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Topic: rpietila Altcoin Observer - page 127. (Read 387493 times)

hero member
Activity: 588
Merit: 504
July 29, 2014, 01:14:05 AM
And what is your point? I have made and lost a lot of money, and continue to do so. Smiley

What else would I say I am? I invest for myself and am not an official spokesperson for any of the things I invest in. Also if you recall I was one of the only shareholders to ever warn of newbies and never attempted to pump the stock. Please read all my activemining posts, I lost a lot, but I never tried to save myself by dragging others in, I always warned off others even to my own detriment.

And I made a lot of bitcoin in other investments, Bitfinex, JustDice, etc... Some work out and some don't, what exactly is your point?

Labcoin on the other hand was silly, I went a little mad with that one, my posts are quite embarrassing.

EDIT: Labcoin was my first exposure to this Bitcoin world and I behaved badly, however, I certainly changed my ways by the time ActiveMining came about and started to fall into a bottomless pit of Kens retirement.

 it's ok. everybody has won and lost some money here, myself included
just easy to be so sure about something at the time- that becomes painfully obvious in retrospect.
You wanted to bet last time after I offered, i think you never actually put the btc down in the end which was good because it would of added insult to injury.

I'm not trying to argue that you will lose money on xmr, of course this is nowhere near the same thing--
just you seem totally adamant right now xmr is the one true coin, and bbr is nothing. I am not I just think it's a little shortsighted to dismiss it that way that's all, or maybe it's just me that's the boolberry beleiber and thinks the market cap disparity between the two is wholly underserved. Anyway we can have our differences., now I'm gonna stop ranting

hero member
Activity: 518
Merit: 521
July 29, 2014, 01:03:59 AM
If dga is a dev, you need to reign him in— his demeanor reflects badly on Monero.

Surea .........

Evidence.

Guys I am impartial because I want to compete against both Monero and Boolberry.

You are anything but impartial. Your credibility took a big hit today due to the posts in the last 3 pages. To an outsider, you clearly have jaundiced views.

1) In what way am I not impartial on Monero vs. Boolberry? I have no incentive to favor one or the other. I think they are both fatally flawed because I believe they can't scale without mining centralization.

2) Please cite how you think I damaged my reputation in the last 3 pages. I do not see it. I would like to learn how you view it. If you are referring to me not releasing all my concepts to open source before code is ready to ship, why should I? I share a lot.

3. The marketing of Boolberry makes grander claims than Monero without sufficiently grander whitepaper to back them up with analysis. I naturally shy away from efforts that overstate and underdeliver.

Yes BBR needs some BTC sugar daddies.

Whether you like it or not, both Monero and Boolberry are investor pump coins, not user transaction coins, because neither can scale. So you damn well better have the investors on your side.

I operate in reality zone, not fantasy sand boxes.

Note the bitmonero launch was horrible. So they've come a long way in a short time. Boolberry could too if Zoidberg is serious about delegation.

BBR faces constant attacks by blind cheerleaders who have bought into hype and will stand by it regardless of what is happening in front of them. That is a difficult hole for most people to climb out of.

That results from the sort of marketing he did with promotional videos without serious whitepaper, etc.. Monero is quietly working behind the scenes. Even the bitmonero launch was almost stealth.

Also Boolberry is a great name. If you do think about rebranding, keep the bool part please.

Well to each his own, but you try doing a marketing survey at WalMart and ask them what they like better for internet money, 'monero' or 'boolberry'.

Are you trying to leverage on the Blackberry phone brand?

Is your target market only programmers? 99% of the people in the world don't know what 'bool' means. You flunk Marketing 101.

Sorry I don't think anyone will get it. Names have to be more direct than that.
full member
Activity: 135
Merit: 100
July 29, 2014, 12:50:01 AM
Guys I am impartial because I want to compete against both Monero and Boolberry.

You are anything but impartial. Your credibility took a big hit today due to the posts in the last 3 pages. To an outsider, you clearly have jaundiced views.

Quote
If dga is a dev, you need to reign him in— his demeanor reflects badly on Monero.

Surea .........

Quote
3. The marketing of Boolberry makes grander claims than Monero without sufficiently grander whitepaper to back them up with analysis. I naturally shy away from efforts that overstate and underdeliver.

Yes BBR needs some BTC sugar daddies.

Zoidberg, but please do publish something.

Quote
4. My cursory impression is it appears that Boolberry is not garnishing the same level of professionalism in the community and focus. My cursory impression is Zoidberg needs to be able to convince someone of smooth's caliber to lead the public side of Boolberry's face and also organize about adding developers, e.g. cryptanalysis of the PoW, etc..

True.

Quote
Note the bitmonero launch was horrible. So they've come a long way in a short time. Boolberry could too if Zoidberg is serious about delegation.

