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Topic: [ANN] [BSV] [Bitcoin SV] Original Satoshi Vision - page 12. (Read 226395 times)

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There is a serial forger in Kleiman vs Wright, and it isn’t Satoshi

For months and even years in the lead-up to Kleiman v Wright, the idea that there are forged exhibits in “evidence” has come up often.

Usually, it comes up in the form of indignant bleating from the people who have already decided (or been paid to decide) that Dr. Craig Wright couldn’t possibly be behind the Satoshi Nakamoto pseudonym. After all, if you can get enough people to write a person off as a serial forger, you can make sure they are never taken seriously again.

That is perhaps the reason for the seemingly immortal claim that if there are any forgeries connected to Wright, it must be Wright who is responsible for them. Who else would have the motive to alter and forge documents? Right?

However, as the Kleiman trial began and as thousands of pages of evidence and hours of testimony were presented to the jury, it has become apparent that this assumption is way off, and that though there is a serial forger in the midst of the Kleiman v Wright suit, it isn’t Wright.

Vital forgeries which can’t be blamed on Wright

To those paying close attention to the case, this won’t be a huge surprise at this stage. Expert witness Dr. Matthew Edman testified for the plaintiffs that 40 or so emails he reviewed had been forged: specifically, he was able to determine that IP addresses associated with some of the forgeries came from Wooloowin, a suburb of Brisbane Australia.

At the time the forgeries were said to have been created, Dr. Wright was living and working in Sydney, 900km and a 9.5-hour drive from Wooloowin—suggesting whoever has been forging evidence, it isn’t Dr. Wright.

Wright was further exonerated when he [url=http://returned to the stand on Monday]returned to the stand on Monday[/url] and was presented with an email—P2 on the plaintiff’s exhibit list—purportedly sent from Wright to Dave Kleiman on March 12, 2008:

"I need your help editing a paper I am going to release [sic] later this year. I have been working on a new form of electronic money. Bit cash, Bitcoin"

"You are always there for me Dave. I want you to be a part of it all."

"I cannot release it as me. GMX, vistomail and Tor. I need your help and I need a version of me to make this work that is better than me."

This email was introduced by the plaintiffs and is vital to their case against Wright because it is the only primary evidence that indicates Dave had any involvement in the Satoshi Nakamoto partnership at all. Wright has always indicated that Dave Kleiman helped edit the white paper, so the email isn’t a slam dunk for the plaintiffs, but it does a lot of heavy lifting for the plaintiff’s case. Without this email, there is zero evidence that Dave and Wright ever talked about Bitcoin before it was released publicly.

What is important is that the email comes from one of Wright’s well-known domains (@rcbjr.org). But public records show that the domain wasn’t registered until 2011 (something which Wright confirmed on the stand). Further, the metadata analysis produced by the defense show that the email was sent in 2015, rather than 2008.

In other words, the 2008 email seems to be at least partly inauthentic.



https://twitter.com/CarolinaBolado/status/1462835989550977038

It should be mentioned that this particular email was conspicuously left off the list of documents sent to Edman by the plaintiff’s lawyers for analysis. Given its importance to the plaintiff’s case and what we now know about the email, it would seem that this omission was deliberate.

However, the most intriguing bit of evidence showing that the email is a forgery has nothing to do with metadata. In something of a ‘gotcha’ moment at the expense of the plaintiffs, Dr. Wright explained to the jury that the @rcjbr.org domain refers to the initials of his family: Ramona, Craig, and his three kids first initials J,B and R. Given that Wright didn’t meet his wife until 2010, the email couldn’t have been sent prior to that even ignoring the metadata.

This puts the 2008 email in a category of its own among the allegedly forged evidence in the case, because it’s the only one where we can definitively rule out any suspects. Whoever forged this document can’t have known what @rcjbr.org stands for, and the email itself is only detrimental to Wright’s defense—which means whoever did the forging was almost certainly someone other than Wright.

In addition to exonerating Wright, it also lends credence to his long-standing claims that some of the evidence being relied upon by the plaintiffs—such as the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) documents—have been forged.

But by who?

Not Dr. Wright

The first thing to clarify is that contrary to what Wright’s detractors would have you believe, the plaintiffs have not been the only party to complain about forgeries on the docket. In fact, it has been the plaintiffs who have fought the hardest to keep the evidence of bogus documents from being considered by the jury.

For example, Dr. Wright’s legal team had expended considerable effort before trial to make sure the issue of forged evidence was put before the jury. They fought to have an expert presented at trial who would testify that certain documents on the record contained forged signatures—including that of Wright. The plaintiffs successfully argued to have the expert excluded.

Consistent with this strategy, the plaintiffs went even further, filing a motion to get the court to prohibit Wright from claiming that any documents in the case had been forged. The court rejected this out of hand on the basis that any claims of forgeries are for the jury to evaluate.

So, even going into the trial, the idea that the record was littered with documents and emails forged by Dr. Wright didn’t make sense. Add to that the fact that the most definitive thing anyone can say about any of the apparent forgeries on the record relates to the 2008 RCBJR email: that whoever made that forgery, it could not have been Dr. Wright.

As the person with hundreds of billions to gain from demonstrating that Dr. Wright was both his brother’s business partner and a compulsive liar, Ira Kleiman is an obvious candidate. The aforementioned pre-trial strategy of preventing Wright from complaining about forgeries certainly indicates that the plaintiffs were well aware that some of their evidence are of questionable authenticity.

Ira isn’t much of a computer expert, however, so if he was forging documents, he at the very least was using someone else to do it.

Jamie Wilson had means, motive and opportunity

There is another suspect worth considering: Jamie Wilson, witness in Kleiman v Wright and former CFO to Dr. Wright.

Remember the testimony by Dr. Edman, presented as part of the plaintiff’s case, which revealed that at least some forgeries were done by an IP based in Wooloowin, Brisbane? Wilson’s company, Cryptoloc, is just an 11-minute drive from Wooloowin.


Source: Google Maps

Further, though a former accountant, Wilson is technologically competent: he runs a successful cryptographic security company, Cryptoloc, so it’s fair to say his competency to create convincing digital forgeries exceeds that of Ira Kleiman.

All of this is circumstantially damning by itself, but a close look into the relationship between Dr. Wright and Jamie Wilson reveals that Wilson had plenty of motivation to implicate Wright in what is said to be most valuable robbery in history.

Jamie Wilson is Dr. Wright’s old chief financial officer, and his testimony formed a curious part of the plaintiff’s case: he appeared to be brought on to opine about the quality of Wright’s various company books, but admitted under oath he’d never seen them in more than a year he supposedly spent serving as CFO. He complained he was never paid for his work with Dr. Wright, but then admitted under oath that no one had ever agreed to pay him in the first place.

Maybe most importantly, Wilson testified that he quit in 2013, while Dr. Wright testified that Wilson was fired. Wright’s story is at least backed up by writings from as early as 2020, where he mentions that around the time Wilson exited the business, he was caught trying to steal and sell Wright’s intellectual property.

That’s right: the person who lives and works just 11 minutes from the suburb proven to be the location where the much-discussed forgeries took place was fired by Wright years ago for stealing intellectual property.

Perhaps more relevant to the question of the forgeries is the fact that the patent which sits at the heart of Wilson’s Cryptoloc business bears Dr. Wright’s name. In fact, Wilson is attached to multiple applications relating to the same Cryptoloc patent, and every one of them—even those filed as late as 2017, well after Wilson had been fired by Wright—bear Wright’s name.

This would seem at odds with answers Wilson gave in his Kleiman v Wright deposition. There, rather than conceding that Dr. Wright (who according to Wilson, was sought out specifically for his expertise in cryptography) played any role in his patents, he began claiming the opposite: that Dr. Wright was on the patents in name only and hadn’t contributed to them at all.

That’s a highly convenient state of affairs for Wilson, because he would go on to leverage the patent originating from his time with Wright to launch Cryptoloc. It turns out that Wilson’s company was listed as one of the 20 Best Cybersecurity Start Ups to Watch in 2020 by Forbes. In the Forbes piece it mentions how the company has set up a new Regional Headquarters for Europe in Cambridge, England. Right in Dr. Wright’s back yard. Certainly, the last thing Wilson or his lucrative business needs is to be accused of stealing from one of the most celebrated inventors in modern history.

Wilson also had more opportunity than anyone to plant damning and convincing forgeries in a way that would implicate Dr. Wright. He had been working in Wright’s companies since 2012, well after Bitcoin had been released to the world, so he would have had a front-row seat to the inner workings of the Wright machine during the elusive time period which is the focus of the Kleiman lawsuit. He also testified that Wright told him about Dave when the two worked together, and Wilson’s involvement with Wright’s companies also coincided with Wright’s ongoing skirmish with the ATO about the tax position of Bitcoin, long before he was outed as Satoshi.

Wilson’s knowledge of the Wright’s fight with the ATO makes him particularly unique as a suspect because it is the ATO documents in evidence in Kleiman v Wright that are perhaps of the most questionable authenticity. Wright’s attorneys fought hard to have these documents thrown out before trial on the basis that they could not be authenticated. Indeed, the pages of ATO documents, which relate to audits of Dr. Wright’s companies which are not parties to this lawsuit, contain unsworn statements, interview transcripts without any seal of authenticity, and documents which are outright incomplete. The motion was denied on the basis that the deficiencies raised by Wright don’t rise to the standard required to have the evidence tossed, but the problem reared its head at trial when the plaintiffs attempted to make sense of the documents in front of the jury. Wright repeated his claim that the ATO documents are incomplete and unverifiable, and the plaintiff’s attorneys could say nothing in response, no doubt leaving the jury wondering why they’d bothered in the first place.

