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marenkar

Discussion 21:49 6 May - 3:50 7 May

May 6th, 2017
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  1. csw [9:49 PM]
  2. https://web.archive.org/web/20160502203742/http://www.drcraigwright.net/tulips-myths/
  3. Dr. Craig Wright Blog
  4. Tulips and other myths - Dr. Craig Wright Blog
  5. What common knowledge tells us and the truth of a matter is not always the same thing. One example is the relationship between tulips and economies.
  6. April 26th, 2016 at 10:54 AM
  7.  
  8.  
  9. [9:50]
  10. Don't always believe what you are told.
  11.  
  12.  
  13. zillionaire [9:52 PM]
  14. http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11127-006-9074-4
  15. SpringerLink
  16. The tulipmania: Fact or artifact?
  17. The famous tulipmania, which saw the reported prices of several breeds of tulip bulbs rise to above the value of a furnished luxury house in 17th century Amsterdam, was an artifact created by an impli
  18.  
  19.  
  20. fatman3001 [9:52 PM]
  21. _"I think the three years core has stalled on chain development is a failure of their leadership"_
  22. It's not leadership at all, and they're proud of it. They think it's some free flowing wishy washy approach for hippie anarcaps, but in reality it just means the ones who shout the loudest are the ones who are heard. Kind of like Gavin said it would be. Where is Gavin btw?
  23.  
  24. tomothy
  25. [9:55 PM]
  26. The reaction to bcoin and parity, in my opinion, illustrates that it's not about what's best for the market or for bitcoin, but blockstream/core. Anything perceived as a threat to that power structure is attacked and undermined. There wasn't any constructive feedback or discourse. Simply, "BAD! BAD BAD!" It demonstrates that something's rotten, to the core. (edited)
  27.  
  28.  
  29. klee [9:56 PM]
  30. They bullied Sergio from Rootstock FOR FUCK's SAKE
  31.  
  32. fatman3001 [9:57 PM]
  33. Posted a question in the SegWit Q&A thread. I've asked before without much luck.
  34.  
  35. https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1682183.msg18900818#msg18900818
  36. bitcointalk.org
  37. Post your SegWit questions here - open discussion - big week for Bitcoin!
  38. Post your SegWit questions here - open discussion - big week for Bitcoin!
  39.  
  40. klee [9:57 PM]
  41. not to mention Emin...
  42.  
  43. zillionaire [9:57 PM]
  44. is Emir Gun on core side?
  45.  
  46. tomothy
  47. [9:57 PM]
  48. The reason for my vitriolic response is that i saw how f2pool flipped after being attacked for supporting scaling. Would they flip again if they were attacked for not supporting scaling? These actions skew the economic market. Like someone playing pinball and tilting the machine. (edited)
  49.  
  50. klee [9:57 PM]
  51. NO
  52.  
  53. [9:57]
  54. he got bullied too
  55.  
  56. [9:58]
  57. and trolled hard
  58.  
  59. tomothy
  60. [9:58 PM]
  61. Emin is more independent than most imho.
  62.  
  63. [9:59]
  64. Hence I think he could be an interesting person to conduct studies or a student under. His neutral to bigger blocks and hated by core. Good enough.
  65.  
  66. zillionaire [9:59 PM]
  67. we should have chief of propaganda lol.
  68.  
  69. tomothy
  70. [9:59 PM]
  71. No. That's a waste of resources.
  72.  
  73. [10:00]
  74. You'd be better off hiring a similar troll army.
  75.  
  76. zillionaire [10:00 PM]
  77. have some bot posting the same thing, banhammer lol
  78.  
  79. anonymint [10:03 PM]
  80. joined private by invitation from @zillionaire
  81.  
  82. vlad2vlad [10:04 PM]
  83. @zillionaire I've been calling myself minister of propaganda for iXcoin. So I agree. Core has theirs - we should have ours. :)
  84.  
  85. [10:05]
  86. @anonymint !!!! Been looking for you?!!!
  87.  
  88. newliberty [10:05 PM]
  89. Balancing core is beneath our dignity.
  90.  
  91.  
  92. vlad2vlad [10:05 PM]
  93. Lol. True story!!! ^^^^
  94.  
  95. [10:06]
  96. Core needs to be disassembled. Enough wasted time.
  97.  
  98. tomothy
  99. [10:07 PM]
  100. Hey anonyumint, welcome. LOL
  101.  
  102. newliberty [10:09 PM]
  103. @anonymint take notice of the pinned statements from @csw which presents a funded research offer. It might be something you could dig your teeth into.
  104.  
  105.  
  106. macsga [10:09 PM]
  107. @anonymint welcome buddy
  108.  
  109. [10:09]
  110. enjoy your stay
  111.  
  112. anonymint [10:10 PM]
  113. Someone share this with me, https://pastebin.com/TZY4aQU0 and also some other ideas from csw about how to scale Bitcoin by employing merchants as miners.
  114. Pastebin
  115. The Challenge - Pastebin.com (19kB)
  116.  
  117. vlad2vlad [10:10 PM]
  118. What do you think about that, @anonymint ?
  119.  
  120. anonymint [10:11 PM]
  121. Well @illodin also pointed out to me that csw seems to regurgitating the concerns Peter Todd wrote: https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2015-December/012103.html
  122.  
  123. newliberty [10:13 PM]
  124. Todd's is a thought paper, the proposal is for demonstrating it with evidence.
  125.  
  126. cypherblock [10:13 PM]
  127. yes csw posted link to that a while back
  128.  
  129. anonymint [10:19 PM]
  130. It seems to be true that with SegWit, the minority miners who don't often win their own blocks, have an incentive to mine without validating, so they can decrease their losses due to mining sooner on the next block by not needing to wait for the propagation of witness data and validation delay. However, my thought is they can begin mining on the next block trusting without the witness data, but statistically they will nearly always have received the witness data and validated it long before they actually find a block solution. So from a theoretical standpoint, I am not understanding the big threat. Additionally, the majority hash rate miners (later we will get into why hashrate will always be centralized) will see their own blocks instantly thus they know they are validated. If the majority hashrate miners want to collude and do malfeasance, they already can with a 51% attack without SegWit. What am I missing?
  131.  
  132. 2 replies Last reply today at 1:50 AM View thread
  133.  
  134. tomothy
  135. [10:20 PM]
  136. Incentive also to Mine non valididated blocks?
  137.  
