Author

Topic: [AUCTION] Wired Magazine | August 1996 | Nanobucks, Digital Currency, & Ecash (Read 401 times)

legendary
Activity: 2828
Merit: 1222
Just looking for peace
Congo kryptowerk

I thought for some reason that this was ending on 27th
My bad lol

legendary
Activity: 2114
Merit: 1403
Disobey.
Congratulations, Kryptowerk! You're the high bidder! You've won! Grin

I'll be in touch with you very soon via PM. (Gotta have some coffee first!)

Regards,
Chris

Wow, I got lucky here. Very happy. The combination of crypto related and a John Carmack cover: Just awesome.

Yes, please let your brother authograph the magazin. Not sure where it would be appropriate, though - maybe on the page where he is mentioned? Suggestions welcome.

PS: Enjoy your coffee, but don't miss out on my current raffle: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=5088616.20
legendary
Activity: 2676
Merit: 2203
BitcoinPenny.com
Congratulations, Kryptowerk! You're the high bidder! You've won! Grin

I'll be in touch with you very soon via PM. (Gotta have some coffee first!)

Regards,
Chris
legendary
Activity: 2676
Merit: 2203
BitcoinPenny.com
0.006 BTC

^^^ Current high bid! ^^^

Good luck, everyone!

Regards,
Me
legendary
Activity: 2114
Merit: 1403
Disobey.
copper member
Activity: 89
Merit: 0
legendary
Activity: 2114
Merit: 1403
Disobey.
legendary
Activity: 2676
Merit: 2203
BitcoinPenny.com
0.003BTC

^^^ Current high bidder! ^^^

Good luck! Smiley

Regards,
Chris
legendary
Activity: 2114
Merit: 1403
Disobey.
Awesome. With John Carmack on the cover it already makes it a collectible for me.

0.002
legendary
Activity: 2520
Merit: 3238
The Stone the masons rejected was the cornerstone.
legendary
Activity: 2676
Merit: 2203
BitcoinPenny.com
Here are a few snippets that explore those early bitcoin similarities…

Quote
If the Internet brings civilization to the mind in cyberspace, then you have just entered its flea market. This is The InfoHaus, an electronic bazaar of digital dreck, where almost everything costs less than US$10. Inside you'll find a pulsating, mutating collection of unknown and unknowable merchants fulfilling the most disparate needs…

Sounds like Silk Road.

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This online trading village is just one corner of the emerging world of electronic cash, but with a very important difference. It's the slice where the only cash that really counts is the coin.

Quote
It's a market where buyers trade money they can't grasp [with merchants they can't see].

Yeah, that's bitcoin.

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In the real world the lowest denomination is the penny, but out on the Net it could be a thousandth or, in the wildest conception, one ten-millionth of a penny. A nanobuck.
The wildest conception? Bitcoin goes one decimal deeper! 1 Nanobuck = 1 Satoshi.

Quote
Here's the tricky part: the cost of performing a transaction must be lower than the value of the transaction. When it comes to juggling hundredths of a cent, efficient use of communications channels and computing power will be key. Simply put, computers make nanotransactions possible.

Yes, computers DO make bitcoin possible. Who would've thought it? The folks at Wired, that’s who!

Quote
To get down to true nanobuck territory, the number of processing cycles between computers, the slices of communications bandwidth needed between points, and the maintenance of all this digital chitchat must be cut to thousandths, millionths, or someday billionths of a cent. Yet the would-be barons of digital microeconomics believe that there is a huge untapped market for cash transactions on the Net. What is missing is the technology that would unleash it.

We have that technology now. It’s called bitcoin.

Quote
Cryptologist David Chaum's DigiCash turns a user's hard drive into a purse.
Purse. Wallet. Whatever.

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To obtain this digital cash, called ecash, you create a series of numbers that will represent a mixture of coins.
Quote
I'd earlier obtained a user name and password from DigiCash. But this only gets me close to getting started. I have to create a string of at least 25 random characters to move onto the next step, which is to create yet another password, unrelated to the first one, so I can create my own private encryption key.
Long strings of random-looking numbers? Check. Private keys? Check. LOL

Quote
Using DigiCash, a meter icon onscreen keeps track of how much cash is still stored on the hard disk. But storing numbers on the hard disk is risky. If you have a disk crash - or if your computer is stolen - you've lost your money. Just like losing your wallet. Result: users are likely to acquire encoded electronic cash only shortly before they intend to spend it and acquire only as much as they think they'll really need.
This is every bitcoin wallet.