Even ignoring the shortcomings within the ATO documents themselves, their origin is so dubious that they are evidentiarily useless. The story goes that Ira was contacted by the ATO’s “criminal investigations unit,” and that’s how he came to be in possession of the documents. The story itself is highly questionable: there is no criminal investigations unit within the ATO, and the plaintiff has never tried to introduce testimony from anybody at the ATO who might be able to testify to their accuracy.

Even if there was, in a criminal investigation the chain of custody is everything. Access to evidence is closely monitored and documented so that any changes or discrepancies are obvious and can be challenged by the defendant. Here in civil proceedings, the burden is much lower, which means that the ATO evidence is as good as a bundle of documents handed to Ira by a stranger on the street. Wright (and therefore the jury) can only take them at face value and have no way of knowing what happened to the documents from the time it (supposedly) left the ATO’s inbox in Australia and ended up in discovery in this case. But from the point of view of somebody trying to denigrate Dr. Wright, getting the ATO documents admitted is nothing short of a luxury—because assuming someone had the means to do it, they could have made any amendments or additions they wanted prior to it being sent to Wright’s lawyers and it still would have ended up in Kleiman v Wright as evidence for the plaintiffs.

In other words, Wilson is one of the only people in the world who could have known all the ingredients necessary to successfully implicate Dr. Wright in the robbery of a partnership which never existed. What’s more, Wilson at best had a bone to pick with Dr. Wright after being unceremoniously let go, and at worst saw Wright as a loose end which could potentially unravel the business he’d built atop their shared patent.

The real question would be how Wilson could possibly have known his breadcrumbs would eventually lead to Dave Kleiman’s brother suing Wright for hundreds of billions of dollars, particularly when for all he knew Wright’s identity would remain a secret forever.

Of course, Wilson doesn’t need to have expected his trail of forgeries would be quite so spectacularly effective, nor does he need to have acted alone. Some of the forgeries were determined to have originated in 2015, for example, after Ira Kleiman had started sniffing around for Wright’s Bitcoin. Wilson may have left a trail of evidence leading Kleiman to Wright, but he could just of easily have collaborated with Kleiman directly in building a case against Wright.

The fact does remain, however, that any attempt to frame Wright for bilking his best friend out of his share of the Satoshi Nakamoto partnership would be futile if no one ever found out that Wright was involved in the creation of Bitcoin.

On this, harken back to the debunked email from March 2008, which has the effect of both confirming Wright to be Satoshi and implicating Dave as a partner. It turns out the Kleiman v Wright lawsuit is not the first time that email has been seen by the general public: it was one of the key pieces of evidence leaked to Wired and Gizmodo which caused them to expose Wright in 2015. That email, together with evidence which included the dubious ATO documents, formed the basis of Wired and Gizmodo’s story—if those outlets didn’t receive these documents from someone, they likely don’t run the story.

No one knows who leaked Wright’s identity to Wired and Gizmodo. It makes no sense for it to be Wright: the breaking of the Gizmodo and Wired story was accompanied by the Australian Federal Police raiding his home, and we can see from private emails between Wright and colleagues that he was just as surprised by the reporters sniffing around before they published their story as the rest of the world was when it was released.

We also know from evidence shown at the Kleiman v Wright trial that Gizmodo was communicating with Ira Kleiman via one of Dave’s many old email addresses, which seems to definitively disprove the idea that the Gizmodo journalists discovered and printed the Wright story without being tipped off by someone familiar with Wright and Dave Kleiman? How else would it be possible for the journalists investigating the Satoshi Nakamoto story to get a hold of Dave’s old e-mail address, and most importantly, how could they have possibly known it was an address that could be used to get in touch with his brother Ira?

https://coingeek.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/there-is-a-serial-forger-in-kleiman-vs-wright-and-it-isnt-satoshi-1024x725.png

Similarly, Ira swore the ATO reached out to him directly, apparently via old inboxes that also belonged to Dave. How did the ATO get these addresses of Dave? And how could they have possibly known Ira Kleiman would be the man on the other end of the line? And how did they vet Ira was really Dave’s brother before sending him the ATO documents? Dr Wright himself testified that he no idea that Dave had a living brother, so how did they come to send pages of documents allegedly from their own investigations to an inbox that was—by all accounts—totally unidentified?

Given that we now know that at least part of what Wired and Gizmodo received were forgeries, some of which have been shown to have originated not 20 minutes’ walk from Wilson’s place of business, and given that we know that whoever was talking to both those publications and the ATO was someone very familiar with Wright and the Kleimans, perhaps we can take a good guess at who was involved.

Check out all of the CoinGeek special reports on the Kleiman v Wright YouTube playlist.

New to Bitcoin? Check out CoinGeek’s Bitcoin for Beginners section, the ultimate resource guide to learn more about Bitcoin—as originally envisioned by Satoshi Nakamoto—and blockchain.

source Jordan Atkins : https://coingeek.com/there-is-a-serial-forger-in-kleiman-vs-wright-and-it-isnt-satoshi/
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Notorious defamation troll Arthur Van Pelt who constantly harasses BSV and Craig Wright with misinformation and lies, admits that he "lives off of donations to do this" in reference to defaming Craig Wright and trolling BSV on Social Media at 1:18 mark:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oHvzIbnQ_mQ&t=4685s


Source: https://twitter.com/cryptorebel_SV/status/1448872867098025985

Getting paid to harass people? Seriously! The 🤡 is fucking wasting his life, time is running out but he only has one life and he's wasting his time.  Cry sad.

Fascinating!!!! Arthur Van Pelt🤢  seems to be willing to do anything to spread big shit and fake news for years, plus he gets paid for it?Huh!!!!!! 🤮
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Kleiman v Wright Day 14: Plaintiff Strategy of Painting Craig Wright as Serial Forger Backfires

It is Day 14 of the controversial Kleiman v Wright trial, which is centered on the real identity of the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto who authored the Bitcoin white paper and allegedly mined 1.1 million Bitcoin, now valued at over $63 billion.

The plaintiff, represented by Ira Kleiman, is accusing computer scientist Craig Wright of cheating David Kleiman of the credit of co-writing the Bitcoin white paper and up to half of the Satoshi coins the two allegedly mined together.

The defense is arguing that Wright solely wrote the Bitcoin white paper under the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto and that there is no evidence of a partnership between Wright and David Kleiman in co-authoring the historic white paper and the mining of the 1.1 million coins.

Wright Takes Stand Again

Wright has previously taken the stand as a witness for the plaintiff; and now, he takes the stand again as the last witness for his defense. It seems that many are speculating that Wright’s lawyers did not want to have him testify again, and it was only Wright himself who insisted on doing so after witnessing a heated conversation between the parties concerned during the break.

It seems that Wright had won over his defense team as he was called in again to take the stand. Wright’s testimony further solidified the claim made by the defense through other witnesses that Wright was highly immersed in Japanese culture as he was influenced greatly by his grandfather on the maternal side, who served in the Australian army during World War II.

This then led to Wright choosing the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto, a combination of two Japanese philosophers, when he wrote the Bitcoin white paper. After which, more about Wright’s career history was examined.

According to Wright, it was in 1998 when he was working for online casino Lasseters, that he first had the idea for Bitcoin. The token system Wright developed for the casino was the first version of what is now Bitcoin.

Minutes of a meeting Wright had with Allan Granger from the well-known accounting firm BDO was then presented as evidence of Wright proposing a P2P e-cash system. The proposal was rejected and never came to fruition. This compelling evidence shows a “precursor to Bitcoin,” and how Wright alone could have created it as Satoshi Nakamoto based on his past work experience.

https://youtu.be/6a3GiqcNGmg


The Bombshell
Previously, the plaintiff has resorted to attempting to discredit Wright and painting him as someone who has forged at least 40 emails presented as evidence. Although Wright has denied having forged even one email in his life, an expert witness for the plaintiff has alluded to Wright being the only one capable of forging said email exchanges between himself and David Kleiman.

Now, the bombshell comes from an email exchange between David Kleiman and Wright provided by Ira Kleiman, which the plaintiff has alleged was forged by Wright. The email was about Wright asking David Kleiman for help in a project called “bit cash,” and was the only email exchange between Wright and Kleiman that even made mention of anything similar to Bitcoin.

It was also discovered that the IP address where the email was sent from was actually one that allegedly Jamie Wilson, Wright’s former disgruntled CFO who also testified for the plaintiff, had access to. What seems to have shocked the plaintiff more is that it was not possible for Wright to have sent the said email in 2008 because the email address it was sent from, [email protected], was actually a family domain that represents the initials of Wright’s second wife Ramona, himself and their three children.

At the time the email was allegedly sent, Wright had not even met Ramona yet. In fact, the two met about two years later in 2010 and only became romantically involved in 2011—not to mention the fact that they did not have children until after 2011. How would their initials be used in an email sent in 2008?

With this established in court, it has now put in question who was actually the serial forger that the plaintiff had been making out to be as Wright? While Wright could not have sent those emails and did not have access to the said family domain until years after that particular email was sent, who could have forged it?

Earlier in the trial, Ira Kleiman said under oath that he still has access to his brother’s email and would even send himself a birthday email yearly from David Kleiman’s email account. Email evidence presented in court also showed that Ira Kleiman had over 30 email addresses he used to communicate with different persons or organizations.

Could Ira Kleiman have enlisted the help of Wilson, who seemed to have a grudge against Wright, to forge emails from Wright to David Kleiman in order to strengthen their case and get their hands on half of the Satoshi coins? Could using forged emails as evidence and attributing these forgeries to Wright have been the plaintiff grasping at straws in a case that lacks meaningful evidence for the plaintiff?

