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Topic: [ANN][NOTE]DNotes - Celebrating DNotes 3rd Birthday - Forum Now Open - page 201. (Read 814541 times)

legendary
Activity: 1932
Merit: 1111
DNotes
All, I need a few quotes from our forum for the new site. If there are any that made an impact on you, or ones you feel important for our industry, please post it here.
legendary
Activity: 1610
Merit: 1060
That old blockchain epicentre is well on its way to coming to fruition.

It is so awesome watching a project develop over time when you were sort of sifting around from the beginning. You begin with a positive 'I feel good about this one...', then it develops too 'oh, they seem to be a bit more switched on to the others - say all the right things', to 'things are moving along nicely, commitments are being met and the project is still alive and holding value! (not common for this industry!)' and then to 'whoa, this really has the potential to change everything' (which is why I was here in the first place - I like proven experience).

Whether it is DNotes building block or not, this will definitely benefit crypto, and DNotes in one way or another. Excellent work. Glad to see Tally capital getting involved.

Just to be clear. This is Matt's project and he has been working on it before I met him. I was at his KeyNote speech at the Inside Bitcoin this morning when he made the big announcement. DNotes will be supportive of the project but have not decided on our level of involvement. It took me over two hours to get home today which will be too demanding. We may maintain a minimum commitment with our own suburban office closer to my home. It is not likely that we will make a firm commitment until early next year. I will be meeting with the group again this Monday.

Turn out at the conference was on the low side; per less than 200. I met quite a few industry leaders and had some friendly conversation. With due respect, none of them seem to know much about DNotes at all nor seem to understand the significance of CryptoMoms, DNotesVault and our family of CRISP. It is news to them. One of our strengths is to remain agile and be able to make decision very quickly. DCEBrief will be invaluable to our industry. What I learned today further reaffirmed it. It is quite amazing how much we have accomplished so far.
hero member
Activity: 846
Merit: 535
That old blockchain epicentre is well on its way to coming to fruition.

It is so awesome watching a project develop over time when you were sort of sifting around from the beginning. You begin with a positive 'I feel good about this one...', then it develops too 'oh, they seem to be a bit more switched on to the others - say all the right things', to 'things are moving along nicely, commitments are being met and the project is still alive and holding value! (not common for this industry!)' and then to 'whoa, this really has the potential to change everything' (which is why I was here in the first place - I like proven experience).

Whether it is DNotes building block or not, this will definitely benefit crypto, and DNotes in one way or another. Excellent work. Glad to see Tally capital getting involved.
legendary
Activity: 1932
Merit: 1111
DNotes
This is interesting.

NEW BITCOIN CENTER OPENS IN CHICAGO

Another of America's major cities will now have its own Bitcoin Center, opening today in Chicago after an announcement at the Inside Bitcoins Conference happening there now.

The effort is funded in part by Tally Capital, a local venture capital firm that sees the potential of block chain technology. The new center will be located at 1871, an office building packed with tech start-ups, currently housing more than 300.

Aside from the usual mission of a Bitcoin information center, the Chicago Bitcoin Center will also focus on incubation of local Bitcoin start-ups, providing them with office space and opportunities to make important connections with local entrepreneurs and innovators. As part of this new move, the owner of the building will begin accepting rent at 1871 in Bitcoin, an obviously huge factor for the Bitcoin Center, which may rely largely on Bitcoin contributions.

[...]

https://www.cryptocoinsnews.com/new-bitcoin-center-opens-chicago/

Looks like a good place for DNotes to setup shop

That's a possibility in the future.
member
Activity: 72
Merit: 10
This is interesting.

NEW BITCOIN CENTER OPENS IN CHICAGO

Another of America's major cities will now have its own Bitcoin Center, opening today in Chicago after an announcement at the Inside Bitcoins Conference happening there now.

The effort is funded in part by Tally Capital, a local venture capital firm that sees the potential of block chain technology. The new center will be located at 1871, an office building packed with tech start-ups, currently housing more than 300.

Aside from the usual mission of a Bitcoin information center, the Chicago Bitcoin Center will also focus on incubation of local Bitcoin start-ups, providing them with office space and opportunities to make important connections with local entrepreneurs and innovators. As part of this new move, the owner of the building will begin accepting rent at 1871 in Bitcoin, an obviously huge factor for the Bitcoin Center, which may rely largely on Bitcoin contributions.