  138. pesa [10:20 PM]
  139. joined private by invitation from @tomothy
  140.  
  141. anonymint [10:20 PM]
  142. Nice to see you again macsga.
  143.  
  144. vlad2vlad [10:20 PM]
  145. @anonymint I didn't even finish reading your sausage message yet feel like you should win Satoshi's £36.000. Where should I sent it?
  146.  
  147. tomothy
  148. [10:20 PM]
  149. Afrokoin is pesa
  150.  
  151. [10:20]
  152. Spelling my bad
  153.  
  154. vlad2vlad [10:21 PM]
  155. Ohhh, just realized Dr. Wright strapped me down with multi-sig. He saw this coming. :)
  156.  
  157. anonymint [10:21 PM]
  158. Lol.
  159.  
  160. vlad2vlad [10:24 PM]
  161. We're getting world class people in this room.
  162.  
  163. hankdasilva [10:25 PM]
  164. csw said that he visions 100 000 nodes (merchants?) mining, did he explain why they would be mining as they can't possible compete against large mining farms located next to power plants thus mining at a loss
  165.  
  166. macsga [10:26 PM]
  167. world class yes
  168.  
  169. [10:28]
  170. @anonymint got it immediately
  171.  
  172. tomothy
  173. [10:28 PM]
  174. Hankdasilva, I think it's the assumption that they want to support and include their own txs and security of them. I.e., Toyota finance, selling cars or leases, they want those txs secure and confirmed
  175.  
  176. macsga [10:28 PM]
  177. we didn't have to argue about it
  178.  
  179. vlad2vlad [10:28 PM]
  180. Mining nodes = profit sharing.
  181.  
  182. [10:29]
  183. @tomothy yes, PLUS profit sharing
  184.  
  185. tomothy
  186. [10:30 PM]
  187. I mean, a supermarket POS upgrade is like 2-10kish the idea was $20k hardware... And yeah they can get their own fees back in return
  188.  
  189. [10:31]
  190. I know theirs been talk of working with excess power generators on off time and mining with older hardware. Certain niches have an incentive to use excess supply
  191.  
  192. hankdasilva [10:32 PM]
  193. if there are 100 000 merchanst mining then on average it takes 100 000 blocks to include their tx in a block if that's the reason for them mining in the first place, I'm confused (edited)
  194.  
  195. anonymint [10:33 PM]
  196. @hankdasilva is my sockpuppet, lol. Well almost. Good job!
  197.  
  198. hankdasilva [10:34 PM]
  199. yeah, except I'm almost always confused lol
  200.  
  201. tomothy
  202. [10:36 PM]
  203. But that's based on current size constraints right? What if there is no block size limit?
  204.  
  205. [10:37]
  206. They're not trying to make money, merchants pay in average 3% of every cc txs. But it helps offset costs.
  207.  
  208. [10:37]
  209. At least that was my interpretation. Phones dying. Back later lol.
  210.  
  211. cryptorebel [10:40 PM]
  212. @hankdasilva some people think mining will become more decentralized over time: https://medium.com/@lopp/the-future-of-bitcoin-mining-ac9c3dc39c60
  213. Medium
  214. The Future of Bitcoin Mining – Jameson Lopp – Medium
  215. Speculation about long-term changes to the dynamics of who and why people will mine bitcoins.
  216. Reading time
  217. ----------------
  218. 8 min read
  219.  
  220. (401kB)
  221. Dec 19th, 2015 at 10:19 PM
  222.  
  223. macsga [10:40 PM]
  224. I was away for a couple of hours guys, do we have any takers on the challenge?
  225.  
  226. [10:40]
  227. maybe @anonymint should be the supervisor of the team to test the hypothesis
  228.  
  229. anonymint [10:40 PM]
  230. Although afaics SegWit does partially ameliorate the advantage that centralized mining has over minority miners in terms of being able to start mining sooner on the next block due to propagation and validation delay, it doesn’t eliminate all the economy-of-scale advantages that drive centralization of PoW mining. In addition to economies-of-scale on electricity costs and being able to locate next to the lowest cost sources (or even perhaps corruption of having political connections to get utility power at below cost), economies-of-scale on hardware acquisition and being first to get new hardware, perhaps one of the most salient factors is that there are only two 14nm fabs in the world. So this tells me that the shadow elite control Bitcoin via Bitmain and their indirect control over large Capex infrastructure such as these two 14nm fabs.
  231.  
  232. zillionaire [10:42 PM]
  233. Damn ... I didn't know what I did but now I know ...
  234.  
  235. vlad2vlad [10:44 PM]
  236. @anonymint "Although afaics SegWit does partially ameliorate the advantage that..."
  237.  
  238. AmelioWhat? Stop that Anonymint.
  239.  
  240. anonymint [10:45 PM]
  241. Also recently I explained that the whales and the miners are the same economic entity:
  242. https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1887077.msg18859434#msg18859434
  243. And they have no incentive to ever allow large blocks.
  244. bitcointalk.org
  245. Where are you 'Iamnotback'?
  246. Where are you 'Iamnotback'?
  247.  
  248. klee [10:45 PM]
  249. So BU does not actually want big blocks?
  250.  
  251. anonymint [10:46 PM]
  252. No. It was only a PR game by Bitmain.
  253.  
  254. tomothy
  255. [10:46 PM]
  256. No. That's insane.
  257.  
  258. macsga [10:46 PM]
  259. that explains it all
  260.  
  261. tomothy
  262. [10:46 PM]
  263. Will respond later.
  264.  
  265. macsga [10:47 PM]
  266. I knew there was a conspiracy somewhere
  267.  
  268. anonymint [10:47 PM]
  269. Please don’t ban me. :stuck_out_tongue_winking_eye:
  270.  
  271. macsga [10:47 PM]
  272. no bans here
  273.  
  274. [10:47]
  275. we banned Thermos
  276.  
  277. anonymint [10:47 PM]
  278. Lol. +1
  279.  
  280. klee [10:47 PM]
  281. Interesting theory, seriously
  282.  
  283. anonymint [10:48 PM]
  284. Somebody please give me a pastebin of this when we are done.
  285.  
  286. pesa [10:51 PM]
  287. +1 me too. pastebin much better for tldr
  288.  
  289. zbingledack [10:51 PM]
  290. Transacting on a soon-to-be dead chain seems pretty uninteresting for most whales, as does mining on such a chain.
  291.  