What could the jury have thought about this most recent information? Could it have completely tipped the case over to the defense’s side? The defense has rested their case, and closing arguments are on the schedule Wednesday. Soon, all of these questions will be answered.

https://youtu.be/O10WCnzMasc

Source https://worldfinancialreview.com/kleiman-v-wright-day-14-plaintiff-strategy-of-painting-craig-wright-as-serial-forger-backfires/
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Satoshi's invention "threatens" the world hegemony and stability of the existing archaic models (bilderberg / states / freemasons / silicon valley network), acquired in absolute majority to the cause of common interests yet exposed to corruption, lies and global greed up to the highest summit and amplified by their intermediaries.

The objective of some castes is to put you under annexation, to annex you by alphanumeric code, sometimes to make you sick, mentally dependent, on data, to make you stay in your place, where they decide. They will continue to sell you data, drugs, oil, artificial neurons, dreams and distractions that will continue to increase their powers, privileges & multi-layered controls. At the same time, rebels, dissenters and other entrepreneurs who do not serve their causes will be steamrollered by the laws that these same detractors pass.

Make no mistake, the Bitcoin protocol validates a proof of existence by time stamping and much more, that said, in a world where data is falsified at the slightest opportunity, everywhere, in every social, political & economic sector then Satoshi and the possibilities of his blockchain become the global threat, since, networks necrotic with cheating, lying, manipulation can be exposed to the eyes of all because, publicly auditable in an unfalsifiable system.

The operational scope has been to multiply blockchains, infiltrate Bitcoin through intermediaries and other puffers, place pawns, create segwit taproot updates designed to modify the code, dupe the trust, shape the public while falsifying the objectives, dividing the communities. At the same time, the laws/networks take care of making this technology exist, then banning it, punishing users, establishing invasive CBDCs, controllable by the ramifications of their fields and means of action.

The accomplices of these formal aberrations are already rewarded. Parade on the web, address laser eyes and other boasts. This is the way it is.

Instead of embracing unified technology, they will separate functions for greater gain at the expense of everyone's interest, at the expense of real progress, to the detriment of resources for humanity. You'd have to be a fool not to see this.

In 2021 of this area, note that the profits generated, created out of nothing, are partly fed back into the stock market, generating inflation at all levels. While the perfect creation has been perverted to serve the purposes of nauseating individuals, the result is the greatest robbery in history which is taking place with the complicity of the states and their intermediaries, they are partly causing global impoverishment across the world, as the lie has been established for several decades, the collusion is redistributing the attributes. Thus the political currents grow and gain influence.

Know that in Uncle Sam's country, Bitcoin and "the petro dollars model" are not compatible, 2022 will let you know. All those who have and threaten this hegemony are paying the price.

While the truths are flouted, shaped, distorted and disseminated, the darkness wins and the real light is extinguished.

That said, not every path is set in stone.

Bitcoin is much more than a crypto-currency, it is the system that can still save you from yourself. Bitcoin `Satoshi Vision' goes far beyond what you can barely perceive. The future is yours, at all times.

History may let you know.

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Bitcoin Association joins the Japan Cryptoasset Business Association (JCBA) as an associate member to support the growth of BSV in Asia




ZUG, Switzerland – November 22, 2021 – Bitcoin Association, the Switzerland-based global industry organisation that works to advance business with the Bitcoin SV (BSV) blockchain and digital currency, today announces that it has been admitted to join the Japan Cryptoasset Business Association (JCBA) as an associate member as part of its ongoing efforts to support the growth of enterprise blockchain technologies in Japan and across Asia.

The JCBA serves as a platform for businesses working with digital assets to network, interface and collaborate on issues important to the growth of the digital asset and blockchain sectors in Japan. Its 112 members include leading banks, exchanges, technology providers, development firms, professional service providers and industry associations with significant interests in the Japanese blockchain space. Since being founded in 2016, the JCBA has played an increasingly prominent role in the growth of the emerging blockchain industry in Japan, including contributing to the development of positive public policy through work with the Financial Services Agency and Consumer Affairs Agency, in addition to increasing awareness of blockchain technologies and improving access to education in the space.

Sharing several of the same goals for the development of a regulation and innovation-friendly blockchain ecosystem, Bitcoin Association joins the JCBA as an associate member to support the growth of enterprise and national scale applications of blockchain technology using the BSV blockchain. Bitcoin Association maintains a pair of ambassadors in Japan as part of its Global Ambassador Programme, Masumi Hamahira – Executive Advisor for the Islamic Banking Window at MUFG Bank and Ken Shishido of Tokyo Bitcoin Ventures – both of whom work to support and nurture the growing community of BSV businesses, developers and enthusiasts in Japan. To learn more about the BSV blockchain and the array of businesses using its network, visit bsvblockchain.org.

Commenting on today’s announcement, Bitcoin Association Founding President, Jimmy Nguyen, said:

‘Bitcoin Association is delighted to be accepted as associate member of the Japan Cryptoasset Business Association, a leading and influential organisation in Japan’s blockchain industry. By working with the JCBA, we look forward to improving awareness in Japan around the capabilities of enterprise blockchain technology and digital assets with real utility and demonstrating how the BSV blockchain is today making these possibilities a reality for businesses all around the globe. I would like to thank the JCBA for welcoming Bitcoin Association and commend the efforts of Masumi Hamahira, one of our Bitcoin Association Ambassadors, for bringing our two associations together.’

Also speaking, Bitcoin Association Ambassador for Japan, Masumi Hamahira, said:

‘It is a great honour for Bitcoin Association to be approved by the board of the Japan Cryptoasset Business Association to join as an associate member. The JCBA is recognised for its positive and proactive work with regulators in Japan, including the Financial Services Agency and Consumer Affairs Agency – both important relationships in the first country to regulate the cryptoasset industry. I see great potential for the BSV blockchain in Japan and am excited to work together with the JCBA and Bitcoin Association to pursue our shared goals for an innovative and regulation-friendly blockchain ecosystem.’

Also commenting, Managing Director of the Japan Cryptoasset Business Association, Seiji Yuki, said:

‘At the JCBA, we work collectively with our members for the healthy development and expansion of the cryptoasset sector and related businesses. I expect that the activities of Bitcoin Association for BSV, working together as part of our own association, will contribute to the development of the cryptoasset industry and I look forward to working alongside them.’




About Bitcoin Association

Bitcoin Association is the Switzerland-based global industry organisation that works to advance business on the Bitcoin SV blockchain. It brings together essential components of the Bitcoin SV ecosystem – enterprises, start-up ventures, developers, merchants, exchanges, service providers, blockchain transaction processors (miners), and others – working alongside them, as well as in a representative capacity, to drive further use of the Bitcoin SV blockchain and uptake of the BSV digital currency.

The Association works to build a regulation-friendly ecosystem that fosters lawful conduct while facilitating innovation using all aspects of Bitcoin technology. More than a digital currency and blockchain, Bitcoin is also a network protocol; just like Internet protocol, it is the foundational rule set for an entire data network. The Association supports use of the original Bitcoin protocol to operate the world’s single blockchain on Bitcoin SV.

Source, https://bitcoinassociation.net/bitcoin-association-joins-the-japan-cryptoasset-business-association-jcba-as-an-associate-member-to-support-the-growth-of-bsv-in-asia/
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Today marks the re-launch of Bitcoin Association’s hub for all things BSV: bitcoinsv.com.

The site is intended to serve as a broad repository of information for everything relating to BSV. Whether you’re a newcomer to the BSV ecosystem or an experienced developer, the bitcoinsv.com site has the information you need – or can tell you where to get it.

Now in its first phase, the site includes a high-level introduction to Bitcoin, a primer on the technical details of the BSV protocol, and information for current or prospective developers to get started building applications on the blockchain.

It also collates some of the most exciting projects already being developed using BSV and how you can find them. This is in no way meant to serve as a complete list of all of the interesting projects being built on BSV, and more are being added all the time.

In addition to the content already on bitcoinsv.com, Bitcoin Association also has a roadmap for the future growth of the site.

In the coming months, it will expand even further to include detailed technical information and demonstrations of the BSV protocol, localization and the aggregation of the most important news from across the BSV ecosystem.

This is just the beginning. Eventually, bitcoinsv.com will produce high value BSV-related content of its own while continuing to be the multi-purpose informational hub at the center of the ecosystem.

https://bitcoinsv.com

Source: https://bitcoinassociation.net/introducing-bitcoinsv-com-a-one-stop-hub-for-bsv/

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Craig Wright: Not the messiah, just a very naughty boy who created Bitcoin

Bitcoin maximalists can’t accept that Dr. Craig Wright is Satoshi Nakamoto because he fails to embody the mythologies these maxis adopted during the Bitcoin creator’s absence from the scene.

The blockbuster civil trial currently wrapping up in a Florida federal court has Dr. Wright defending himself against Ira Kleiman, the brother of Wright’s late friend and colleague Dave Kleiman. Ira claims Dave helped Wright create Bitcoin and thus Ira believes that Dave’s estate is entitled to half of any BTC tokens the pair may have created prior to Dave’s untimely death in 2013.

Wright has publicly acknowledged his identity as Satoshi, author of the 2008 Bitcoin white paper, since he was doxed nearly six years ago by Wired and Gizmodo (with, as Wright maintains, the apparent help of documents provided by Ira Kleiman). The belief that Wright is Satoshi is pivotal to Ira’s lawsuit, putting both sides of this legal dispute on the same side of the great debate over Satoshi’s real-world identity.

Mainstream media reporting on this consensus has triggered many BTC maxis, who vent on social media that the general public shouldn’t be told that there’s any link between Wright and Satoshi. (The fear is that individuals might feel compelled to investigate Wright’s BSV protocol which, unlike BTC, offers unlimited scaling and ultra-low transaction fees and can therefore serve as the ‘peer-to-peer electronic cash system’ described in the Bitcoin white paper.)