[...]

https://www.cryptocoinsnews.com/new-bitcoin-center-opens-chicago/

Looks like a good place for DNotes to setup shop
legendary
Activity: 1932
Merit: 1111
DNotes
Further iterations.





By the way Mochilles, would you send me the source code on these? PSD or AI if you have it.
sr. member
Activity: 452
Merit: 250
I will be at the Chicago Inside Bitcoin convention today but will be checking in later this evening. Have a good day. Alan

Good luck, hope you make some great contacts there. Let us know how it went.
legendary
Activity: 1932
Merit: 1111
DNotes
This is interesting.

NEW BITCOIN CENTER OPENS IN CHICAGO

Another of America's major cities will now have its own Bitcoin Center, opening today in Chicago after an announcement at the Inside Bitcoins Conference happening there now.

The effort is funded in part by Tally Capital, a local venture capital firm that sees the potential of block chain technology. The new center will be located at 1871, an office building packed with tech start-ups, currently housing more than 300.

Aside from the usual mission of a Bitcoin information center, the Chicago Bitcoin Center will also focus on incubation of local Bitcoin start-ups, providing them with office space and opportunities to make important connections with local entrepreneurs and innovators. As part of this new move, the owner of the building will begin accepting rent at 1871 in Bitcoin, an obviously huge factor for the Bitcoin Center, which may rely largely on Bitcoin contributions.

[...]

https://www.cryptocoinsnews.com/new-bitcoin-center-opens-chicago/
legendary
Activity: 1932
Merit: 1111
DNotes
I will be at the Chicago Inside Bitcoin convention today but will be checking in later this evening. Have a good day. Alan

Excellent! Wish I could join you.
legendary
Activity: 1610
Merit: 1060
I will be at the Chicago Inside Bitcoin convention today but will be checking in later this evening. Have a good day. Alan
legendary
Activity: 1610
Merit: 1060
Very interesting article:


Visa: Bitcoin Has a Future in Payments


Large existing payments companies are “lowering the drawbridges” and working more openly with new players in the space, according to a Visa executive.

Jonathan Vaux, executive director of new digital payments and strategy at Visa Europe, was speaking at WIRED Money, held in London yesterday.

“I genuinely believe that by working together, we will succeed together. I think that the innovation that the startups bring is fantastic and that the scale the incumbents – the banks, the Visas of the world – can bring is really really valuable,” he said.

Removing friction

Vaux’s session at the one-day conference focused on removing friction between startups and incumbents within the payments space.

Formerly vice president at American Express, Vaux said bitcoin is very much on his radar:

“The one thing I often get asked about is bitcoin. I do see … a separation between the currency and the technology that sits under it. From the point of view of currency, I think that's interesting. As Visa, that's what we do – we manage currencies.”

However, he finds the attitude of some of those in the cryptocurrency space a little bizarre. When he was at South by Southwest earlier this year, he noticed a number of cryptocurrency company members arguing.  He said it came across like a scene from Life of Brian, where fractious independence movements the People's Front of Judea and the Judean People's Front spend more time fighting each other than achieving their shared goal.

Regardless, he believes bitcoin has a future in the world of payments and wider finance.

“I think it's going to be really interesting how that currency stabilises,” he said, adding:

“Like any other currency, although this might not be the best week to discuss it, at Visa we are very keen to facilitate that translation of currencies on a global basis.”

The executive said he is also deeply interested in the underlying technology behind bitcoin and suggested it could be used to streamline the payments process when implemented by incumbents, such as Visa.

“Ultimately, what we're looking for is the technology and the component parts that we can bring into our platform and into our marketplace, that delivers a richer proposition,” he explained.

Jonathan Vaux Visa
Jonathan Vaux, executive director of new digital payments and strategy at Visa Europe, speaks at WIRED Money.
Startup advice

Vaux receives pitches on a daily basis from startups looking to form partnerships with Visa and he used his WIRED Money session to offer some advice to such companies.

Number one on his list was preparation. Startups need to “do their homework” and make sure they’re confident the service or product they are pitching is tailored to the larger company’s needs.