  292. [10:53]
  293. Much more interesting to make profits from new investors because the chain is usable and grows
  294.  
  295. cryptorebel [10:53 PM]
  296. I made a pastebin from when craig popped in earlier: https://pastebin.com/Wa1CMM1E
  297. Pastebin
  298. private by invitation from @jp zbingledack 7:48 AM @andy He was on the BU sla - Pastebin.com (19kB)
  299.  
  300. [10:53]
  301. but I didn't make it public, don't feel comfortable making everything public
  302.  
  303. macsga [10:54 PM]
  304. good thing @cryptorebel
  305.  
  306. fatman3001 [10:54 PM]
  307. Anonymint?
  308. https://media.tenor.co/images/9d06a86bdcd648c964e322559fdd3b80/tenor.gif (1MB)
  309.  
  310. macsga [10:54 PM]
  311. we don't want the man out of here
  312.  
  313. cryptorebel [10:54 PM]
  314. yeah true
  315.  
  316. anonymint [10:56 PM]
  317. I didn’t read the policies when I joined. Are we restricted or encouraged not to share this chat publicly?
  318.  
  319. fatman3001 [10:56 PM]
  320. Restricted
  321.  
  322. cryptorebel [10:56 PM]
  323. not sure, it does say the channel is not actually private
  324.  
  325. zbingledack [10:56 PM]
  326. Impossible to enforce anything like that
  327.  
  328. cryptorebel [10:57 PM]
  329. I was thinking maybe it would be good to make the chat public somehow, with a bot linked to IRC or something, then public can view, but trolls cant disrupt the discussion
  330.  
  331.  
  332. klee [10:57 PM]
  333. no need for restrictions I think, it is private in a sense to cut the trolls
  334.  
  335.  
  336. zbingledack [10:57 PM]
  337. The point of making it private is to keep it readable
  338.  
  339. macsga [10:58 PM]
  340. ^this
  341.  
  342. vlad2vlad [10:59 PM]
  343. The assumption is the only way for a mining node to be profitable is as they are now.
  344.  
  345. 100,000 merchants. Plus.
  346.  
  347. They have their own reasons and methods...
  348.  
  349. We will explain how in time... but no Protocol change needed other than the cap
  350.  
  351.  
  352. macsga [11:01 PM]
  353. @vlad2vlad thanks for clarifying this for the newcomers
  354.  
  355. vlad2vlad [11:01 PM]
  356. That was from the Dr. Wright
  357.  
  358. macsga [11:01 PM]
  359. :slightly_smiling_face:
  360.  
  361. andy [11:02 PM]
  362. :slightly_smiling_face:
  363.  
  364. anonymint [11:06 PM]
  365. @zbingledack why would Bitcoin be dead with 1 MB blocks? It will become highly sought after due to scarcity of transacting on chain unregulated in the reserve currency of the crypto-currency ecosystem.
  366.  
  367. tula [11:08 PM]
  368. @anonymint that can only happen if 1MB is a natural limit, not artificial (edited)
  369.  
  370.  
  371. anonymint [11:20 PM]
  372. @tula there is no natural limit which is a tragedy of the commons. Thus it is a power vacuum which must be filled by a centralized power that sets a limit and has an economic incentive to enforce it.
  373.  
  374. tula [11:22 PM]
  375. so current hardware has no limits?
  376.  
  377. anonymint [11:22 PM]
  378. Btw, poor punctuation phrasing. I meant the lack of a natural limit, creates a tragedy of the commons.
  379.  
  380. tula [11:24 PM]
  381. there are no commons, the network is owned by the miners
  382.  
  383. anonymint [11:24 PM]
  384. The transaction fees are the commons.
  385.  
  386. tula [11:25 PM]
  387. elaborate
  388.  
  389. anonymint [11:29 PM]
  390. In a hypothetical decentralized scenario (which doesn't exist), the miners will fight with each other to compete to offer larger block sizes, thus lower transaction fees, and drive their revenue and thus security towards 0. There is no fee market without a block size limit. This is tragedy of the commons, thus even if mining wasn’t centralized for the other stated reasons, it would become centralized in order to dictate a maximum block size. The whales and miners are the same economic entity and have no incentive to offer larger than 1 MB block size.
  391.  
  392. [11:30]
  393. That is presuming the block size wasn't limited in the protocol.
  394.  
  395. macsga [11:30 PM]
  396. That notion there just blew my mind
  397.  
  398. [11:30]
  399. I need to sleep
  400.  
  401. anonymint [11:31 PM]
  402. Sleep first.
  403.  
  404. macsga [11:31 PM]
  405. good night everyone enjoy your stay
  406.  
  407. [11:31]
  408. nice talking to you @anonymint
  409.  
  410. fatman3001 [11:31 PM]
  411. gn
  412.  
  413. klee [11:33 PM]
  414. Why security goes to 0?
  415.  
  416. fatman3001 [11:33 PM]
  417. cause no fees
  418.  
  419. [11:33]
  420. no block reward
  421.  
  422. klee [11:33 PM]
  423. so spamming
  424.  
  425. [11:35]
  426. Suddenly IOTA comes to mind
  427.  
  428. [11:36]
  429. 0 fees, but spamming supposed to secure the network (instead of destroying it)
  430.  
  431. [11:36]
  432. Never understood how
  433.  
  434. anonymint [11:37 PM]
  435. How do we know the real Craig Wright is posting here?
  436.  
  437. tula [11:37 PM]
  438. @anonymint i suppose you are familiar with https://www.bitcoinunlimited.info/resources/feemarket.pdf
  439. so what are your objections to that?
  440.  
  441. cypherblock [11:38 PM]
  442. @anonymint earlier I requested he post a selfie of himself with this slack in background. he complied
  443.  
  444. vlad2vlad [11:38 PM]
  445. @anonymint cause I pinky swear
  446.  
  447. klee [11:38 PM]
  448. He posted a shit ton of photos taken live before some hours
  449. anonymint
  450. How do we know the real Craig Wright is posting here?
  451. Posted in #privateYesterday at 11:37 PM
  452.  
  453. cypherblock [11:38 PM]
  454. it is above somewhere unless deleted
  455.  
  456. [11:38]
  457. background is somewhat blurry but I think it was this slack. I could sort of see my icon in the background
  458.  