Even pro-BTC sites such CoinDesk weren’t spared these attacks; the site was apparently forced to revise an article that claimed the trial would decide the fate of Satoshi’s fabled 1.1 million BTC reserve after Alan Silbert—brother of Digital Currency Group founder Barry Silbert—publicly lambasted CoinDesk on Twitter, saying “this article should have never seen the light of day.”

What’s my motivation in this scene?

Ever since Wright’s outing six years ago, BTC maxis have accused him of constantly moving the goalposts that might confirm his Satoshi claims. Chief among the maxis’ complaints is Wright’s failure/unwillingness to move any of the tokens derived from early block rewards that are assumed to belong to Satoshi. A simple read of his Bitcoin White Paper Chapter 10 on Privacy will show that identity is firewalled and that possession of keys do not prove ownership. Wright maintains that possession of private keys to certain coins is no more proof of ownership than stealing someone’s car keys and then declaring that their vehicle is your rightful property.

But the maxis’ own demands have been equally amorphous. This past weekend, Bitcoin Core developer Greg Maxwell publicly voiced a conspiracy theory that Wright had purchased the private keys to 15 early BTC addresses, which Wright would then use to respond to the maxis’ oft-stated maxim of “not your keys, not your Bitcoin.” So there really doesn’t appear to be any hurdle that Wright could clear that wouldn’t retroactively be raised ever higher by those that refuse to accept him as Satoshi.

The motivations behind the anti-Wright campaign of Maxwell and his ilk are clear enough: there’s quite literally no point to BTC’s further existence should BSV achieve mass adoption. If Wright is successful in getting BSV’s message out to the world, the BTC Ponzi bubble will burst, and down the drain goes the dreams of a new world order with maxis at the controls.

But there are a host of BTC maxi-minions who are far less financially invested than the Blockstreams or DCG’s of the world but who nonetheless embrace a strong anti-Wright sensibility. For these individuals, the enmity stems from a belief that Wright doesn’t match their expectations for who Satoshi is/was. And these expectations are primarily based on these acolytes projecting their own values onto the blank canvas created by Satoshi’s withdrawal from the public stage in 2011.

Sado-solipsism

From the dawn of time, man has been making gods in his own image (and then claiming the reverse), apparently convinced that man occupies the summit of sentient development. Satoshi’s vanishing act allowed the nascent Bitcoin community to imagine him as various idealized versions of themselves writ large, and thus the emergence of someone who runs counter to those expectations threatens their (similarly exalted) sense of themselves.

So, Adam Back sees Satoshi as a cypherpunk, obsessed with keeping the state from sticking its nose where it doesn’t belong. Anarchists like Cøbra see Satoshi as the poster boy for burning the system to the ground, without much thought for what might replace it. And would-be alphas like Magnus Granath (aka Hodlonaut) simply want to upend the current financial structure with a new model in which individuals like himself are the new 1%.

Imagine their collective horror when Satoshi staged his involuntary second coming and they learned that his message on Bitcoin’s genesis block—“The Times 03/Jan/2009 Chancellor on brink of second bailout for banks”—was less a declaration of war against the financial old guard and more a simple timestamp marking the technology’s debut.

Imagine their horror growing when they discovered Satoshi had no interest in facilitating criminal transactions and proclaimed Bitcoin to be a means of allowing greater tracking of criminal activity. Imagine their consternation when Satoshi claimed Bitcoin wasn’t in a zero-sum cage-match with big banks but would work alongside the existing financial system. Imagine their indignance at discovering that Satoshi wasn’t interested in perpetually pumping the value of an inert token to make it easier for a handful of early adopters to buy Lamborghinis.

All the things they believed—and thus assumed Satoshi also believed—turned out to be views that Satoshi either didn’t fully support or outright opposed. Their reaction was both immediate and visceral, mirroring the early denial/anger stages of the grief cycle. This can’t be Satoshi. Satoshi thinks like I/we do. Ergo, this must be a fraud.

It’s around this time that the attempt to undermine Satoshi’s influence on all things Bitcoin began in earnest. The phrase “we are all Satoshi” was quickly memed into ubiquity in a bid to minimize the significance of Wright’s emergence, and with it the likelihood that Wright’s maxi-opposing views might gain widespread acceptance.

In good (flawed) company

Of course, there were others whose resistance to Wright’s charms was less predicated on naked financial self-interest and more based on their unwillingness to accept a highly combative, often foul-mouthed Aussie with a seriously quirky fashion sense as their new technological Lord and Savior.

When Wright’s defense team made their arguments in that Florida federal court, they brought on Dr. Ami Klin, the autism research specialist who diagnosed Wright with Autism/Asperger’s Syndrome. Klin noted that Wright, like many individuals on this spectrum, is a person with high intellect and dodgy social skills, prone to speaking with “supreme confidence” while lacking the capacity to “read cues for reciprocal communications.”

Wright is hardly the first individual to embody both high-level polymath capabilities with the table manners of Atilla the Hun. Steve Jobs was widely recognized as a genius, particularly by himself. Atari co-founder Nolan Bushnell, who hired Jobs in 1974, once described Apple’s co-founder as “very often the smartest guy in the room, and he would let people know that.”

While Jobs was never formally diagnosed with autism, his behavior led many to conclude he met the criteria. Jobs’ long-time friend and colleague Jony Ive told biographer Walter Isaacson that Jobs had “this very childish ability to get really worked up about something” and when Jobs got frustrated, “his way to achieve catharsis is to hurt somebody.”

Other acknowledged geniuses showed no shortage of personality traits that tended to irk lesser mortals. Albert Einstein’s first wife left him after he handed her a draconian list of rules she had to obey, including her agreeing to “renounce all personal relations with me insofar as they are not completely necessary for social reasons.”

Historian Stephen Budiansky once declared that “the ideal cryptanalyst is Beethoven with the soul of an accountant; or vice versa.” Given the following anecdote, Wright’s neighbors are probably grateful his soul leans more toward the mathematical than the musical.

In 1820, police in the Austrian town of Wiener Neustadt arrested a dirty, disheveled vagrant who’d been roaming through town at night, peering into people’s windows and then scurrying away when spotted. Back at the station, the raving madman kept bellowing “I am Beethoven.” This went on long enough that the police summoned the local symphony conductor, who duly informed them that yes, that is Beethoven. The great composer was subsequently released, after which the police chief reportedly instructed his officers on the need to distinguish between simple madmen and geniuses in the throes of creation.

Warts and all

During one of this month’s livestreamed daily court action recaps, CoinGeek’s chief Bitcoin historian Kurt Wuckert Jr. responded to a viewer who asked him to relate “the best piece of evidence that you’ve seen to prove CSW is Satoshi.”

Wuckert’s response is worth hearing in its entirety, as he references “the descriptions of things to supposed experts that they had never heard of ever and Craig Wright explained them years before they could be proven to other people… It’s like asking someone about the intricacies of their childhood home, where they lived for 20 years, and only they can explain it.”

But Wuckert also addressed many of the potentially unflattering elements of Wright’s persona that the plaintiffs’ legal team did their best to amplify during the trial. “The actual gaffes and the litigiousness and the stuff that people don’t like [about] Craig… I don’t know. Maybe Satoshi Nakamoto did actually forge things … Maybe Satoshi Nakamoto lied to the Australian Tax Office. We don’t know these things. And it’s not a mutually exclusive thing that Satoshi Nakamoto is both the creator of Bitcoin and Craig Wright and maybe not a nice guy in some regards.”

And that’s the thing. Wright doesn’t have to measure up to someone’s idealized version of Satoshi. Regardless of his quirks and human frailties, he’s demonstrated an understanding of the technology that transcends that of his critics, and for that alone he deserves to be heard above their din.

This won’t stop many BTC maxis from labeling BSV a cult based on its adherents’ deep respect for Wright and his creations. But Wright and BSV aren’t indivisible. BSV backers may have a passionate devotion to the technology Wright unleashed upon the world, but that devotion—like the technology itself—will endure regardless of whether Wright is still on the scene.

But hey, so long as we’re talking about cults, bear in mind that BSV fans haven’t adopted the same type of shared identity markers like the BTC maxis who dutifully added identical ‘laser eyes’ to their social media avatars. Nor have BSV supporters developed a lexicon of pithy slogans such as “have fun staying poor” or “not gonna make it” that can be readily deployed against any heretic who dares challenge BTC’s articles of faith.

Regardless of how the jury decides in Kleiman v Wright, the BTC diehards will work overtime to paint it as a setback for Wright. They don’t really have any choice because, after stripping BTC of virtually all functionality besides “number go up,” disinformation is the only tool they have left. BTC may win the odd skirmish but it will ultimately lose this war because utility trumps perceived value every time, and BSV has utility in spades.

In the end, maybe the best way for BTC maxis to make their peace with Wright being Satoshi is to consider Tony Soprano’s reaction to his nephew Christopher questioning Tony’s decisions while lamenting that this has caused him to question his love for Tony: “What happens – I decide, not you. Now you don’t love me anymore, that breaks my heart but it’s too f**king bad. Because you don’t gotta love me, but you will respect me.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FrxGbMH-W1c

Check out all of the CoinGeek special reports on the Kleiman v Wright YouTube playlist.

New to Bitcoin? Check out CoinGeek’s Bitcoin for Beginners section, the ultimate resource guide to learn more about Bitcoin—as originally envisioned by Satoshi Nakamoto—and blockchain.

Source, thanks to Steven Stradbrooke https://coingeek.com/craig-wright-not-the-messiah-just-a-very-naughty-boy-who-created-bitcoin/

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MNP report finds Bitcoin SV to be the best implementation of the original Bitcoin protocol

MNP, the fifth-largest chartered professional accountancy and business consultancy firm in Canada, has issued a report that compares the alignment of the Bitcoin SV (Satoshi’s Vision) and Bitcoin Core (BTC) protocols with the original Bitcoin protocol. The report, titled ‘The original Bitcoin protocol: what is it and why does it matter?’, found that out of these two competing implementations, Bitcoin SV is the most representative of Satoshi Nakamoto’s original intention for Bitcoin.