“Ok, you want my brand, you want my money, you want my distribution, what I have no sense of is what is in it for me as the provider of that service,” he said.

A lot of the startups Vaux comes into contact with are targeting their products at millennials, which doesn’t align with the target audiences of larger companies. He explained:  “Many of these services are so specifically focussed on the millennials that it may be hard [to gain a partnership] because, honestly, those are not going to be most large financial organisations' most successful customers."

Another gripe Vaux has is startups pitching to him without having thought extensively enough about the future roadmap of their businesses.  “It is a large organisation's worst nightmare to be dependent on a partner who cannot fulfil the obligations from a financial or from a scalability standpoint. Therefore, there's a lot of nervousness about that and the more clear and well thought out the plan is, the better for everyone,” he explained.

Areas of interest

Vaux said some of the areas Visa is currently interested in include “identification, device fraud, using cloud-based technology to take some of the pain out of online payments, digital receipting”.

He said these are the kind of services Visa thinks will really add value for its current and future customers.

At the end of his session, when asked what he sees as the highest risk to the future of Visa, he replied “complacency”, concluding:

“I think that you have to adapt, you have to learn … I think what we have to focus on is where we add value and collaborate with others to do that.”

http://www.coindesk.com/visa-bitcoin-has-a-future-in-payments/




Good find Chase. Sounds like they are open to working with digital currencies and finding a place to integrate with their services. That is very positive for our industry and DNotes.

Yes, they are open to working with them as long as they get their cut of the pie. Just like now they get a percentage of the transaction (in cash) and once they work with digital currencies it will just switch to a percentage of the digital currency (DNotes). As usual they will appear to be all nice and sweet but will get you in the end with fees. I would not work with them given the chance. One of the major points of digital currency is the near zero fees. Yeah they will say zero fees at first, but we all know how that works out.

Credit card companies make the poor, poorer. Digital currency (DNotes) will remove this problem.

Thank you for participating in this HOT topic. You are already right on one point. They are “very nice”. Quite a few from different credit card companies and major banks have already connected with me on my professional network on LinkedIn. Of course, I am “very nice” too, lol. But that’s me. Having said that, I will say that you have made some solid points. Beyond the high merchant fees and charge backs, what has been most troubling to me is the high interest burden of close to 30% the average consumers and small business owners have been paying. It is easy for those who have the cash flow to say “why don’t you just pay off the entire balance every time. If they could, they would. Tens of millions of people are struck with high credit card balance because they simply do not have the money to pay it off or even pay it down. I never have a problem that everyone in business is out there to make a profit. However, I feel very strongly that the credit card companies have been taking advantage of those who can least afford by charging them such outrageously high rate when they are getting the money for nothing. Indeed, that is one more reasons why I am so passionate about building DNotes to be the trusted global digital currency for everyone worldwide.


“Credit card companies make the poor, poorer. Digital currency (DNotes) will remove this problem.” I am 100% in agreement with you, HORT. Thank you for taking a strong position.
hero member
Activity: 508
Merit: 501
Very interesting article:


Visa: Bitcoin Has a Future in Payments


Large existing payments companies are “lowering the drawbridges” and working more openly with new players in the space, according to a Visa executive.

Jonathan Vaux, executive director of new digital payments and strategy at Visa Europe, was speaking at WIRED Money, held in London yesterday.

“I genuinely believe that by working together, we will succeed together. I think that the innovation that the startups bring is fantastic and that the scale the incumbents – the banks, the Visas of the world – can bring is really really valuable,” he said.

Removing friction

Vaux’s session at the one-day conference focused on removing friction between startups and incumbents within the payments space.

Formerly vice president at American Express, Vaux said bitcoin is very much on his radar:

“The one thing I often get asked about is bitcoin. I do see … a separation between the currency and the technology that sits under it. From the point of view of currency, I think that's interesting. As Visa, that's what we do – we manage currencies.”

However, he finds the attitude of some of those in the cryptocurrency space a little bizarre. When he was at South by Southwest earlier this year, he noticed a number of cryptocurrency company members arguing.  He said it came across like a scene from Life of Brian, where fractious independence movements the People's Front of Judea and the Judean People's Front spend more time fighting each other than achieving their shared goal.

