Let me put this a different way for you pie-in-the-sky folk, it doesn't matter if the socalled protocol for btc is perfect, right now a REAL security issue has been identified, not the problem that MT Gox pointed us to, but the ability to trace 800K btc once controlled by MG, if the cryptocurrency community is unable to find the money then the system cannot and should not be trusted.
If that many Bitcoins could be stolen, missing, or untraced the protocol is unsafe for mass acceptance. If we don't find the funds before the summer radical change must occur in the system to make up for the failings or weaknesses of the protocol.
Wrong.The "safety" of the protocol has nothing to do with the Gox situation, as much as they might have wanted the public to think that. Nor was there an unknown weakness, the transaction malleability issue was known since 2011. The failing here as we are given to understand was they they didn't adjust their software to
work around it and as a result got robbed blind. That is as inexcusable as if someone intentionally left their antivirus definitions 3 years out of date and then blame the antivirus software for having a fault when they get infected.
Is it a fault in Bitcoin if you logged onto an exchange website and your account there says the 1000 BTC you deposited is currently in your account with them? Because unless you hold the private keys yourself to those coins then the aren't yours. If your account is telling you that the exchange has your coins but you can't withdraw them, and then it turns out they were long gone then isn't that misrepresentation at best, fraud as worst?
I do agree with what you said about finding out where the BTC went, but we also need to find out what was going on behind the scenes at Gox. Hopefully there will be further leaks of documents from them so a proper autopsy can be performed here.
My driving point was: 'don't get distracted by the malleability issue, or the ridiculous notion that the btc protocol is perfect, the focus should be on finding the money.
Let me put this another way it doesn't matter if Mt Gox was operated in prison by the incarcerated hackers using computers littered with viruses of all sorts, and everyone could do anything they wanted with the funds, the btc protocol must allow us to find, trace, or track all of the 800K btc that once existed in MT Gox. It doesn't matter if it was stolen, got stuck in a hole, was put in cold storage, used to pay rent, etc ... we must be able to track it, trace it, and follow the money, that is the NUMBER 1 purpose of the block chain, and the blockchain is the core of the btc protocol.
If you don't find the money, then every exchange has a recipe for doing the same thing on purpose, over and over again.
That's why if the problem isn't solved via the btc protocol very soon (before the summer), then a "work around" will be necessary -- exchanges will have to adopt very serious changes to INSURE safety, accountability, transparency, solvency, etc ...
As the title of the thread suggests it's either secure the system with code or with self-regulation at this moment we have neither, but only now did we realize that the king had no clothes we have until the beginning of the summer to fix this or else its back to single digits for btc with no hope for a rise without the safeguards.