.  Which side will those devs take?
1139  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: April 03, 2015, 09:11:49 PM
if the need presents itself the more probable outcome would be to change the hashing algorithm use cpu's and kill all asic behemoths and adjust the difficulty to the new hardware scale than what Jorge suggest.
You cannot kill a cryptocurrency, remember?  Wink

If the idealists do as above, there will be a "rebel bitcoin" with a tiny mining network, and the "cartel's bitcoin", with all the old hashpower (since the ASIC miners would not have other choice than to mine it).  Guess which one will keep most of the value of the original bitcoins.  It is like the Captain "defeating" a mutiny by taking off alone in a small lifeboat, and declaring it to be the real ship.

Moreover, even the rebels will still have their coins waiting for them on the cartel's chain; so why would they not sell and trade them? Ignoring those coins would be their loss, not the cartel's.

Smiley you forget that they would instantly have over 51% of the network closer to 100% Cheesy and there would be no confidence as to the transactions integrity.

BTW what I stated was the outcome to a real proposal if the odd chance that the present mining algorithm would have been compromised via a back door. In essence making all existing ASIC use for BTC obsolete and make the old BTC network compromised and useless.

I don't understand the first paragraph.  Yes, the rebels will control 100% of their puny all-CPU network (which the cartel could probably squash by renting some could computing for a couple million dollars, if it cared to).  But 100% of the old hashpower will be mining the cartel's 25 M chain, just as before the fork; and the rebels cannot do anything against them.  Each client would have to either upgrade to the cartel's software, or upgrade to the rebel's software (or to both, after cloning the wallet); clients who keep the original software will be unable to use their coins.

Yes, this is called "Red Button plan" or something like that.  It is not a defense, or even a deterrent like the nuclear mutually assured destruction; it is just a ridiculous form of suicide.

Quote
In other words. If the conditions present themselves the btc blockchain network and participants will make the most prudent choice that will have majority consensus. No one given the option would eat spoiled food or in this case trade on a defunct chain.

The problem is that power is asymmetric: a small group of miners can block the network and hold all users' coins hostage, whereas no group of users can stop the miners from doing it without hurting themselves a lot more.

According to the attack plan outlined (which is just one possibility), the 21 M chain would become defunct immediately after the fork, while the 25 M chain would continue working without a glitch. 

Quote
Exchanges that would fail to move over would cause panic in the ALT coin space as exchanges would not know as to the authenticity of the BTC being traded for alts effectively making alts valueless.

There would be no confusion, because any exchange that fails to switch will have its wallets frozen and all BTC deposits and withdrawals blocked.  The coins that are inside the exchanges can be traded normally, because the trades do not involve the blockchain.  When the exchange switches to the 25 M chain, it will find its hot and cold wallets waiting there, and it will be able to execute withdrawals in that chain.  Clients then will have to upgrade in order to use the coins withdrawn.

If the attack succeeds, life will continue in the 25 M chain almost as if there had been no fork.  If the attack fails, and all miners go back to the 21 M chain, people will be able to use that chain again, but their accounts will be reset to the pre-fork state.  Thus, any payments made using the 25 M chain will be cancelled, and there will be real losses (like the double spend against OKPay in the 2013 fork).  This will be another reason why most everybody will want the attack to succeed, once it has been sustained for a day or so and enough people have used the 25 M chain.

There is a third possible outcome: the cartel stops jamming the 21 M chain (e..g because of defections, or "hero miners" coming to the rescue), but only part of the miners go back to it.  In that case the two versions of bitcoin will remain viable; each copy of one's coins can be spent or moved independently of the other copy.  The original price should also split between the two, and the miners will migrate between the chains until either alternative is just as lucrative to mine as the other.  (I wonder if they can be merge-mined?)
1140  Economy / Speculation / Re: Wall Observer BTC/USD - Bitcoin price movement tracking & discussion on: April 03, 2015, 08:30:36 PM
New investors are not putting that much money into the system per day. Not all coins are sold

This seems to be a common folklore, but is it true?  

I recall an interview with a Chinese miner, made many months ago, where he said how much he kept of what he mined.  Unfortunately I don't recall whether it was 50% or 10%.  Are there other data points?

Assuming that it was 50%, and the guy was telling the truth, and he has been able to keep that fraction in spite of the falling price, and he is representative of all miners, even so the miners must be taking ~450'000 $ out of the system, every day.

Quote
[ new investors ] would not be happy to continue to once the word is out that bitcoin is broken which it would.

Well, I believe that bitcoin is broken in that respect: mining will inevitably become centralized, ane eventually it will be controlled by a cartel of miners.  And the cartel can  do arbitrarily nasty things: not just dictate the minimum fee, or starve competing miners (which everybody knows that they can do, right?), but even force all users and services to accept changes in the protocol -- such as postponing the next halving.  That is one reason why I am skeptical about its longterm success.

(By the way, they could postpone the next halving but speed up all the subsequent ones, so as to preserve the 21 M limit that people seem to be so attached to.)

Discussions of the 51% attack usually start with the tacit assumption that the attacker wants to destroy bitcoin, or do some petty crime like double-spending, that would immediately destroy it.  However, cartels and monopolies do not get created to destroy their business, but to maximize their revenue -- usually by charging far more than they could charge in a free market.  
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