  459. anonymint [11:38 PM]
  460. I obliterated @Peter R's whitepaper in discussion on BCT. I will try to find a link for you. It was a long discussion.
  461.  
  462. fatman3001 [11:39 PM]
  463. I disagree with @anonymint. I think competition of ideas will land the network at a place where profitability for miners, utility for users and security for the network will be balanced within an acceptable range. Some miners will see that it's in their interest to make the network as attractive as possible for it to grow and become more profitable. Some will mine large blocks altruistically. (edited)
  464.  
  465. [11:39]
  466. search image.png in the slack
  467.  
  468. anonymint [11:39 PM]
  469. I think the real reason they banned me is because I speak heresy.
  470.  
  471. cypherblock [11:40 PM]
  472. who banned you?
  473.  
  474. fatman3001 [11:40 PM]
  475. scrolling takes too much time
  476.  
  477. klee [11:40 PM]
  478. Who gives a shit about Theymos et al any more
  479.  
  480. [11:40]
  481. screw them
  482.  
  483. fatman3001 [11:41 PM]
  484. not many of the cool cats left there (edited)
  485.  
  486. anonymint [11:41 PM]
  487. @Theymos: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1887077.msg18861383#msg18861383
  488. bitcointalk.org
  489. Where are you 'Iamnotback'?
  490. Where are you 'Iamnotback'?
  491.  
  492. [11:44]
  493. @fatman3001, the altruistic miners are being bankrupted by Bitmain. Bitmain miners sells their hardware first to those who support the master plan. The altruistic miners get hardware when it is beyond its profitability life.
  494.  
  495. fatman3001 [11:44 PM]
  496. We can't just have one asic producer forever
  497.  
  498. anonymint [11:44 PM]
  499. He who controls the 14nm fabs, controls Bitcon.
  500.  
  501. fatman3001 [11:44 PM]
  502. it's madness
  503.  
  504. klee [11:44 PM]
  505. Where's Intel?
  506.  
  507. [11:44]
  508. or AMD?
  509.  
  510. [11:45]
  511. Why not in this biz too?
  512.  
  513. anonymint [11:45 PM]
  514. Intel has 14nm fabs, but not available for custom ASICs. AMD's fab is Global Foundaries, one of the two 14nm available for custom ASICs.
  515.  
  516. klee [11:46 PM]
  517. aha
  518.  
  519. fatman3001 [11:47 PM]
  520. Maybe some of the other independent miners should go together and buy a chip dev firm. Globalfoundries will make chips to anyone and their mother as long as you pay them. TSMC too.
  521.  
  522. [11:49]
  523. Soon they're going to want Bitcoiners to pay for their initial runs of 10-11nm processes
  524.  
  525. tomothy
  526. [11:49 PM]
  527. Mining and segwit. Segwit changes the economic incentives necessary for mining development to continue. Rewards from mining are necessary to encourage people to spend money on capital projects, they are rewarded with fees / BTC block reward. As miners compete, their efforts result in the network being secured. Segwit changes this economic incentive. Mining itself isn't centralized but mining production is. So long as bitmain doesn't censor who can or can't buy their tools that concern is invalid. Additionally price of BTC is an issue. You don't have large companies investing in hardware development because there isn't enough demand. These issues go away as bitcoin grows. However the incentives changed by segwit do not.
  528.  
  529. [11:50]
  530. Growth has artificially been suppressed because of the cap. That's cws's whole point on all of this.
  531.  
  532. fatman3001 [11:50 PM]
  533. chip design is the tricky part
  534.  
  535. tomothy
  536. [11:50 PM]
  537. He specifically States, no fees.
  538.  
  539. fatman3001 [11:50 PM]
  540. Bitmain has a massive head start
  541.  
  542. tomothy
  543. [11:50 PM]
  544. Not only does he say no fees, he says no cap.
  545.  
  546. [11:51]
  547. Sure but most companies could buy bitmain with pocket change at this point.
  548.  
  549. [11:51]
  550. They may be a leader in their field but not a global leader.
  551.  
  552. anonymint [11:51 PM]
  553. @klee not even spamming. Just the fact that without a block size limit then users don’t have to include any significant transaction fee, because some miner will add it for the incremental revenue no matter how small it is. That is assuming miners haven’t colluded/agreed to set a maximum block size or minimum fee. A minimum fee dictates a block size limit as well. So therefor there has to be some protocol (or de facto agreed) limit else it is a tragedy of the commons. Iota requires proof-of-work to accompany each transaction and the game theory on that is obtuse and unclear to me as well. But I Iota has bigger problems in that afaics it doesn’t converge on consensus without centralized servers.
  554.  
  555. fatman3001 [11:51 PM]
  556. They're a global leader in their field
  557.  
  558. tomothy
  559. [11:51 PM]
  560. And don't the have 2nm now?
  561.  
  562. [11:52]
  563. Sorry, global leader in their field, but still not mega Corp
  564.  
  565. [11:52]
  566. I.e., Sony, etc etc etc
  567.  
  568. anonymint [11:53 PM]
  569. @fatman3001 I heard the the fabs are oversubscribed and they prioritize their largest customers. Bitmain seems to have someone pulling strings for them, as their volume is not large compared to say AMD.
  570.  
  571. tula [11:53 PM]
  572. @anonymint can you give me the gist of that orphaning rebuttal of yours? let me guess 100% centralization?
  573.  
  574. vlad2vlad [11:54 PM]
  575. @anonymint you've got mail. :)
  576.  
  577. tomothy
  578. [11:54 PM]
  579. I think you're right that their are large behind the scene players. However the players are bitmain and bitfury. And bitmain at least sells to the general public.
  580.  
  581. [11:55]
  582. Those Public sales help support more Decentralized mining as compared to the full setups by bitfury
  583.  
  584. anonymint [11:55 PM]
  585. They sell the public, but the public seems to get the newest profitable versions somewhat later than the insiders.
  586.  
  587. fatman3001 [11:55 PM]
  588. AMD doesn't want to pay for the initial runs. The price is high and the yield is terrible in the beginning. Basically the manufacturing process isn't really "finished" until it's run several runs and ironed out the kinks.
  589.  
  590. tomothy
  591. [11:56 PM]
  592. Sure but that's mitigated by a persons electric costs
  593.  
  594. anonymint [11:56 PM]
  595. I heard that independent miners will tell that the ASICs killed their profits for the most part.
  596.  