BBR faces constant attacks by blind cheerleaders who have bought into hype and will stand by it regardless of what is happening in front of them. That is a difficult hole for most people to climb out of.

@Zoidberg

Perhaps the CN team can help you with personnel. Please reach out to them. You are on the right track and team augmentation is a must.

Also Boolberry is a great name. If you do think about rebranding, keep the bool part please.
legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1015
July 29, 2014, 12:48:39 AM
In case of any confusion. I am not apart of the Monero team. I am an independent investor that supports Monero.

drawingthesun, Independent investor?

Anotheranonlol why are you here?

why is anyone here? what a question  Roll Eyes



No chance we even go below 0.0034 before hashing. Not a chance, please quote me on that!

You would love us to sell our shares for cheap because you know how good this stock is now.

 Cheesy


Do you realise why I was there now? LOL.
I told you with activemining too. You must have lost a few hundred btc there.
Great independent investor you are, I will surely follow your XMR investing advice  Grin



And what is your point? I have made and lost a lot of money, and continue to do so. Smiley

What else would I say I am? I invest for myself and am not an official spokesperson for any of the things I invest in. Also if you recall I was one of the only shareholders to ever warn of newbies and never attempted to pump the stock. Please read all my activemining posts, I lost a lot, but I never tried to save myself by dragging others in, I always warned off others even to my own detriment.

And I made a lot of bitcoin in other investments, Bitfinex, JustDice, etc... Some work out and some don't, what exactly is your point?

Labcoin on the other hand was silly, I went a little mad with that one, my posts are quite embarrassing.

EDIT: Labcoin was my first exposure to this Bitcoin world and I behaved badly, however, I certainly changed my ways by the time ActiveMining came about and started to fall into a bottomless pit of Kens retirement.
hero member
Activity: 588
Merit: 504
July 29, 2014, 12:44:12 AM
In case of any confusion. I am not apart of the Monero team. I am an independent investor that supports Monero.

drawingthesun, Independent investor?

Anotheranonlol why are you here?

why is anyone here? what a question  Roll Eyes



No chance we even go below 0.0034 before hashing. Not a chance, please quote me on that!

You would love us to sell our shares for cheap because you know how good this stock is now.

 Cheesy


Do you realise why I was there now? LOL.
I told you with activemining too. You must have lost a few hundred btc there.
Great independent investor you are, I will surely follow your XMR investing advice  Grin

legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1015
July 29, 2014, 12:38:52 AM
In case of any confusion. I am not apart of the Monero team. I am an independent investor that supports Monero.
legendary
Activity: 2968
Merit: 1198
July 29, 2014, 12:38:46 AM
2. Next Monero seems to have more articulate and reasoned devs who are around to address technical points astutely, e.g. smooth and fluffypony (is drawingthesun a Monero dev?). If dga is a dev, you need to reign him in— his demeanor reflects badly on Monero.

Core team is listed on the official Monero thread: tacotime, eizh, smooth, fluffypony, othe, davidlatapie, NoodleDoodle

It does not include drawingthesun or dga although dga has contributed code (PoW) and DTS may have contributed as well (I don't know there are a lot of contributors now).
hero member
Activity: 588
Merit: 504
July 29, 2014, 12:37:06 AM
No Zoidberg, that isn't fair.

It's ok if you don't want to read the missives, but if so then don't go around saying how much better BBR is than Monero. Before you make wild claims do your research.

So if you don't read up on Monero and what they are doing, stop talking out your arse when it comes to what the Monero team are doing and how they compare to your project.

It's not interesting for some to read a daily newsletter, readers digest or captains log. Maybe he is more concerned with checking the code when the writing develops into real world results.

hero member
Activity: 518
Merit: 521
July 29, 2014, 12:35:39 AM
Guys I am impartial because I want to compete against both Monero and Boolberry.

1. The name is a big factor for me when I stumbled onto both of them.

I was aware of bitmonero from the beginning (April I believe) when no one understood what was going on. I am aware of TacoTime since I studied his posts on Scrypt back in the Litecoin days.

2. Next Monero seems to have more articulate and reasoned devs who are around to address technical points astutely, e.g. smooth and fluffypony (is drawingthesun a Monero dev?). If dga is a dev, you need to reign him in— his demeanor reflects badly on Monero.

3. The marketing of Boolberry makes grander claims than Monero without sufficiently grander whitepaper to back them up with analysis. I naturally shy away from efforts that overstate and underdeliver.

4. My cursory impression is it appears that Boolberry is not garnishing the same level of professionalism in the community and focus. My cursory impression is Zoidberg needs to be able to convince someone of smooth's caliber to lead the public side of Boolberry's face and also organize about adding developers, e.g. cryptanalysis of the PoW, etc..