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Transactions are anonymous, unless the seller specifically asks for the identity of the buyer.

Kind of like Monero too?

Quote
In a given week, David Bianco, a senior member of the technical staff at iTRiBE Inc., has about 140 visitors to his Digital Cash Shop, which accepts only DigiCash's ecash. But only about five people a week look at the order link for his lone product, a piece of Star Trek/Dr. Who-genre science fiction called Cyborged. Of those, he may get a single order, since he restricts purchases to ecash [only]. "Most people don't actually have digital cash,'' he acknowledges.

^^^ That’s my older brother — the true cryptocurrency OG! No credit cards. No fiat. He accepted cryptocurrency ONLY. (You’re my crypto-hero, David!)

Quote
DigiCash, on the other hand, stands outside the existing banking networks and offers complete anonymity.

Again…like bitcoin or Monero.

Quote
Electronic coins could be another technology…

And the article even reviews some of the new digital cash systems! (Most are merely debit card systems, but these two are the crypto-coolest!

Quote
[DIGICASH] Hard drive as coin purse...The serial numbers of the coins are maintained, so the merchant and bank can keep records of which coins are spent.
Projected cost: One-tenth of a cent per transaction.
Smallest appropriate purchase: 1 cent.
Upside: Anonymity; strong cryptography.
Downside: Anonymity (could allow money laundering); cost of strong crypto could be underestimated.

They mentioned money laundering. This is TOO bitcoin. LOL

Quote
[MILLICENT] Two-step process using fake money akin to Geoffrey Bucks at Toys 'R' Us. Merchant creates own electronic currency, or "scrip," that is sold to brokers. Brokers then sell the scrip to buyers. Sellers deal with just a handful of accounts, spreading transaction costs over a large volume of purchases. Millicent customers need to buy currency from only a few trusted brokers, not every vendor. Anyone can see the request and scrip as it is sent, but cracking the signature on the package is kept more costly than the scrip inside is worth.
Projected cost: One-tenth of a cent per transaction.
Smallest appropriate purchase: 1 cent.
Upside: Inexpensive; efficient.
Downside: Merchants can run off with money; lacks privacy, auditability.

“Downside: Merchants can run off with money?” And there we see a future glimpse at greedy altcoin ICO skammers!
legendary
Activity: 2676
Merit: 2203
BitcoinPenny.com

(Wired Magazine Cover, August 1996 — “Nanobucks: Big Deal or Pocket Change?”)


This auction is for a physical copy of the Wired Magazine issue from August 1996 with the cover article title “Nanobucks: Big Deal or Pocket Change?”

The six-page article is actually titled “The Buck Starts Here,” and you can find it beginning on page 133.

While the article was inspired by the idea of micro-transactions in a future where it may be commonplace to make small online (nano) purchases, the article is chiefly about the complex payment technology which would make that possible, specifically describing cryptographic digital currency (or ecash). In other words, this article is about the early forms of BITCOIN!

(NOTE: I'll include snippets from the article in a new post below.)


AUTOGRAPHED upon REQUEST

My older brother is briefly mentioned in this article as being an early digital cash / ecash merchant, and he's happy to autograph this copy upon request. (He thinks it's silly that someone may want his autograph, but he's willing to do it for me anyway. He's a good big brother.)


AUCTION RULES

Anti-Sniping Rule / Grace Period: There will be a grace period of 10 minutes following the last bid. When 10 minutes pass without a new bid, the auction will be officially ended. For example, if someone places a bid on Saturday, December 22 at 4:55PM, then the auction will extend until 5:05PM. If another bid is placed at 5:03PM, then the auction extends until 5:13PM, and so forth.

>>> CLICK HERE for COUNTDOWN TIMER <<<

Start Time: Immediately
End Time: Saturday, December 22, 2018 @ 5 PM EST (UTC -5:00).

Starting Bid: 0.001 BTC
Bid Increments: 0.001 BTC


PAYMENTS

The winning bid must be sent to the following address: 1Ardbeg65yGfReTrzpTmWiPU2hF3AUjvFV.


Please feel free to ask questions.

Good luck, everyone!

Regards,
Chris @ The Bitcoin Penny Company
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