MNP conducted an in-depth review of both protocols and compared them with the vision of Bitcoin defined by a wealth of source material related to Satoshi Nakamoto’s development of the original Bitcoin protocol. The source material for the review included the original Bitcoin white paper, as well as publicly available emails, forum posts and original code written by the blockchain’s pseudonymous inventor.

Bitcoin SV differs from Bitcoin Core in that it aims to restore the original vision of Bitcoin through the restoration of the original protocol. This has resulted in a network with unbounded scaling, unlimited block sizes, extremely low transaction fees, diverse data functionalities and fully-fledged scripting support. This development philosophy is ratified by the findings of the MNP report, which highlights the original definition of Bitcoin as peer-to-peer digital cash enabling fast and efficient transactions.

‘Based on our review, Bitcoin was intended to be a transaction network for digital cash to compete as a global payment system. Current implementations (Bitcoin SV and Bitcoin Core) were compared against that original vision,’ the report states.

‘Our findings indicate that Bitcoin SV is the most representative of Satoshi Nakamoto’s original intention for Bitcoin. We used an assessment framework and resulting criteria to assess the protocols described in this paper, including opcodes, Bitcoin scripting and protocol elements.’

Why BSV is closer to Bitcoin than BTC

MNP opted to compare BTC and BSV with the original Bitcoin protocol as they contrast the key attributes in realising Satoshi’s vision and show how development decisions have affected each implementation. Both these implementations of Bitcoin were assessed according to various criteria which encompassed their capabilities, functional requirements, non-functional requirements, as well as the alignment of attributes as defined by Satoshi Nakamoto’s vision of the original Bitcoin protocol.

The original vision of Bitcoin was designed as a means to sending and receiving fast and efficient digital cash transactions that solved the problem of double spending. The report notes, however, that the protocol’s underlying design demonstrates a vision of the technology acting as more than just a payment protocol.

‘The original design was intended for Bitcoin to be used for other functions (beyond mere payments) such as vending machines, paid emails, SaaS products, website activations, etc.  It is clear from the forum posts, writings, and community discussions that the Bitcoin protocol was intended to scale to allow for many forms of payments. This includes macro-payments (i.e., settling an account at the end of the day) and micropayment (i.e., sending a very small fee to access a service or send a text message),’ the report states.

After inspecting this design philosophy, contextualised with discussions by Satoshi regarding the need for Bitcoin to run on a low-fee model with sustainable economic incentives, MNP found that the BSV blockchain is more aligned with the original intent of Bitcoin that BTC. This is demonstrated by its ability to process many more transactions at a lower cost, as well as its support for scripting and on-chain data storage and applications. Conversely, BTC offers extremely low transaction throughput, high transaction fees and a lack of support for opcodes available in early versions of Bitcoin.

‘Considering these factors, BSV appears more aligned to the original intention of the payment system. With an uncapped block size which can grow with market demand, a significantly larger number of transactions can be included within each block, therefore allowing higher overall network throughput,’ the report states.

Satoshi’s vision and the future of blockchain scaling

The report’s interpretation of the white paper and Satoshi Nakamoto’s code and communication reaches the same conclusion as that of the BSV ecosystem – that Bitcoin was always designed to be more than a simple electronic payment system.

‘The original vision and long-term intentions were far beyond just an electronic cash and payment system. These elements are primarily provided by the Script language and implementation details of the stable, underlying protocol,’ the report states.

It goes on to describe the potential impact of a protocol designed according to Satoshi’s vision of Bitcoin, noting that this would enable efficient, easy-to-use digital payments, high transaction throughput with full scripting support for data-intensive applications and the creation of an enterprise utility blockchain secured by robust economic incentives and capable of rivalling incumbent traditional payment and data management systems.

Bitcoin SV has already made great strides in realising this vision by continuing to restore the full capability of the original Bitcoin protocol and develop applications on top of it. Thanks to its unlimited block size and support for Turing-complete blockchain-based applications, the BSV network offers an unparalleled platform for everyone from wallet providers and merchants to enterprises and financial institutions.

The MNP report highlights the importance of a stable, secure and scalable system for realising the true potential of Satoshi’s vision, and Bitcoin SV has demonstrated its adherence to these traits through its rapid growth and adoption. Diametrically opposing BTC’s artificially limited block sizes, high transaction fees and poor throughput, Bitcoin SV has demonstrated its ability to process 50,000 transactions per second through a new implementation of its node software based on the Teranode open framework.

This impressive scalability and its commitment to maintaining its stable and reliable underlying Bitcoin protocol means that Bitcoin SV is not only the blockchain most aligned with the original vision of Bitcoin as outlined by Satoshi Nakamoto, but it is also the technology that is best positioned to realise the true potential of Satoshi’s vision.

To view the full MNP report on how Bitcoin SV and Bitcoin Core adhere to the original vision of Bitcoin, click here or https://www.mnp.ca/-/media/files/mnp/pdf/service/enterprise-risk/the-original-bitcoin-protocol-r.pdf.


Source: https://bitcoinassociation.net/mnp-report-finds-bitcoin-sv-to-be-the-best-implementation-of-the-original-bitcoin-protocol/

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MNP Report demonstrates why BSV is the real Bitcoin

MNP, the fifth largest chartered professional accountancy and business consulting firm in Canada, has released a report that investigates the alignment of Bitcoin SV (BSV) and Bitcoin Core (BTC) with the original vision of the Bitcoin protocol described in Satoshi Nakamoto’s 2008 white paper.

The report is titled ‘The Original Bitcoin Protocol: What is it and Why Does it Matter?’ and finds that Bitcoin SV is the blockchain implementation which stays truest to the original vision of Bitcoin.

‘Based on our review Bitcoin was intended to be a transaction network for digital cash to compete as a global payment system,’ the report states.

‘Current implementations (Bitcoin SV and Bitcoin Core) were compared against that original vision. Our findings indicate that Bitcoin SV is most representative of Satoshi Nakamoto’s original intention for Bitcoin.’

The report looks at various aspects of the original Bitcoin protocol based on communications and code written by Satoshi Nakamoto during the time he created and was actively involved in the development of the technology. Creating a framework from this material, it then compares the capabilities, design and performance of Bitcoin SV and Bitcoin Core against it.

The BTC implementation of the Bitcoin protocol has undergone numerous hard forks throughout its tumultuous development, and it has migrated from a system designed to facilitate fast and efficient peer-to-peer transactions with double spend protection to a classification as a ‘store of value’ or ‘digital gold’. Throughout its development, it has disabled several of the original opcode, or scripting, functionalities of the original Bitcoin protocol and has retained an artificial 1MB limit on the size of blocks processed by the network.

Bitcoin SV (Bitcoin Satoshi’s Vision) was created by a community which aims to restore the original functionality of Bitcoin, including its support for smart contracts and fast, cheap, data-heavy transactions. To this end, BSV developers have restored much of the original scripting functionality of the Bitcoin protocol and have removed the artificial limit on block sizes, allowing the network to scale with adoption and gain substantial transaction throughput while keeping transaction fees low.

The MNP report defines several criteria based on the original protocol’s design and examines how both BTC and BSV fulfil these requirements by examining each blockchain’s protocol implementation as of March 31, 2021. The speculative valuation of each blockchain’s token, its reputation and other forks were excluded from the scope of the study due to their irrelevance when considering each protocol’s alignment with the original Bitcoin design.

The key differences

The report’s assessment encompasses a range of categories, ranging from each protocol implementation’s adherence to the security design of the original Bitcoin to their success in meeting the scaling and functional requirements posited by vision behind the original protocol.

Many of the most significant differences between Bitcoin SV and BTC when comparing them against Satoshi’s Vision arise from Bitcoin SV’s theoretically unbounded block size and BTC’s antithetical artificial block size limit – as BTC is limited to a maximum block size of 1MB, this significantly impedes its ability to scale and to offer the high transaction throughput needed to realise many aspects of Satoshi’s vision for the Bitcoin protocol.

A few of the key criteria in the report where differences were found to be most apparent are as follows:

‘The network and block size should scale dependent on network utilization’ – BTC’s artificial block size limit of 1MB imposes a maximum number of transactions that can be processed by the network daily – making it impossible to support higher transaction volumes as adoption increases. Conversely, Bitcoin SV has no default block size limit and can easily scale as transaction volume increases by increasing block sizes in relation to network market forces.

‘The network should always be available and process all valid transactions including free ones as there is still Bitcoin to be mined’ – On BTC, free transactions can be ignored by miners and may remain starved in the mempool, never being processed. On Bitcoin SV, free transactions can and do occur within blocks due to its superior scalability. There is no downtime recorded for either network.

‘The overall energy requirements will vary depending on the scale of the network’ – BTC’s overall energy consumption per transaction will increase with difficulty as the size of blocks is limited to 1MB on the network. On the Bitcoin SV network, the required amount of energy per transaction will decline significantly as block sizes increase and more transactions can be processed per block.

‘The scripting language and opcodes allow developers to create contracts’ – BTC has disabled many opcodes throughout its development, which has greatly inhibited or prevented developers from creating detailed and complex smart contracts. Bitcoin SV has re-enabled historic opcodes which enable complex scripting and the creation of stateful smart contracts.

‘The network should be able to scale meet any demand in transactions and how users adopt the network’ – BTC is unable to scale with adoption of the network due to its limited block size, which restricts usage of the network – especially as adoption increases. Bitcoin SV offers a theoretical unbounded number of transactions per block, restricted only by hardware and software limitations that are reduced as technology improves. This allows for mass adoption of payment processing and for the facilitation of micropayments on the network.

