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Topic: Is Satoshi actually Richard Stallman? - page 3. (Read 10092 times)

member
Activity: 98
Merit: 10
September 07, 2011, 10:59:34 PM
#34
According to Rule 34, now RMS is a porn star.





I'm never turning off "safe search" again.  Shocked
legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
September 07, 2011, 10:57:10 PM
#33
Nah, he was speaking in very general terms about some way to send money, quickly, easily and anonymously to content creators. That's not far off from what he's been evangelizing for decades, so I see no significance in his mentioning it at any particular time in 2009.

Has RMS made any public comments about Bitcoin?  In light of his past commentaries, he should have something notable to say about Bitcoin.  If his public mentions of such cryptocurrency ideas cease after Bitcoin's metoric rise around October 2010, about the same time that Satoshi disappeared, this might be a significant link.

Where do you want to start?  "Richard Stallman" bitcoin     -->  http://www.google.com/search?aq=f&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8&q=%22Richard+Stallman%22+bitcoin  About 132,000 results

Correlation does not mean causation. A Google search for "Richard Stallman" porn returns 290,000 results, none of which stars Richard as the porn star. According to your logic, it should be about twice as likely that Richard is a porn star than that he is Satoshi.

Surely, you don't think that I didn't know that. Hence the question. With so many results, where do should we start?

member
Activity: 112
Merit: 10
September 07, 2011, 10:45:13 PM
#32
Correlation does not mean causation. A Google search for "Richard Stallman" porn returns 290,000 results, none of which stars Richard as the porn star. According to your logic, it should be about twice as likely that Richard is a porn star than that he is Satoshi.

I guess even he doesn't want to GPL his nads...
newbie
Activity: 32
Merit: 0
September 07, 2011, 10:43:18 PM
#31
Nah, he was speaking in very general terms about some way to send money, quickly, easily and anonymously to content creators. That's not far off from what he's been evangelizing for decades, so I see no significance in his mentioning it at any particular time in 2009.

Has RMS made any public comments about Bitcoin?  In light of his past commentaries, he should have something notable to say about Bitcoin.  If his public mentions of such cryptocurrency ideas cease after Bitcoin's metoric rise around October 2010, about the same time that Satoshi disappeared, this might be a significant link.

Where do you want to start?  "Richard Stallman" bitcoin     -->  http://www.google.com/search?aq=f&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8&q=%22Richard+Stallman%22+bitcoin  About 132,000 results

Correlation does not mean causation. A Google search for "Richard Stallman" porn returns 290,000 results, none of which stars Richard as the porn star. According to your logic, it should be about twice as likely that Richard is a porn star than that he is Satoshi.
legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
September 07, 2011, 10:32:08 PM
#30
https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/User:Genjix/Free_software

Quote
Richard Stallman, a programmer at MIT hit upon the idea of using copyright law against itself to develop a license called copyleft. Copyleft says that this Wikipedia article, this piece of music or this piece of source code that is protected under this license must be shared. Furthermore for software programs the source code must always remain public- if I redistribute that program then I must also distribute the source code with it. Any changes I make, they have to be released too. He setup the Free Software Foundation to protect these licenses. For music, writing and art we have the Creative Commons. For documents and source code we have the GNU Free Documentation License and GNU General Public License. Each license particular to the media, and each with customisable variants for different situations; all protecting the user and free expression.
member
Activity: 112
Merit: 10
September 07, 2011, 10:30:27 PM
#29
The bitcoin client has at least three orders of magnitude too few features to have been written by RMS. Wink

Are you sure about that? They did release a UNIX that had no kernel. Smiley



Touché. Smiley


We could probably argue that CoinHunter is RMS though:

* Sees someone else's work and decides he can do better, so clones it
* Can't make it compatible with the original
* Obviously doesn't like the MIT license
* Security is an afterthought
* Bug fixes take three tries to get right
* Won't shut up about how much better he is than everyone involved in what he cloned
* Adds "features" to clone that cause more problems than they solve (try a 'grep -z foo /dev/zero' on a Linux box belonging to someone you don't like)
* Arrogance infinitum
* Makes long-winded speeches about how flawed the original is and how he's fixing them all
* Can't understand why his clone doesn't immediately take over the whole industry
* Has small but insanely fanatical array of followers who believe everything he says and reject any logic

I think I'm kicking the carcass of a horse that's not only dead but was eaten by saber-toothed tigers here. Smiley
sr. member
Activity: 574
Merit: 250
September 07, 2011, 10:26:51 PM
#28
It is not Stallman's coding style, choice of tools/libraries, or licensing style.  So highly doubtful.
legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
September 07, 2011, 10:25:41 PM
#27
Nah, he was speaking in very general terms about some way to send money, quickly, easily and anonymously to content creators. That's not far off from what he's been evangelizing for decades, so I see no significance in his mentioning it at any particular time in 2009.

Has RMS made any public comments about Bitcoin?  In light of his past commentaries, he should have something notable to say about Bitcoin.  If his public mentions of such cryptocurrency ideas cease after Bitcoin's metoric rise around October 2010, about the same time that Satoshi disappeared, this might be a significant link.