  597. fatman3001 [11:57 PM]
  598. Bitcoin ASICs is Gods gift to chip manufacturers.
  599.  
  600. tomothy
  601. [11:57 PM]
  602. Sure, if you don't have money you lose
  603.  
  604. [11:57]
  605. But that's the nature of competition
  606.  
  607. [11:57]
  608. You grow or die
  609.  
  610. [11:58]
  611. But again a lot of that was due to price. If bitcoins' price was 2-3x smaller miners would still be profitable
  612.  
  613. [11:58]
  614. Failing to grow not only hurt adoption but also chain security.
  615.  
  616. anonymint [11:58 PM]
  617. I need to eat breakfast. Fasting since I took my TB meds. Famished now. Brb.
  618.  
  619. tomothy
  620. [11:59 PM]
  621. Np thanks for comments.
  622.  
  623.  
  624. ----- Today May 7th, 2017 -----
  625. vlad2vlad [12:03 AM]
  626. TB mess? @anonymint
  627.  
  628. [12:03]
  629. Mess?
  630.  
  631. [12:03]
  632. Meds *
  633.  
  634. klee [12:03 AM]
  635. tuberculosis
  636.  
  637. vlad2vlad [12:04 AM]
  638. @anonymint your profile pic, is that the mind of a muppet? Just askin'?
  639.  
  640. klee [12:04 AM]
  641. Homer Simpson
  642.  
  643. vlad2vlad [12:04 AM]
  644. Tuberculosis? @anonymint you 98 or you chilling in the jungles of Africa again looking for answers?
  645.  
  646. [12:04]
  647. Haha
  648.  
  649. [12:05]
  650. I like really like this @anonymint guy. A real genius. Shit, I hope I don't have to ban his shit. :)
  651.  
  652. tomothy
  653. [12:06 AM]
  654. Jesus tb is rough, sorry dude
  655.  
  656.  
  657. cryptorebel [12:06 AM]
  658. lol
  659.  
  660. vlad2vlad [12:06 AM]
  661. Maybe he deserves it. Maybe he's a small Blocker. Just sayin'!
  662.  
  663. cryptorebel [12:07 AM]
  664. he sounds like a small blocker
  665.  
  666. vlad2vlad [12:08 AM]
  667. Luke is a small Blocker and he's coming to our global domination party. So it depends
  668.  
  669. tomothy
  670. [12:08 AM]
  671. Security is important and that's what this concerns, mining incentives and segwit
  672.  
  673. [12:08]
  674. I think mining centralization and segwit incentives are different and this study just concerns the latter
  675.  
  676. vlad2vlad [12:09 AM]
  677. We need @csw in here debating him on the centralized bankster nature of Segwit and LN.
  678.  
  679.  
  680. cryptorebel [12:09 AM]
  681. Craig was mentioning a big danger of segwit is the developers can set the mining fees, so it takes away power from miners and gives it to devs
  682.  
  683.  
  684. [12:09]
  685. we don't really want a centrally planned blockchain
  686.  
  687.  
  688. vlad2vlad [12:09 AM]
  689. Yeah. Segwit is a power play. Power stolen from the miners
  690.  
  691. anonymint [12:16 AM]
  692. @klee & @macsga, after all my chronic illness was finally diagnosed in January as disseminated Tuberculosis. All those years since 2012 at least, I was fighting TB and didn’t know what was causing my health problems. I never suspected TB because I did not have a cough. The TB was disseminated all over in my gut, lymph nodes, brain, etc.. The normal mode of death is an internal hemorrhage due to the disfigurement caused by the bacteria. So that explains the gut pain and liver disease I developed. Any way 15 weeks into very toxic TB meds, I am coming cured!! I can actually enjoy life again! Back to doing my intense sports, able to think without delirium, etc.. What a massive relief!!
  693.  
  694. klee [12:17 AM]
  695. I read that
  696.  
  697. [12:17]
  698. glad to found the reason
  699.  
  700. anonymint [12:17 AM]
  701. Supercharged and ready to go!
  702.  
  703. klee [12:18 AM]
  704. stay strong and fight the disease (we all fight some disease)
  705.  
  706. tomothy
  707. [12:18 AM]
  708. Jesus dude. Will it be fully gone after you finish the medication courses?
  709.  
  710. fatman3001 [12:18 AM]
  711. Congratulations man
  712.  
  713. [12:18]
  714. That's friggin insane
  715.  
  716. cryptorebel [12:18 AM]
  717. you can never be fully cured of TB, there is only active and inactive form
  718.  
  719.  
  720. elliotolds [12:18 AM]
  721. joined private by invitation from @bitsko
  722.  
  723. bitsko
  724. [12:18 AM]
  725. thank you for joining @elliotolds
  726.  
  727. klee [12:18 AM]
  728. You manage it for life
  729.  
  730. anonymint [12:19 AM]
  731. Unless it is a MDR strain, I have a 90+% chance of no recurrence. If it is MDR and it comes back after a year, there are new superior treatments under Stage 2 and 3 trials at the TBalliance.org
  732.  
  733. klee [12:20 AM]
  734. Going to sleep guys, tight XRP stop (shotring it)
  735.  
  736. anonymint [12:22 AM]
  737. gn @klee. The inactive and active form of TB can be eradicated, but it is not 100% certain, because TB hides away and if you don't get every last one of those fuckers, it can come back again. The stats are roughly 93% chance of no reoccurrence after 5 years. And that includes people who maybe didn't do their meds every day. So the odds are pretty good. And the new drug regimens coming are probably even more effective.
  738.  
  739. newliberty [12:22 AM]
  740. Grats anon, I was concerned for you for a long time, great news.
  741.  
  742. cryptorebel [12:26 AM]
  743. sometimes i feel like blockstream is Bitcoin's TB
  744.  
  745. [12:27]
  746. neverending battle
  747.  
  748. anonymint [12:27 AM]
  749. @vlad2vlad I do hope @csw comes back. I had once cited him as being smarter than Nick Szabo and Gregory Maxwell on the issue of whether Bitcoin is Turing complete:
  750. https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1284083.msg13239420#msg13239420
  751. bitcointalk.org
  752. Layman's Journey to Understanding Zerocash
  753. Layman's Journey to Understanding Zerocash
  754.  