The points above, which outline Satoshi’s original ideas and the adherence of each protocol to them, are among the most salient differences between the Bitcoin Core and Bitcoin SV protocols, but there are many other areas in which they differ. It is important to note that under all the categories examined in the report, there is never an instance of Bitcoin SV failing to meet a criterion to at least the same extent that BTC does. However, there are many instances where BTC fails to meet an assessment criterion while Bitcoin SV succeeds.

Bitcoin SV best represents the original Bitcoin

The MNP report notes that Bitcoin SV stays far truer to the original design of the Bitcoin protocol than BTC, as shown by its ability to scale and process transactions on the level of modern digital payment networks, as well as its support for complex scripting functionality.

‘After examining Bitcoin Core and Bitcoin Satoshi’s Vision compared to the original vision set forth in the whitepaper, forum posts, emails, and other writings by Satoshi, it is our opinion that Bitcoin Satoshi’s Vision is the implementation that currently best represents what Satoshi originally intended,’ the report states.

‘BSV has a theoretically unbound block size – this allows for payments to scale to the size of a Visa-like network without requiring an increase in fees to meet the economic requirements of the node operators. BSV also provides more functionality in terms of what developers can do to utilize the network for building their own transaction systems on top of the Bitcoin protocol.’

The report goes on to highlight the countless ways in which blockchain technology can have a positive impact on the future, and a blockchain that aligns with Satoshi’s original vision can enable unprecedented new industries and services, from micropayments and autonomous contracting to distributed data storage and identity management.

The infographic below shows how Bitcoin SV and Bitcoin Core each comply with MNP’s criteria based on the original vision of the Bitcoin protocol as described by Satoshi Nakamoto.



Source: https://bitcoinassociation.net/mnp-report-demonstrates-why-bsv-is-the-real-bitcoin

To view the full MNP report on how Bitcoin SV and Bitcoin Core adhere to the original vision of Bitcoin: https://www.mnp.ca/-/media/files/mnp/pdf/service/enterprise-risk/the-original-bitcoin-protocol-r.pdf

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Crypto Crime Cartel: Behind Adam Back and Blockstream’s attempts to constrain Bitcoin

Blockstream CEO Adam Back desperately wants to be seen as Bitcoin’s all-father despite his ongoing efforts to strangle Bitcoin in its cradle.

In April, Back gave a podcast interview in which the host awarded Back the title of ‘inventor of Proof of Work,’ a label that Back did nothing to disabuse. Back’s public association with proof of work is based on his development of Hashcash, an anti-spam email concept that Back mused about in 1997 but didn’t get around to publishing until 2002.

Hashcash was cited in the Bitcoin white paper authored by Satoshi Nakamoto, who wrote that implementing a distributed timestamp server on a peer-to-peer basis would require a PoW system “similar to Adam Back’s Hashcash.”

But PoW didn’t originate with Back. As Back himself acknowledged in his 2002 Hashcash paper, multiple individuals—Cynthia Dwork and Moni Naor, Ari Juels and John Brainard—had proposed PoW systems prior to Hashcash. Back’s Hashcash paper grudgingly claimed its author “was not aware” of these prior works before unveiling his own creation.

Moreover, the PoW puzzle described in Bitcoin’s white paper more closely resembles the methodology described by researchers Tuomas Aura, Pekka Nikander, and Jussipekka Leiwo in their 2001 paper DOS-Resistant Authentication with Client Puzzles (which itself builds on Juels and Brainard).

Satoshi later revealed that Back was namechecked in the white paper solely because he was the only recipient who responded to Satoshi’s pre-publication distribution of the concept. And in that response, Back blithely informed Satoshi that his Bitcoin plans wouldn’t work.

Back with a vengeance

This skepticism may explain why Back appears to have utterly lost interest in Bitcoin after his initial communication with Satoshi, but his interest returned in April 2013, coincidentally around the time that the value of the Bitcoin token hit an all-time high (US$220, after starting the year at just $13.40). Within days, Back made his first appearance on the Bitcointalk forum, introducing himself as “inventor of hashcash (the bitcoin mining function).”

Back also began quietly updating his Hashcash websites to claim a stake in Bitcoin’s success. In 2012, Hashcash was still being described as “a denial-of-service counter measure tool,” but by 2013 Hashcash became “a proof-of-work algorithm” that is “most widely used as the bitcoin mining function.” A ‘bitcoin’ page was also added to the site, in case anyone missed the point.

Critics of the Bitcoin SV protocol have long ridiculed the ‘cult of Craig,’ a reference to the attention paid to Dr. Craig Wright, BSV thought-leader and—yes, folks—the real-world identity behind Satoshi. Adam Back appears to crave similar deification, perhaps on par with the ‘made in God’s image’ status of his Biblical namesake (although the rib that Adam donated to create the first woman proved infinitely more beneficial to society than Back’s dust-collecting Hashcash concept).

Enter the Blockstream

In 2014, Back co-founded Blockstream, which stated its mission as “finding an architecturally sound and permissionless way to extend Bitcoin.” Co-founder Austin Hill penned an introductory blog in which he claimed that he and Back had written “Can’t be evil” on a whiteboard while crafting their ethos. (Given what was to come, we assume that whiteboard actually read “Can we achieve success by telling people the truth? Can’t. Be evil.”)

Blockstream quickly unveiled its concept for ‘sidechains’ to relieve pressure by permanently blocking the stream of Bitcoin transactions at 6Mb per hour, which was good for about seven transactions per second. Blockstream envisioned different sidechains that would allow transactions large and small to occur away from the main chain through the use of proprietary tokens in lieu of Bitcoin’s then-primary token BTC.

Numerous Satoshi communications that emerged following the white paper’s release stated unambiguously that 1Mb was always intended as a stopgap solution for a temporary security problem and that the size of the individual blocks would need to increase dramatically as Bitcoin’s popularity grew.

In August 2015, Back claimed to be amenable to small increases, proposing an immediate doubling of blocks to 2Mb, rising to 4Mb in two years and to 8Mb in another two years, after which the impacts of these increases could be assessed.

Strongly agree. My suggestion 2MB now, then 4MB in 2 years and 8MB in 4years then re-asses. (Similar to BIP 102) https://t.co/1VjeF0SRP0

— Adam Back (@adam3us) August 26, 2015

Back opposed larger increases, claiming it would interfere with the average Bitcoin user’s ability to operate a network node. Back somewhat laughably argued that the reduced bandwidth caused by larger blocks would force these users to choose between operating a node and watching YouTube (with the rather comical implication that YouTube would win this conflict).

But as Dr. Wright has observed, unless you’re verifying transactions and mining blocks, you’re not a node. You’re a passive observer whose Raspberry Pi connection is slowing down the network. So by all means, enjoy your cat videos, but ditch the ‘I can haz nodeburger’ crap.

Back’s opposition to larger blocks also appeared more concerned with the dramatic reduction in the transaction fees paid to Bitcoin miners that would result. Fees tended to skyrocket every time Bitcoin activity rose, and Back correctly observed that “people only have an incentive to pay any transaction fees if there’s any shortage of space [in the blocks].”

It’s worth noting that a Forbes writer summed up Blockstream’s business model thusly: “Blockstream plans to sell side chains to enterprises, charging a fixed monthly fee, taking transaction fees and even selling hardware.” Back later confirmed the accuracy of this quote via his Twitter account.

In other words, Blockstream had a financial incentive to artificially constrain Bitcoin’s capacity to handle transactions, because otherwise there would be no need for Blockstream’s proprietary off-ramps.

Blockstream’s limited vision for the Bitcoin protocol became known as Bitcoin Core, appropriately named due to its focus on steadily stripping Bitcoin of any functionality beyond a supposed ‘store of value,’ aka digital gold. Meanwhile, other voices in the Bitcoin community continued to push for larger blocks and the restoration of script functions to expand Bitcoin’s use case.

So began the fabled Bitcoin Civil War—which, like the Korean War, never officially ended—with small blockers like Blockstream on one side and big blockers on the other. Both sides were playing to win, but Blockstream was fighting for its very existence, which may explain why it was willing to fight so dirty.

Rotten to the Core

It quickly became clear that Back’s initial enthusiasm for 8Mb blocks was simply a ruse to buy time while the Core camp maneuvered to outflank its large-block rivals. This duplicity was to become a pattern in Back’s dealings with the Bitcoin community in the years to come.

In February 2016, Back and five Core developers gathered in a Hong Kong hotel with a group of Chinese miners representing a significant chunk of Bitcoin’s hash power. After a contentious discussion that stretched into the wee hours, a deal was struck in which the miners agreed they would “only run Bitcoin Core-compatible consensus systems … for the foreseeable future.”

In exchange, Core agreed that the block size would be raised to 2Mb, plus whatever additional gains could be derived from incorporating Blockstream’s new Segregated Witness (SegWit) software. SegWit worked by stripping the signature data from Bitcoin transactions and replacing them with hashes of signature data, theoretically expanding the number of transactions one could stuff into a block.

But within months of this deal, Blockstream reneged on the original order of changes, and a shift in the narrative indicated that there would be no block size increase and that any gains would be achieved by SegWit alone. Miners felt betrayed, leading to a second agreement in New York in May 2017 that emphatically stated the protocol would continue with both SegWit and a doubling of the current 1Mb block size.

As news of this agreement spread, Back released an apparently unironic statement decrying the impropriety of “meeting in a hotel room to impose a change on Bitcoin.” Despite Blockstream/Core’s ongoing efforts to consolidate all Bitcoin decision-making in their own hands, Back suggested it was unwise for anyone to believe that “they trust themselves so it’s ok to seize central control.”