Where do you want to start?  "Richard Stallman" bitcoin     -->  http://www.google.com/search?aq=f&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8&q=%22Richard+Stallman%22+bitcoin  About 132,000 results
member
Activity: 98
Merit: 10
September 07, 2011, 10:23:02 PM
#26
The bitcoin client has at least three orders of magnitude too few features to have been written by RMS. Wink

Are you sure about that? They did release a UNIX that had no kernel. Smiley



Touché. Smiley
member
Activity: 112
Merit: 10
September 07, 2011, 10:21:23 PM
#25
The bitcoin client has at least three orders of magnitude too few features to have been written by RMS. Wink

Are you sure about that? They did release a UNIX that had no kernel. Smiley
member
Activity: 98
Merit: 10
September 07, 2011, 10:18:42 PM
#24
The bitcoin client has at least three orders of magnitude too few features to have been written by RMS. Wink
member
Activity: 112
Merit: 10
September 07, 2011, 10:16:00 PM
#23
Don't people have a their own coding style that is hard to shake? Somebody should compare EMACS source code to Bitcoin source code.

The lack of GPL license is a compelling argument against the theory, but RMS has used more liberal licenses in the past: when he feels it is to his advantage (such as the LGPL for libraries). If Shatoshi is really RMS, that may explain the annonymity though: he would not want to admit he found a case where the MIT license is more pragmatic.

I'm pretty sure they're two different people. If RMS wrote Bitcoin you'd have to press C-x f M-a M-e s to see your balance, and something with ten times as many keystrokes to send a coin. That, and Bitcoin doesn't allocate the entire swap partition. Smiley
legendary
Activity: 1008
Merit: 1001
Let the chips fall where they may.
September 07, 2011, 10:12:44 PM
#22
Don't people have a their own coding style that is hard to shake? Somebody should compare EMACS source code to Bitcoin source code.

The lack of GPL license is a compelling argument against the theory, but RMS has used more liberal licenses in the past: when he feels it is to his advantage (such as the LGPL for libraries). If Shatoshi is really RMS, that may explain the annonymity though: he would not want to admit he found a case where the MIT license is more pragmatic.
legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
September 07, 2011, 10:07:54 PM
#21
Take a look at the YouTube stats of this video. Look at what link is at the top. Note the view count for that link.

Phin, step away from the conspiracy theory  Grin

My post had nothing to do with any conspiracy theory.

YouTube stats:

Date    Event    Views
A
12/06/10    First referral from – forums.somethingawful.com    371
B
05/21/10    First referral from related video – Thorium Remix 2009 - LFTR in 16 Minutes    305
C
04/15/10    First referral from – www.stumbleupon.com    2,341
D
12/10/09    First referral from Google search – richard stallman    698
E
09/08/09    First view from a mobile device    2,592
F
07/27/09    First referral from related video – Richard Stallman Eats Something From His Foot    426
G
04/10/09    First referral from – www.google.com    735
H
02/06/09    First referral from YouTube search – richard stallman    8,509
I
02/06/09    First referral from YouTube search – stallman    1,322
J
02/06/09    First referral from – www.facebook.com    415
full member
Activity: 174
Merit: 100
Posts made Jan-March 2017 are not by me
September 07, 2011, 09:55:26 PM
#20
If RMS were Satoshi, the client code would be better.
legendary
Activity: 1708
Merit: 1010
September 07, 2011, 09:49:04 PM
#19
Nah, he was speaking in very general terms about some way to send money, quickly, easily and anonymously to content creators. That's not far off from what he's been evangelizing for decades, so I see no significance in his mentioning it at any particular time in 2009.

Has RMS made any public comments about Bitcoin?  In light of his past commentaries, he should have something notable to say about Bitcoin.  If his public mentions of such cryptocurrency ideas cease after Bitcoin's metoric rise around October 2010, about the same time that Satoshi disappeared, this might be a significant link.
legendary
Activity: 1708
Merit: 1010
September 07, 2011, 09:45:44 PM
#18
I believe Satoshi will come back down here to save us all if things goes really bad for Bitcoins.

Actually, one of the SolidCoin people has apparently been claiming that Satoshi has dumped his bitcoins and invested in SolidCoins instead.

https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/m.512976

BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

That's typical of the guy behind SolidCoin and just goes to show how much everyone show avoid SC like the plague. He's bad news.

It's also easily checked.  Have any of the first 10 blocks moved?  The first ten are almost certainly Satoshi's, the genesis block definitely is.
legendary
Activity: 1106
Merit: 1001
September 07, 2011, 09:39:00 PM
#17
Take a look at the YouTube stats of this video. Look at what link is at the top. Note the view count for that link.

Phin, step away from the conspiracy theory  Grin
legendary
Activity: 1918
Merit: 1570
Bitcoin: An Idea Worth Spending
September 07, 2011, 09:31:24 PM
#16
Take a look at the YouTube stats of this video. Look at what link is at the top. Note the view count for that link.
legendary
Activity: 1078
Merit: 1000
Charlie 'Van Bitcoin' Shrem
September 07, 2011, 09:22:12 PM
#15
This video was uploaded at the same time when Bitcoin was launched in Feb 2009:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SNBMdDaYhZA&t=1h1m4s

Watch the next 2 minutes after the linked time. 1:02:45 is where it's at. Have we found our man?

Correct me if I am wrong, but Bitcoin was introduced in November 2008, not Feb 2009.

Here's Satoshi's first post, http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg09959.html
Dated November first 2008.

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