  755. cryptorebel [12:29 AM]
  756. yeah Craig had some interesting comments about turing completeness on Bitcoin using a double stack architecture: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LdvQTwjVmrE&feature=youtu.be&t=17m11s
  757. YouTube BitcoinInvestor.com
  758. All-Star Panel: Ed Moy, Joseph VaughnPerling, Trace Mayer, Nick Szabo, Dr. Craig Wright
  759.  
  760.  
  761. vlad2vlad [12:30 AM]
  762. @anonymint I can guarantee you CSW will be back here but only if you respond to my PM. And he is smarter than Szabo et al. Dude, did you see how many degrees he wiped the floor with? Ludicrous!!!
  763.  
  764. [12:31]
  765. Double stack? What?
  766.  
  767. fatman3001 [12:32 AM]
  768. Pancakes
  769.  
  770. [12:32]
  771. with syrup
  772.  
  773. cryptorebel [12:32 AM]
  774. he said dual stack architecture, sounds interesting though maybe Craig could elaborate what he means
  775.  
  776. ajd [12:33 AM]
  777. joined private by invitation from @bitsko
  778.  
  779.  
  780. satoshi [12:35 AM]
  781. Putting together some tools to facilitate opposition research.
  782.  
  783. anonymint [12:37 AM]
  784. @tula, you were asking for a gist about my orphaning rebuttal. I presume you mean my rebuttal to @Peter R's BU whitepaper about a natural fee market with unlimited block size. Afair (and there may have been more details I am not remembering offhand), Peter's analysis assumed an equal orphan rate for all miners, but each miner has a different orphan rate determined primary by their proportion of the hashrate and other factors such as their connectivity for propagation.
  785.  
  786. vlad2vlad [12:37 AM]
  787. uploaded this image: Double Stack!!!
  788. Add Comment
  789.  
  790. vlad2vlad [12:37 AM]
  791. Never in my life did I think my junk would have such meaning.
  792.  
  793. bitsko
  794. [12:39 AM]
  795. is there no place on the internet that is free from your junk pics lol
  796.  
  797. tula [12:40 AM]
  798. @anonymint different cost is still not zero cost ...
  799.  
  800. anonymint [12:41 AM]
  801. @tula I will dig up a link for you, bcz I have forgotten all of the issues offhand. There were game theories enabled by this fact that orphan rate is asymmetrical.
  802.  
  803. vlad2vlad [12:42 AM]
  804. Fair enough
  805.  
  806. [12:42]
  807. No junk
  808.  
  809. vlad2vlad [12:43 AM]
  810. uploaded this image: Vlad2vlad - BIG Blocker!!!
  811. Add Comment
  812.  
  813.  
  814. fatman3001 [12:47 AM]
  815. _wtf?_
  816.  
  817. satoshi [12:48 AM]
  818. :eyes:
  819.  
  820. vlad2vlad [12:48 AM]
  821. IXcoin. Ohhh. I keep forgetting to plug that
  822.  
  823. xhiggy [1:07 AM]
  824. A miner that makes a block that can't propagate and be validated in less than ten minutes, would be at a substantial orphan risk.
  825.  
  826. [1:07]
  827. Compared to a block that could be
  828.  
  829. vlad2vlad [1:08 AM]
  830. uploaded this image: I just can't help myself. Oh...IXcoin!!!
  831. Add Comment
  832.  
  833. newliberty [1:28 AM]
  834. BitCoin already has an Alt-stack
  835. https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Script#Stack
  836. Turing machine can be made from a small number of deterministic outputs and functions. CSW is right in that BitCoin in its current state is Turing complete, but then so also is Conway's game of life.
  837. Meaning that you can program anything that can be programmed with it.
  838. Here's a digital clock with Conway's game of life:
  839. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3NDAZ5g4EuU
  840.  
  841. A Turing complete system is one thing, being able to do things with easily and economically it still another.
  842. YouTube Mikhail Goncharov
  843. digital clock in conways game of life
  844.  
  845.  
  846.  
  847. zillionaire [1:29 AM]
  848. Dr. Conway ... mad respect for him. 4 hours of meeting was gold.
  849.  
  850. [1:29]
  851. He was talking about Church, God, Turing and Russel
  852.  
  853. [1:30]
  854. Explained 3n+1 conjecture, incompleteness theorem, turing, 2+2=5 joke, etc. (edited)
  855.  
  856. [1:31]
  857. Had him personally taught "surreal number" and the monster.
  858.  
  859. anonymint [1:40 AM]
  860. Why are some of my posts in this slack disappearing from history? Who is the moderator here?
  861.  
  862. tomothy
  863. [1:41 AM]
  864. 10000 posts
  865.  
  866. [1:41]
  867. and i don't think thats possible
  868.  
  869. anonymint [1:41 AM]
  870. I scroll up and I can't find some of my posts.
  871.  
  872. tomothy
  873. [1:41 AM]
  874. slack sucks, there is that
  875.  
  876. [1:41]
  877. has it loaded?
  878.  
  879. [1:42]
  880. oh, you have to click" and more"
  881.  
  882. [1:42]
  883. to unlock the prior pages
  884.  
  885. [1:42]
  886. it's not like irc in that regard
  887.  
  888. [1:42]
  889. well, it doesnt suck, i mean, emojjis
  890.  
  891. [1:42]
  892. :dancing_penguin:
  893.  
  894. anonymint [1:44 AM]
  895. The posts between 4am and 4:54am are gone.
  896.  
  897. [1:46]
  898. Somebody is deleting more and more of the posts. Now the ones from 4:54 are gone also.
  899.  
  900. tomothy
  901. [1:46 AM]
  902. keep scrolling back and unloading more?
  903.  
  904. [1:46]
  905. it only keeps 10,000
  906.  
  907. bitsko
  908. [1:46 AM]
  909. people are allowed to delete their own posts per the settings
  910.  
  911. anonymint [1:47 AM]
  912. I did. I can see posts from 4am and before, and 4:56am after. But the posts between that time frame are gone. And those were the most damning posts I wrote refuting Craig Wright.
  913.  
  914. tomothy
  915. [1:47 AM]
  916. impossible
  917.  
  918. anonymint [1:47 AM]
  919. I did not delete my posts!
  920.  
  921. tomothy
  922. [1:47 AM]
  923. i can't delete your posts and you can't delete mine
  924.  
  925. bitsko
  926. [1:47 AM]
  927. I am the only moderator, I am on not going to delete others posts
  928.  