Back then, the community was still relatively insular, and Blockstream/Core had forged ties with individuals like Theymos, the anonymous figure who controlled most of the main Bitcoin forums and subreddits. Theymos and others of his ilk quickly began censoring both criticism of Core and support for non-Core protocols, ensuring that Core’s was the only option visible.

In the end, with its rivals silenced and the mining community desperate for a resolution, Blockstream/Core was declared the victor (at least, of this skirmish). The way was now clear for Back & Co. to grab Bitcoin’s wheel and steer all activity off the blockchain and into Blockstream’s walled gardens.

Lightning in a very, very small bottle

SegWit was officially launched in August 2017, a necessary precursor to the arrival of the Lightning Network, technically the product of a separate company but largely designed by Blockstream developer Rusty Russell.

Lightning was intended to enable smaller Bitcoin transactions that were otherwise impractical due to the fact that someone—Anyone? Anyone? Bueller?—had artificially constrained the main blockchain, pushing fees to absurd heights. Lightning employed ‘bidirectional payment channels’ that required two parties to freeze a certain amount of BTC on the main chain before transacting off-chain with Lightning’s proxy token.

For all its alleged convenience, Lightning imposed a host of new limitations, including the requirement to be online 24/7 to prevent your channel from closing prematurely and to prevent fraud. You also can’t top up your Lightning account if you spend all the Blockstream Monopoly tokens in your channel and you can’t reliably establish connections with individuals with whom you want to transact.

The solution to these problems is apparently something called ‘watchtowers,’ effectively giant Lightning hubs that will remain online in perpetuity and are willing to serve as trusted third parties between unconnected individuals. So basically, a bank. And so much for decentralization.

Blockstream released its own version of Lightning called ‘c-Lightning.’ (This has spawned many jokes based on the old Dick & Jane primers, as in ‘c-Lightning. c-Lightning fail. Fail, Lightning, fail!’) Blockstream’s Lightning is considered to be the most advanced of the versions currently operating, which is akin to saying the railway tracks Blockstream has laid are closer to the cliff than anyone else’s.

Six years after the Lightning white paper, the actual product still doesn’t work as advertised. Adam Back fancies himself a ‘cypherpunk,’ and Lightning was intended to add an extra layer of privacy to Bitcoin transactions. In this aspect, Lightning can certainly claim success, as it’s hard to monitor transactions that never occur.

Liquid pro quo

In October 2018, Blockstream unveiled the Liquid Network, basically Lightning on steroids, primarily intended to facilitate high-volume transfers between cryptocurrency exchanges. In yet another middle finger to decentralization, a handful of exchanges play the role of ‘functionaries’ in the ‘strong federation’ that ensures transfers make it to their intended destinations (through Blockstream’s proprietary hardware and software).

Among Liquid’s participating exchanges was Bitfinex, which was set up by the same team that established the controversial Tether stablecoin. In 2018, a widely read report alleged Tether-based purchases of BTC via Bitfinex were largely responsible for inflating the BTC token’s 2017 value bubble.

In early 2019, Adam Back publicly pushed back against growing suspicion of Tether’s capacity to mint tens of billions of new coins out of thin air, begging his Twitter followers not to repeat these claims. Not long after that, Tether began trading on Liquid. And not long after that, BTC’s current value bubble got underway. Odd, that.

It’s worth noting that Bitfinex was an early investor in Blockstream, although Bitfinex went unmentioned when Blockstream’s seed round investments were publicized.

Who pays the piper calls the tune

As for the investors Blockstream has disclosed, they include some unlikely partners for a purported cypherpunk such as Back. Among the most prominent names is an offshoot of French insurance giant AXA, which at the time of its Blockstream investment was run by Henri de Castries, then-chairman of the Bilderberg Group, the secretive group of elites that meets annually to discuss ways to safeguard global capitalism.

Blockstream also received support from the Digital Currency Group (DCG), the Barry Silbert-led outfit backed by a handful of traditional financial firms, including New York Life and MasterCard. Among DCG’s other funding recipients is Lightning Labs (the face of Lightning Network), as well as multiple exchanges, including Coinbase and Kraken.

DCG also owns cryptocurrency media site CoinDesk, ensuring a steady stream of positive coverage for Blockstream-related projects that is often repeated verbatim by other crypto news sites and a growing number of gullible mainstream media types.

(You may not want to look into the funding sources of Blockstream’s Japanese venture firm ‘Digital Garage,’ but should you decide to, there is an interesting tangent about laundering money donated to the Core developer group at MIT by none other than Jeffrey Epstein.)

Early on, the buzz around Bitcoin was that it would disrupt the financial status quo by offering an alternative to the banking giants. Instead, the old guard appears to have co-opted the revolution simply by buying off a few crypto Quislings.

Under Blockstream/Core’s control, Bitcoin was stripped of all utility until it was reduced to the ‘store of value’ currently known as BTC. CoinDesk barely talks about technology anymore, just endless articles on what US dollar price BTC hit that day, where the latest ‘support’ or ‘resistance’ points lie in this fiat valuation, and the size of BTC’s market cap. Honestly, why not just go all the way and hire Jim Cramer as editor?

Meanwhile, all of Bitcoin’s hijacked utility was transferred to proprietary secondary layers of the BTC blockchain controlled by Blockstsream. In this scheme, BTC is just a placeholder for transactions in Corporate Coin™. Meet the new cash, same as the old cash.

Welcome to Blockmart

Blockstream has recently been expanding its crypto mining operations. With Lightning and Liquid’s strategy of keeping all but infrequent summary transaction records off BTC’s main chain, Blockstream appears to be betting that other miners will soon find the activity financially unsustainable, leaving Blockstream to pick up the pieces.

Blockstream appears determined to establish itself as BTC’s Walmart, a vertically-integrated custodian that will continue to publicly sing decentralization’s praises even as it consolidates ever greater power in its own hands. Adam Back wanted to be seen as Bitcoin’s progenitor. Instead, he will go down in history as one of the chief architects of its demise.

Fortunately, the machinations of Back and his ilk led Dr. Wright to restore Bitcoin’s former glories in the form of Bitcoin SV, which remains true to the white paper’s original plan for a friction-free, low-cost peer-to-peer electronic cash system—one that can scale to a truly global volume—while dramatically expanding the blockchain’s data management abilities.

So perhaps Back has earned some recognition after all, if only as the irritant that gets inside an oyster and causes it to form a pearl.

Follow CoinGeek’s Crypto Crime Cartel series, which delves into the stream of groups—from BitMEX to Binance, Bitcoin.com, Blockstream, ShapeShift, Coinbase, Ripple and Ethereum—who have co-opted the digital asset revolution and turned the industry into a minefield for naïve (and even experienced) players in the market.

Source: https://coingeek.com/crypto-crime-cartel-behind-adam-back-and-blockstreams-attempts-to-constrain-bitcoin/


 Shocked This is how BTC is centralized, manipulated, made obsolete  Huh

kna
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MNP accounting firm declares BSV blockchain to be most energy efficient in new report

The BSV blockchain’s energy efficiency record has received a big boost from MNP, one of Canada’s largest professional accounting and business advisory service firms. Comparing models and real-world data from BTC, BCH and BSV, a report titled “The Search for a More Efficient Bitcoin” found BSV to be the most efficient due to its unbounded transaction processing capacity.

“So long as the size or number of transactions on the BSV network exceeds the limitation of the other protocols, BSV is the most efficient in this group,” the report concluded. It also found that BSV’s energy consumption per transaction is more likely to improve over time than the other two networks, and that the “arbitrary limitations of BTC and BCH may have a significant impact in consumption per transaction.”

Since restoring Bitcoin‘s original protocol in February 2020, BSV sustained a higher transaction count than BTC or BCH throughout that year, and for most of 2021. Even where its total transaction numbers have fallen below BTC’s, the numbers were close to equal.

MNP has over 7,000 employees nationwide and has offices in most of Canada’s major urban centers. Its clients include businesses across multiple sectors, as well as government and not-for-profit organizations. Representatives from the firm gave a preview of their research findings at the recent CoinGeek conference in New York City.

Transaction processing infrastructure firms growing in Canada

The firm wrote that it performed the research because there are approximately 12 publicly traded firms in Canada providing infrastructure for processing blockchain transactions as their main business. Focusing on SHA-256 proof-of-work (POW) based transaction processing operations, it added that there has been an increasing mainstream and social media focus on these networks’ energy consumption issues in 2021. This comes amid a growing conversation about digital assets in general, which has seen market prices rise in parallel to concerns over the industry’s sustainability.

“As more businesses and consumers adopt blockchain technologies, and regulatory requirements towards green and renewable energy continue to become more stringent, it is important to understand the impact blockchain has on the environment—especially related to the energy consumption issue,” the report said.

It set out to answer two main questions: Is it possible to accurately estimate the power consumption of a blockchain network? And is there a more efficient blockchain implementation when comparing kilowatt hours consumed per block? MNP’s findings confirmed the answer to both questions to be yes, and that BSV had proven itself the most efficient based on both its data models and real-world research.

Profitability, energy efficiency and throughput

MNP’s research did not take into account the current market price situation for each of the networks’ native assets. However, it noted that coin prices played a significant role in mining/processing operators’ choices when purchasing equipment. Describing this as “trading efficiency for value,” it said processors for more profitable assets may in fact choose older, less energy efficient equipment to give them lower overhead costs for a comparable amount of hashing power.

“Transactions are the ultimate measure of throughput,” the report noted.

While it added that “equipment efficiency is the major unknown factor in calculating network consumption,” its model took into consideration the most- and least-efficient methods. This covers the most efficient processing equipment available (the Bitmain 219 Pro, Ebang Ebit E11++, and Canaan AvalonMiner 1246) to the least (Bitmain Antminer S9, Ebang Ebit E10, and Canaan AvalonMiner 921) as well as air- and immersion-cooling methods. It assumed that mining operations would base decisions on profitability before efficiency.