Regardless, he believes bitcoin has a future in the world of payments and wider finance.

“I think it's going to be really interesting how that currency stabilises,” he said, adding:

“Like any other currency, although this might not be the best week to discuss it, at Visa we are very keen to facilitate that translation of currencies on a global basis.”

The executive said he is also deeply interested in the underlying technology behind bitcoin and suggested it could be used to streamline the payments process when implemented by incumbents, such as Visa.

“Ultimately, what we're looking for is the technology and the component parts that we can bring into our platform and into our marketplace, that delivers a richer proposition,” he explained.

Jonathan Vaux Visa
Jonathan Vaux, executive director of new digital payments and strategy at Visa Europe, speaks at WIRED Money.
Startup advice

Vaux receives pitches on a daily basis from startups looking to form partnerships with Visa and he used his WIRED Money session to offer some advice to such companies.

Number one on his list was preparation. Startups need to “do their homework” and make sure they’re confident the service or product they are pitching is tailored to the larger company’s needs.

“Ok, you want my brand, you want my money, you want my distribution, what I have no sense of is what is in it for me as the provider of that service,” he said.

A lot of the startups Vaux comes into contact with are targeting their products at millennials, which doesn’t align with the target audiences of larger companies. He explained:  “Many of these services are so specifically focussed on the millennials that it may be hard [to gain a partnership] because, honestly, those are not going to be most large financial organisations' most successful customers."

Another gripe Vaux has is startups pitching to him without having thought extensively enough about the future roadmap of their businesses.  “It is a large organisation's worst nightmare to be dependent on a partner who cannot fulfil the obligations from a financial or from a scalability standpoint. Therefore, there's a lot of nervousness about that and the more clear and well thought out the plan is, the better for everyone,” he explained.

Areas of interest

Vaux said some of the areas Visa is currently interested in include “identification, device fraud, using cloud-based technology to take some of the pain out of online payments, digital receipting”.

He said these are the kind of services Visa thinks will really add value for its current and future customers.

At the end of his session, when asked what he sees as the highest risk to the future of Visa, he replied “complacency”, concluding:

“I think that you have to adapt, you have to learn … I think what we have to focus on is where we add value and collaborate with others to do that.”

http://www.coindesk.com/visa-bitcoin-has-a-future-in-payments/




Good find Chase. Sounds like they are open to working with digital currencies and finding a place to integrate with their services. That is very positive for our industry and DNotes.

Yes, they are open to working with them as long as they get their cut of the pie. Just like now they get a percentage of the transaction (in cash) and once they work with digital currencies it will just switch to a percentage of the digital currency (DNotes). As usual they will appear to be all nice and sweet but will get you in the end with fees. I would not work with them given the chance. One of the major points of digital currency is the near zero fees. Yeah they will say zero fees at first, but we all know how that works out.

Credit card companies make the poor, poorer. Digital currency (DNotes) will remove this problem.
legendary
Activity: 1932
Merit: 1111
DNotes
Very interesting article:


Visa: Bitcoin Has a Future in Payments


Large existing payments companies are “lowering the drawbridges” and working more openly with new players in the space, according to a Visa executive.

Jonathan Vaux, executive director of new digital payments and strategy at Visa Europe, was speaking at WIRED Money, held in London yesterday.

“I genuinely believe that by working together, we will succeed together. I think that the innovation that the startups bring is fantastic and that the scale the incumbents – the banks, the Visas of the world – can bring is really really valuable,” he said.

Removing friction

Vaux’s session at the one-day conference focused on removing friction between startups and incumbents within the payments space.

Formerly vice president at American Express, Vaux said bitcoin is very much on his radar:

“The one thing I often get asked about is bitcoin. I do see … a separation between the currency and the technology that sits under it. From the point of view of currency, I think that's interesting. As Visa, that's what we do – we manage currencies.”

However, he finds the attitude of some of those in the cryptocurrency space a little bizarre. When he was at South by Southwest earlier this year, he noticed a number of cryptocurrency company members arguing.  He said it came across like a scene from Life of Brian, where fractious independence movements the People's Front of Judea and the Judean People's Front spend more time fighting each other than achieving their shared goal.

Regardless, he believes bitcoin has a future in the world of payments and wider finance.