  929. anonymint [1:47 AM]
  930. So where are my first posts in this discussion?
  931.  
  932. tomothy
  933. [1:48 AM]
  934. let me do a search
  935.  
  936. [1:48]
  937. did you say craig or csw/ or?
  938.  
  939. [1:48]
  940. (trying to limit terms
  941.  
  942. anonymint [1:48 AM]
  943. Somebody go look for any posts between 4am and 4:56am. Can anyone see any posts from that time frame?
  944.  
  945. tomothy
  946. [1:49 AM]
  947. i dont have same time, what time is it for you now?
  948.  
  949. [1:49]
  950. i'm 750pm
  951.  
  952. anonymint [1:49 AM]
  953. 7:50am for me. So go look for posts between 4pm and 4:56pm your time.
  954.  
  955. tomothy
  956. [1:49 AM]
  957. kk
  958.  
  959. anonymint [1:50 AM]
  960. Now there are no posts between 4am and 5:29am for me. The problem is getting worse.
  961.  
  962. tomothy
  963. [1:51 AM]
  964. i have some from 410+
  965.  
  966. [1:51]
  967. you share the pastebin
  968.  
  969. [1:51]
  970. i don't think its limit? is it limit?
  971.  
  972. [1:52]
  973. stuffs missing
  974.  
  975. [1:52]
  976. i think
  977.  
  978. anonymint [1:52 AM]
  979. All posts have returned when I refreshed the browser page. Apparently it was some JavaScript glitch.
  980.  
  981. tomothy
  982. [1:52 AM]
  983. my whole cconversation with you is gone
  984.  
  985. [1:52]
  986. wtf
  987.  
  988. [1:53]
  989. ok. so i'm not crazy, but this could drive one crazy :smile:
  990.  
  991. [1:53]
  992. :hypnotoad:
  993.  
  994. anonymint [2:15 AM]
  995. @tula, I am glad you prompted me to go review my prior research on the two BU papers, because it caused me to realize something new and important! @dinofelis and I (along with @tromp from private msg) had reasoned[1] that Peter R's whitepaper was irrelevant because well before any posited equilibrium could be reached due to the limitation of orphan rate, that the network would have failed (or necessarily come under centralized control enforcing a lower block size equilibrium) due to bandwidth overload[2], asymmetrical orphan rate game theory strategies[3], or failure to converge on a longest chain due to too high of an orphan rate. I then refuted[4] Andrew Stone’s white paper on the grounds that regulating block size via empty block production will cause miner centralization. However, because as I explained in this slack[5] SegWit enables Xthin-like propagation with UTXO changes available immediately (with the witness proof to normally arrive statistically before the block solution is found), then there is no equilibrium point on block size and it is a tragedy-of-the-fee-commons power vacuum that must be filled by a centralized mining power that enforces a block size limit.
  996.  
  997. [1] https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1819153.msg18289475#msg18289475
  998. [2] https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1739268.msg18260085#msg18260085
  999. [3] https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1819153.msg18273645#msg18273645
  1000. [4] https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1837136.msg18323030#msg18323030
  1001. [5] My comment at 4:19am. https://btcchat.slack.com/archives/G583BUJ7J/p1494101954754652
  1002. bitcointalk.org
  1003. SegWit losing Bitcoin Unlimited winning -> Moon soon
  1004. SegWit losing Bitcoin Unlimited winning -> Moon soon
  1005. bitcointalk.org
  1006. Do you think "iamnotback" really has the" Bitcoin killer"?
  1007. Do you think "iamnotback" really has the" Bitcoin killer"?
  1008. bitcointalk.org
  1009. Miner cartel, Bankster cartel, or an altcoin? Your choice?
  1010. Miner cartel, Bankster cartel, or an altcoin? Your choice?
  1011. anonymint
  1012. It seems to be true that with SegWit, the minority miners who don't often win their own blocks, have an incentive to mine without validating, so they can decrease their losses due to mining sooner on the next block by not needing to wait for the propagation of witness data and validation delay. However, my thought is they can begin mining on the next block trusting without the witness data, but statistically they will nearly always have received the witness data and validated it long before they Show more…
  1013. Thread in #privateYesterday at 10:19 PM
  1014.  
  1015. tomothy
  1016. [2:19 AM]
  1017. Have you reviewed or evaluated parallel validation?
  1018.  
  1019. anonymint [2:25 AM]
  1020. By parallel validation you could be referring to either multicore usage on each miner, or you could be alluding to some sort of sharded block chain design?
  1021.  
  1022. [2:26]
  1023. Satoshi’s PoW can not be sharded. And multicore usage doesn’t solve the scaling issues we are discussing.
  1024.  
  1025. bitsko
  1026. [2:28 AM]
  1027. https://github.com/BitcoinUnlimited/BitcoinUnlimited/pull/254/commits/cca06f89f9287e7b0412eeb649e6878170f8d203
  1028. GitHub
  1029. Parallel Validation by ptschip · Pull Request #254 · BitcoinUnlimited/BitcoinUnlimited
  1030. opening PR on the dev branch
  1031.  
  1032.  
  1033.  
  1034. tomothy
  1035. [2:28 AM]
  1036. and then bitcrusts'
  1037.  
  1038. [2:28]
  1039. https://bitcrust.org/blog-spend-tree
  1040. bitcrust.org
  1041. BITCRUST
  1042. BITCRUST, Second generation bitcoin software | Fast parallel block validation without UTXO-index (12kB)
  1043.  
  1044. [2:29]
  1045. https://bitcrust.org/blog-fraud-proofs
  1046. bitcrust.org
  1047. BITCRUST
  1048. BITCRUST, Second generation bitcoin software | Fast parallel block validation without UTXO-index (12kB)
  1049.  
  1050. anonymint [2:30 AM]
  1051. I am reasonably confident I already figured out what is going to happen, so I can tell you with high confidence the future.
  1052.  
  1053. Bitcoin will never be forked to increase the block size or add SegWit. It will remain 1MB forever. It will be the reserve currency and be used by the wealthy who can afford the high transaction fees. Litecoin will become the SegWit+LN off chain scaling coin. There will be no on chain scaling for most of us. We will be pushed off chain onto to regulated Mt. Box-like "banks" (https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1887077.msg18888361#msg18888361). The shadow elite have planned this out well. Bitcoin was a trojan horse. And we've been totally fooled.