“The number and size of the transactions in a block will affect the size of the block. BTC has a strictly limited block size approaching 4MB. BCH has a much more permissive limit of 32MB. BSV is unbound by block size. Since mining is what consumes energy, and blocks are the product of mining: the more transactions in a block, the lower the energy consumption per transaction. Similarly, the larger a block can be (measured in megabytes), the lower the energy consumption per megabyte.”

“Results indicate BTC consumes orders of magnitude more power than either of the other two protocols tested,” it said, between 60 and 250 times that of BSV per quarter. This is due to the popularity advantage BTC enjoys, despite its severely limited capacity.

MNP compared its model to actual block data from the three networks from April 1, 2020, to June 13, 2021. This included network difficulty figures and the hashrate necessary to mine/process a transaction block, looking at kilowatt hours per transaction and per megabyte of data processed. It concluded that this comparison confirmed the validity of its data model to provide a reasonable estimate of the three networks’ energy efficiency, while noting the model could be made more accurate by making profitability calculations at multiple stages over test periods.

At the end of the day, network data processing capacity is the key factor when determining energy efficiency, and it’s here that BSV has the clear advantage. As more users come to BSV, it becomes more efficient given it has no upper limit on scaling. With a mainstream focus on energy use and sustainability that is only likely to increase in the future, corporations and governments will be taking note of these results.

Watch: CoinGeek New York panel, How to Achieve Green Bitcoin: Energy Consumption & Environmental Sustainability

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mdycRafL6MU&t=27226s

Thanks to Jon Southurst source https://coingeek.com/mnp-accounting-firm-declares-bsv-blockchain-to-be-most-energy-efficient-in-new-report/
newbie
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Hey BTC miximalist people,

1. Doesn't it bother you that Taproot and Schnorr significantly alter the obsolescence capacity of BTC?

2. Doesn't it bother you that the designer of Taproot & Graftroot (further altering the Bitcoin protocol) is also Gregory Maxwell?

3. Doesn't it bother all you so-called "respectful of satoshi's work" "Bitcoin lovers" that BTC / Blockstream has completely altered the Bitcoin protocol? (https://coingeek.com/crypto-crime-cartel-behind-adam-back-and-blockstreams-attempts-to-constrain-bitcoin/)

4. Doesn't it bother you that your protocol modification change inexorably lead to security problems on BTC?

5. Do all of you Core programmers mind openly participating in fooling consumers?

6. Suggestion, why not rename your BTC directly to Greggle Coin?

7. Why don't you recognize the BSV code as Bitcoin (even though it is fully compliant with the white paper and the Bitcoin protocol)? Are your economic interests threatened?
newbie
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Oddly ~ ~ ~ Blablablaa~ ~ ~

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Once again your judgement is totally truncated. Concerning your obsessive questions about the courts, I strongly recommend you to turn to a lawyer/doctor specialist who will be able to answer you with accuracy.

Maybe, the best thing would be to bring your ubiquitous accusations directly to court, and not hide behind your computer through multiple accounts.

Have a good life!

newbie
Activity: 4
Merit: 46
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~ ~ ~ BlaBlaBlaaa~ ~
Welcome to Law!!! ~ ~ ~ BlaBlaBlaaa~ ~


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Hey you are interested in the Kleiman Vs Wright trial of the century then I recommend a more coherent and above all "up to date" source of your sorted, remixed and redacted information. Here is https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLTpDsXEwfAQqeKnLhhKMq4blGCqX_ecoY it's a daily appointment, exhibitions, debriefing, hard facts...

Since you seem to be very excited about what you think is fun.... I suggest you spend your time doing something... useful!

https://bitcoinsv.academy/ is the perfect place to learn and increase your technological knowledge, courses & trainings of all levels are given for free, so you have the possibility to discover in a really "playful" with real fun people, way how, why, because, what, who, where ... But I don't guarantee that it will stop your famous baldness.

It's time to make some progress. Good luck!
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So Greggle.

Did you know that when SegWit was adopted to deceive consumers, several functions were removed from the Bitcoin protocol, the same goes for the alert key and a multitude of functions just like the complete turing.

Blockstream and some of its predecessors removed the light, replaced the carbon frame with heavy iron, removed the brakes and the saddle, and added the small wheels, here is BTC updated in 2017 (segwit) & in 2021 (taproot) by Blockstream. some other concrete facts here: https://coingeek.com/crypto-crime-cartel-behind-adam-back-and-blockstreams-attempts-to-constrain-bitcoin/

Ipv6 layer 3 of the OSI model created in 1990 was finalised in RFC 2460 in December 1998 and was standardised in RFC 8200 in July 2017. However Ipv6 is an obsolete protocol that can be solved by the Bitcoin protocol.

Clearly, given the colossal stakes, I can't reveal exactly how here. That said, if you're seriously exploring the environment then you'll find out for yourself. Here's a lead: https://medium.com/nchain/tagged/metanet

Anyway Greggle, the only sect here is you and what you impose on yourself. Money, encryption keys (modified or not by devs during updates?) are a way like any other to get the truth out, other legal routes are currently being explored.
 
Understand that BTC is a gangrene that seriously harms the Bitcoin protocol because it pretends to be something it is not. That said, those responsible for this will soon be brought to the forefront.

No contingency plan. With or without Craig Wright the protocol is set in stone so that future Blockstream/Mastercard/Bilderberg (deceived) companies will stop perverting a perfect software.

It is a question of global functions for emerging technologies to come, the public interest is far greater than what you can currently perceive here, at this time. Where do you think technology and Bitcoin would be in 2140? Time does not matter, only life is important.
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Another victory for Satoshi Nakamoto: Peter McCormack to pay Craig Wright another £90k in costs, appeal refused

The U.K. court has denied Peter McCormack permission to appeal October’s sweeping judgment in which the court threw out all but one pillar of the blogger’s defense against Dr. Craig Wright’s defamation suit. Peter McCormack will now proceed to defend himself at trial on the limited basis that though his attacks on Dr. Wright were untrue, they did not cause serious harm to his reputation.

Read more https://coingeek.com/another-victory-for-satoshi-nakamoto-peter-mccormack-to-pay-craig-wright-another-90k-in-costs-appeal-refused/
newbie
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Notorious defamation troll Arthur Van Pelt who constantly harasses BSV and Craig Wright with misinformation and lies, admits that he "lives off of donations to do this" in reference to defaming Craig Wright and trolling BSV on Social Media at 1:18 mark:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oHvzIbnQ_mQ&t=4685s


Source: https://twitter.com/cryptorebel_SV/status/1448872867098025985

Getting paid to harass people? Seriously! The 🤡 is fucking wasting his life, time is running out but he only has one life and he's wasting his time.  Cry sad.


This guy is so obsessed by Craig !
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What I understand from the metrics is that data is the fuel of the new economy of the fourth industrial revolution for the masses users, in this regard only the original Bitcoin protocol aka BSV is Turing complete, tailored among other things to accommodate several billion users, iot, and a base foundation for future A.I.

Note that contrary to what you write there is not only weather on the blockchain. an example here https://urchain.com/#/ to see what happens in real time.



And there https://bsvdata.com/applications for usual stats.



Laughable or not, this data exists, it is auditable, so no risk of misleading (honest) consumers, so Bitcoin protocol is white paper compliant, full function, like a standard for data, IPv4 & IPv6 are obsolete, Bitcoin fixes that.

No sect here, everyone is free to participate or not, to try, to use, to learn, to build, to grow, to solve goals for tomorrow's challenges, there are also passionate people, companies, curious people, and experimenters of multiple solutions.

All of them have one thing in common that you don't understand, because they are deployed on a stable, secure, unlimited protocol, set in stone, Bitcoin.

PGP key or any other process doesn't matter, it doesn't concern me.

I hope I have illuminated the darkness of your obtuse ignorance. If you had any real respect for satoshi then you would take the time to question what you take for granted.

For your frustration which is expanding your baldness, it might be better to go directly to a court of law to bring your accusations before a judge, would be more honest, respectful of satoshi's work and even that of others in general. although i understand that having balls is not necessarily innate. That said, anything is possible!

newbie
Activity: 5
Merit: 12
Roll Eyes

Craig Wright is ~ ~ ~ blablablaaa~ ~ ~


Nice! I suggest that you make your accusations in a court of law instead of hiding in the shadows of your internet connection like no balls.



But why waste time? BSv is like #60 shitcoin by market cap, meaning objectively time is better spent warning noobs about gambling on 55 more relevant shitcoins. On top of that, we all know that those coins are never moving, and i expect Faketoshi has already transferred all of his assets to Ayre. This way he's uncollectable and will just declare bankruptcy so Ira won't be able to get a penny.


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Understand that bitcoin is not a ticker, it is a computer protocol.

You & your troll friends know that but you participate in fooling consumers into believing that BTC is legitimate, but BTC is not BSV, BSV is bitcoin, compare source codes, functions, attributes, white paper.

The white paper governs the bitcoin computer protocol .

No SegWit functions in the white paper, no LN; no replaceByFee, ChildPays4Parent, let alone Taproot, mixer functions, not present in the white paper.

Be brave & honest, be ethical, be humble, if you are really a bitcoin enthusiast, build, share your passion with beginners they deserve to have a compliant, solid, secure, stable & scalable tool such as BSV and its original Bitcoin protocol to work well and have access to infinite possibilities. Respecting satoshi, the creator of the software, respecting his work, is the least you can do as a former user I don't understand why you don't see all this (knowingly?)

Put down your lasers that blind you. It's about time!


Check, verify & wake up! https://coingeek.com/crypto-crime-cartel-behind-adam-back-and-blockstreams-attempts-to-constrain-bitcoin/



Craig is Satoshi, it's totally obvious Smiley
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