“I think it's going to be really interesting how that currency stabilises,” he said, adding:

“Like any other currency, although this might not be the best week to discuss it, at Visa we are very keen to facilitate that translation of currencies on a global basis.”

The executive said he is also deeply interested in the underlying technology behind bitcoin and suggested it could be used to streamline the payments process when implemented by incumbents, such as Visa.

“Ultimately, what we're looking for is the technology and the component parts that we can bring into our platform and into our marketplace, that delivers a richer proposition,” he explained.

Jonathan Vaux Visa
Jonathan Vaux, executive director of new digital payments and strategy at Visa Europe, speaks at WIRED Money.
Startup advice

Vaux receives pitches on a daily basis from startups looking to form partnerships with Visa and he used his WIRED Money session to offer some advice to such companies.

Number one on his list was preparation. Startups need to “do their homework” and make sure they’re confident the service or product they are pitching is tailored to the larger company’s needs.

“Ok, you want my brand, you want my money, you want my distribution, what I have no sense of is what is in it for me as the provider of that service,” he said.

A lot of the startups Vaux comes into contact with are targeting their products at millennials, which doesn’t align with the target audiences of larger companies. He explained:  “Many of these services are so specifically focussed on the millennials that it may be hard [to gain a partnership] because, honestly, those are not going to be most large financial organisations' most successful customers."

Another gripe Vaux has is startups pitching to him without having thought extensively enough about the future roadmap of their businesses.  “It is a large organisation's worst nightmare to be dependent on a partner who cannot fulfil the obligations from a financial or from a scalability standpoint. Therefore, there's a lot of nervousness about that and the more clear and well thought out the plan is, the better for everyone,” he explained.

Areas of interest

Vaux said some of the areas Visa is currently interested in include “identification, device fraud, using cloud-based technology to take some of the pain out of online payments, digital receipting”.

He said these are the kind of services Visa thinks will really add value for its current and future customers.

At the end of his session, when asked what he sees as the highest risk to the future of Visa, he replied “complacency”, concluding:

“I think that you have to adapt, you have to learn … I think what we have to focus on is where we add value and collaborate with others to do that.”

http://www.coindesk.com/visa-bitcoin-has-a-future-in-payments/




Good find Chase. Sounds like they are open to working with digital currencies and finding a place to integrate with their services. That is very positive for our industry and DNotes.
legendary
Activity: 1638
Merit: 1005
Very interesting article:


Visa: Bitcoin Has a Future in Payments


Large existing payments companies are “lowering the drawbridges” and working more openly with new players in the space, according to a Visa executive.

Jonathan Vaux, executive director of new digital payments and strategy at Visa Europe, was speaking at WIRED Money, held in London yesterday.

“I genuinely believe that by working together, we will succeed together. I think that the innovation that the startups bring is fantastic and that the scale the incumbents – the banks, the Visas of the world – can bring is really really valuable,” he said.

Removing friction

Vaux’s session at the one-day conference focused on removing friction between startups and incumbents within the payments space.

Formerly vice president at American Express, Vaux said bitcoin is very much on his radar:

“The one thing I often get asked about is bitcoin. I do see … a separation between the currency and the technology that sits under it. From the point of view of currency, I think that's interesting. As Visa, that's what we do – we manage currencies.”

However, he finds the attitude of some of those in the cryptocurrency space a little bizarre. When he was at South by Southwest earlier this year, he noticed a number of cryptocurrency company members arguing.  He said it came across like a scene from Life of Brian, where fractious independence movements the People's Front of Judea and the Judean People's Front spend more time fighting each other than achieving their shared goal.

Regardless, he believes bitcoin has a future in the world of payments and wider finance.

“I think it's going to be really interesting how that currency stabilises,” he said, adding:

“Like any other currency, although this might not be the best week to discuss it, at Visa we are very keen to facilitate that translation of currencies on a global basis.”

The executive said he is also deeply interested in the underlying technology behind bitcoin and suggested it could be used to streamline the payments process when implemented by incumbents, such as Visa.

“Ultimately, what we're looking for is the technology and the component parts that we can bring into our platform and into our marketplace, that delivers a richer proposition,” he explained.