  1054. bitcointalk.org
  1055. Where are you 'Iamnotback'?
  1056. Where are you 'Iamnotback'?
  1057.  
  1058. tomothy
  1059. [2:31 AM]
  1060. I think that is a possibility, however, based on continued miner scaling support for an increase, I think there is a chance of that future not coming to pass.
  1061.  
  1062. bitsko
  1063. [2:31 AM]
  1064. :wut:
  1065.  
  1066. tomothy
  1067. [2:31 AM]
  1068. I think we'll probably get 2mbs on chain
  1069.  
  1070. anonymint [2:31 AM]
  1071. My question for @csw is what is your role in this? Are you a disinformation agent of the shadow elite?
  1072.  
  1073.  
  1074. tomothy
  1075. [2:31 AM]
  1076. but I think LTC will be an interesting experiment
  1077.  
  1078. [2:32]
  1079. as CW is suggesting the complete removal of a block limit; although he could be a disinformation agent, he still seeks onchain scaling, which runs contrary to globalist interests regarding control
  1080.  
  1081. [2:32]
  1082. especially if it is to be used to facilitate gaming in all it's shapes and forms...
  1083.  
  1084. anonymint [2:35 AM]
  1085. In case my links to Bitcointalk stop functioning (mods havebeen deleting posts and entire threads of mine), here is a backup archive: https://web-beta.archive.org/web/*/https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1887077.0;all
  1086.  
  1087. Does someone have a lifetime paid pastebin account to make a permanent pastebin of my discussion here?
  1088. 4 replies Last reply today at 3:47 AM View thread
  1089.  
  1090. tomothy
  1091. [2:35 AM]
  1092. I think there was discussion of setting up an IRC relay; so text could be sent to irc via a bot, and then that text saved/archived
  1093.  
  1094. [2:36]
  1095. I'm not sure the status of that however
  1096.  
  1097. cypherblock [2:39 AM]
  1098. @anonymint are you anonymint on bitcointalk ?
  1099.  
  1100. [2:39]
  1101. or who
  1102.  
  1103. anonymint [2:40 AM]
  1104. @tomothy I posit there is no real support for an increase. BU and all that (including perhaps @csw) is just PR to keep us distracted from our self-enslavement which we are enabling with our fanatical support of these systems. @dinofelis says I have a confirmation bias because I am working on a consensus design which I claim/posit doesn’t have these problems. I claim to have solved everything.
  1105.  
  1106. cypherblock [2:40 AM]
  1107. Iamnotback ?
  1108.  
  1109. anonymint [2:42 AM]
  1110. I am all of these accounts and my real name is Shelby Moore III (my photo is on my avatar at the following link):
  1111.  
  1112. https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=400235.msg16925985#msg16925985
  1113. bitcointalk.org
  1114. rpietila Wall Observer - the Quality TA Thread ;)
  1115. rpietila Wall Observer - the Quality TA Thread ;)
  1116.  
  1117. tomothy
  1118. [2:44 AM]
  1119. I think you miss the forest for the trees; what i mean by that, is that bitcoin adoption is stalling because of the limit. bitmain has invested significant amounts of capital and needs a return on that which is dependent on again, increased adoption, and increased bitcoin fees
  1120.  
  1121. [2:45]
  1122. if bitcoin fails to increase on chain txs, mining won't be able to support itself after the next halving
  1123.  
  1124. [2:49]
  1125. so if there is no increase, bitcoin mining dies. it would have to change how it works and it would no longer be bitcoin
  1126.  
  1127. tula [3:05 AM]
  1128. @anonymint ok thx.. so it was as i thought ..you assume unregulated blocksize leads to 100% centralization ..because bigger pools have an advantage over smaller pools (no shit)
  1129. thus "proving" that bitcoin does not work (is a ponzi scheme) and we need a central bank.
  1130. also mathematically proving that generally free market capitalism does not work and thus the only system that works is communism (this should give you a hint where i think you made a mistake) (edited)
  1131.  
  1132.  
  1133. jesse [3:06 AM]
  1134. joined private by invitation from @bitsko
  1135.  
  1136. anonymint [3:33 AM]
  1137. @tomothy the altcoin ecosystem adoption is not stalling. Bitcoin is the reserve currency (the most liquid, least volatility) of this ecosystem. Bitcoin will continue to grow in value as the mother ship. Bitmain will profit handsomely. Besides, I am positing that Bitmain is just a front for the shadow elite, and most mined coins end up in the shadow elite's pocket because Bitmain makes sure that independent miners are not that profitable, by selling them hardware that is already months after first produced for the insiders. Nothing is dying. It is all going according to the master plan: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1887077.msg18897366#msg18897366
  1138. bitcointalk.org
  1139. Where are you 'Iamnotback'?
  1140. Where are you 'Iamnotback'?
  1141.  
  1142. anonymint [3:45 AM]
  1143. Coinmarketcap has a chart on total market capitalization that will show you the ecosystem is still growing.
  1144.  
  1145. tomothy [3:47 AM]
  1146. Yes the overall market has increased. However, I think increasing the blocksize would also increase bitcoin dominance (59). This is because more block space would allow more increased development. In doing so, it would also clearly weakens altcoin market.
  1147.  
  1148. anonymint [3:47 AM]
  1149. As well that BTC's share of the ecosystem has declined from 90+% to roughly 2/3 rather precipitously recently with the Scalepocalypse coming to moment of truth.
  1150.  
  1151. tomothy
  1152. [3:47 AM]
  1153. I think the global elite ideas is dependent on how that and the issue is framed
  1154.  
  1155. [3:48]
  1156. For example. If you have a bitcoin, now, you are part of the global elite. Think about how many people live on less than $5 USD/day. So it's about​ perspectives.
  1157.  
  1158. new messages
  1159. anonymint [3:49 AM]
  1160. @tomothy you are at best only a dolphin. Refer to my prior BCT links which explain what I think will happen to the dolphins and the role you play in the NWO.
  1161.  
  1162. tomothy
  1163. [3:50 AM]
  1164. In terms of global politics? I think there was an attempt to limit bitcoin Independence by suggesting segwit and refusing size increase. It failed. Now? Now bitcoin has the opportunity to vote on it's future. Will it change that future? Maybe. Maybe not.
  1165. Ok I'll take a look. And then AFK.
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