Author

Topic: a new way to secure the blockchain (Read 527 times)

newbie
Activity: 9
Merit: 0
April 25, 2017, 03:29:01 PM
#10
shitty temp website but here is some info.

http://xtrabytes.club/#

thanks
legendary
Activity: 1240
Merit: 1001
Thank God I'm an atheist
April 25, 2017, 03:00:51 PM
#9
shitty temp website but here is some info.

http://xtrabytes.club/#

Is every node going to store all signatures from all nodes? If so the more nodes the slower it gets.

Or is every node going to store only its signatures? If so a light client has to blindly trust one full node
newbie
Activity: 48
Merit: 0
April 25, 2017, 12:17:07 PM
#8
shitty temp website but here is some info.

http://xtrabytes.club/#


Thanks it was seeing this info that made me buy more!

Gonna be huge I think once people hear about this.
full member
Activity: 384
Merit: 103
April 25, 2017, 01:51:53 AM
#7
shitty temp website but here is some info.

http://xtrabytes.club/#

I'm not a mathematician but I'd guess there are several isues and possible exploits with the system presented. Hopefully others who are familiar can comment.

Also, what is the initial distribution method? Premined and sold on exchange, aka ICO?


very unique distribution actually. there was an ico on ccex that was a scam. ccex allowed the investors to fork to recover their coins and this project rose out of the ashes. im learned about this myself so dont expect me to have all the answers. sorry typing on phone on work break.



None of that sounds like unique, in fact, quite the opposite. But good luck I guess.

maybe unusual is a better word. personally have seen coins forked and revived but i cant remember on ico being converted into another project mid ico but i could be wrong. anyway it wasnt like it was by design more turning a shitty situation around so i guess new developers cant be judged too much on it.
legendary
Activity: 2002
Merit: 1051
ICO? Not even once.
April 25, 2017, 01:20:35 AM
#6
shitty temp website but here is some info.

http://xtrabytes.club/#

I'm not a mathematician but I'd guess there are several isues and possible exploits with the system presented. Hopefully others who are familiar can comment.

Also, what is the initial distribution method? Premined and sold on exchange, aka ICO?


very unique distribution actually. there was an ico on ccex that was a scam. ccex allowed the investors to fork to recover their coins and this project rose out of the ashes. im learned about this myself so dont expect me to have all the answers. sorry typing on phone on work break.



None of that sounds like unique, in fact, quite the opposite. But good luck I guess.
full member
Activity: 384
Merit: 103
April 25, 2017, 01:08:48 AM
#5
shitty temp website but here is some info.

http://xtrabytes.club/#

I'm not a mathematician but I'd guess there are several isues and possible exploits with the system presented. Hopefully others who are familiar can comment.

Also, what is the initial distribution method? Premined and sold on exchange, aka ICO?


very unique distribution actually. there was an ico on ccex that was a scam. ccex allowed the investors to fork to recover their coins and this project rose out of the ashes. im learned about this myself so dont expect me to have all the answers. sorry typing on phone on work break.

legendary
Activity: 2002
Merit: 1051
ICO? Not even once.
April 25, 2017, 01:02:22 AM
#4
shitty temp website but here is some info.

http://xtrabytes.club/#

I'm not a mathematician but I'd guess there are several isues and possible exploits with the system presented. Hopefully others who are familiar can comment.

Also, what is the initial distribution method? Premined and sold on exchange, aka ICO?
full member
Activity: 384
Merit: 103
April 25, 2017, 12:47:25 AM
#3
That doesn't say much. What about IPv6 or Tor nodes - both of which is trivially easy to get dozens of?


well tor at least is a non starter huge problems which could potentially land you in jail.

https://www.eff.org/torchallenge/what-is-tor.html


plus like masternodes you would earn from owning and running a node.




shitty temp website but here is some info.

http://xtrabytes.club/#
legendary
Activity: 2002
Merit: 1051
ICO? Not even once.
April 25, 2017, 12:42:42 AM
#2
That doesn't say much. What about IPv6 or Tor nodes - both of which is trivially easy to get dozens of?
full member
Activity: 384
Merit: 103
April 25, 2017, 12:41:05 AM
#1
XBY has a new way to secure the blockchain. No miners and no POS but uses private signed static nodes. As a would be hacker would have to get the private keys of all the nodes its impossible to hack.
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