Jonathan Vaux Visa
Jonathan Vaux, executive director of new digital payments and strategy at Visa Europe, speaks at WIRED Money.
Startup advice

Vaux receives pitches on a daily basis from startups looking to form partnerships with Visa and he used his WIRED Money session to offer some advice to such companies.

Number one on his list was preparation. Startups need to “do their homework” and make sure they’re confident the service or product they are pitching is tailored to the larger company’s needs.

“Ok, you want my brand, you want my money, you want my distribution, what I have no sense of is what is in it for me as the provider of that service,” he said.

A lot of the startups Vaux comes into contact with are targeting their products at millennials, which doesn’t align with the target audiences of larger companies. He explained:  “Many of these services are so specifically focussed on the millennials that it may be hard [to gain a partnership] because, honestly, those are not going to be most large financial organisations' most successful customers."

Another gripe Vaux has is startups pitching to him without having thought extensively enough about the future roadmap of their businesses.  “It is a large organisation's worst nightmare to be dependent on a partner who cannot fulfil the obligations from a financial or from a scalability standpoint. Therefore, there's a lot of nervousness about that and the more clear and well thought out the plan is, the better for everyone,” he explained.

Areas of interest

Vaux said some of the areas Visa is currently interested in include “identification, device fraud, using cloud-based technology to take some of the pain out of online payments, digital receipting”.

He said these are the kind of services Visa thinks will really add value for its current and future customers.

At the end of his session, when asked what he sees as the highest risk to the future of Visa, he replied “complacency”, concluding:

“I think that you have to adapt, you have to learn … I think what we have to focus on is where we add value and collaborate with others to do that.”

http://www.coindesk.com/visa-bitcoin-has-a-future-in-payments/


legendary
Activity: 1932
Merit: 1111
DNotes
Very nice Mochilles. A bit hard to see the Digital Currency Executive, even on the large logo.

Agreed, might be a bit too small, does look nice though.
sr. member
Activity: 452
Merit: 250
Very nice Mochilles. A bit hard to see the Digital Currency Executive, even on the large logo.
sr. member
Activity: 452
Merit: 250
A warning for those using brain wallets.

Brainflayer: A Password Cracker That Steals Bitcoins From Your Brain

FOR BITCOIN FANS, the notion of a “brain wallet” has long seemed like the ideal method of storing your cryptocurrency: By simply remembering a complex passphrase, the trick allows anyone to essentially hold millions of dollars worth of digital cash in their brain alone, with no need to keep any records on a computer.

It turns out, however, that your mind is a surprisingly vulnerable place to put the key to your crypto-liquid assets. And now one hacker is releasing the brain-thieving software to prove it.

Next month at the hacker conference DefCon, security Ryan Castellucci plans to release a piece of software he calls Brainflayer, designed to crack bitcoin brain wallets and let any hacker suck out the digital cash stored in them. In fact, wise bitcoiners have known for years that brain wallets—despite their promise of hiding crypto treasure in the most private depths of the user’s mind—are often unsafe. Castellucci says his cracking program is designed to serve as a public demonstration of that insecurity for those who still haven’t gotten the message, and put an end to the practice for good.

[...]

The problem, says Castellucci, is that humans don’t choose strong, random passphrases as well as they think they do. And any hacker can patiently guess millions upon millions of passphrases, converting them into private keys and trying them on every bitcoin address on the blockchain, the public ledger of all bitcoin locations. Even when a bitcoin user thinks she has chosen a sufficiently strong passphrase for her brain wallet, Castellucci says it often can’t stand up to the cracking resources of thieves motivated by an instant cash reward. “The usual bitcoin private key is long enough that no one is going to guess it before the sun burns out,” says Castellucci. “But if they just have to guess your passphrase, they’re going to do it, because people are terrible random number generators.”

[...]

http://www.wired.com/2015/07/brainflayer-password-cracker-steals-bitcoins-brain/

Specific words will generate the same private key every time, as soon as I figured that out, I stayed away from brain wallets. So if I tried "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog" and got the private key, I could check it against a list of addresses to see if I get a match. In this case, the list of addresses is the entire blockchain.



 
hero member
Activity: 846
Merit: 535
I agree, top work mochilles.
legendary
Activity: 1932
Merit: 1111
DNotes
Further iterations.





Thank you Mochilles, these are looking very good.
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