My interpretations and gut instinct could be wrong, and I am open to be pointed to a link to that changes my mind.

Note the bitmonero launch was horrible. So they've come a long way in a short time. Boolberry could too if Zoidberg is serious about delegation.

No Zoidberg, that isn't fair.

It's ok if you don't want to read the missives, but if so then don't go around saying how much better BBR is than Monero. Before you make wild claims do your research.

So if you don't read up on Monero and what they are doing, stop talking out your arse when it comes to what the Monero team are doing and how they compare to your project.

You don't need to attack Monero if your PR engine is working smoothly.

If your technical capabilities are superior, it will be self-evident in your well organized PR materials, e.g. whitepaper, devs in your public threads, etc..

You are lashing out at Monero's success in community organization, because you focused on coding. Realize there is another stage after coding where you release and need community.
legendary
Activity: 2968
Merit: 1198
July 29, 2014, 12:35:11 AM
Monero is just a Litecoin ?

No. The economics are quite different.

Forking makes economic sense when the mining gets too far ahead of the adoption, because new adopters gain more by adopting a coin without the legacy holdings than they lose by adopting a coin with smaller network effect.

Bitcoin was far more highly adopted (and less mined) by the time Litecoin came along which is why Litecoin was never able to eclipse Bitcoin the way Monero has eclipsed Bytecoin.
legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1015
July 29, 2014, 12:34:19 AM
Real world is not only your's problem Smiley

So just curious how you going to solve this issue ?... bitcoin is also in more than real world and have blockchain much bigger than any CN coin(at least at that moment  Smiley ).
And it still load's it from network.
So you see the problem in slow protocol ? Or somewhere else  ?


Learn to use github before you guys badmouth monero Wink
https://github.com/rfree2monero/bitmonero/commits/dev-rfree

Its also mentioned in the weekly missives.
So yeah, we are currently rewriting that code and its a priority.


Dear Othe, learn that world does not revolve around Monero Smiley and don't be so aggressive.
I just don't read your weekly missives, forgive me that




No Zoidberg, that isn't fair.

It's ok if you don't want to read the missives, but if so then don't go around saying how much better BBR is than Monero. Before you make wild claims do your research.

So if you don't read up on Monero and what they are doing, stop talking out your arse when it comes to what the Monero team are doing and how they compare to your project.
hero member
Activity: 976
Merit: 646
July 29, 2014, 12:30:26 AM
Real world is not only your's problem Smiley

So just curious how you going to solve this issue ?... bitcoin is also in more than real world and have blockchain much bigger than any CN coin(at least at that moment  Smiley ).
And it still load's it from network.
So you see the problem in slow protocol ? Or somewhere else  ?


Learn to use github before you guys badmouth monero Wink
https://github.com/rfree2monero/bitmonero/commits/dev-rfree

Its also mentioned in the weekly missives.
So yeah, we are currently rewriting that code and its a priority.


Dear Othe, learn that world does not revolve around Monero Smiley and don't be so aggressive.
I just don't read your weekly missives, forgive me that


hero member
Activity: 588
Merit: 504
July 29, 2014, 12:23:19 AM
Are you mentally ill, stupid, or just being deliberately offensive and dishonest?

possibly a combination of those three  Grin

What dga is saying is spot on as usual, what zoidberg says about boolberry being the technically stronger coin is absolutely correct and how anyone can try and pretend otherwise is beyond me. Maybe not superior in flowery talk and penning eccentricities like boolberry bulletins, not superior with creating as many threads- the majority of this thread is monero promo and back and forth discussion specifically around monero which seems to have become a synonym for cryptonote.. maybe not superior in convincing the unwashed masses it's is indeed the only thing worth investing in aside from bitcoin, . whilst everything else is a cheap clone or shitcoin, or in terms of bitcointalk allstar celeb endorsement  and greasing up the palms of exchanges though


But this is your opinion. It's not spot on that BBR is the technically stronger coin, this is not "absolutely correct".

The pow change is questionable and the pruning is linear pruning, it's a fixed space saving per block, nothing that will reduce the chain like true transaction pruning does.

You have bought into Zoid's marketing hype.

Like I have said many times, this is the Litecoin fiasco all over again. I remember when I was told by many experts that Litecoin was faster [1], more secure, safer, technically superior to Bitcoin because it's Bitcoin plus awesome sauce on top.

I never bought into the Litecoin hype back then and I'm not falling for it today. All of the BBR arguments sound like the same fluff Litecoin supporters shouted back then.

[1] And that apparently was enough reason to hail a Litecoin take over where many people started panic buying Litecoins because Bitcoin now was on its way out. What a joke.



 The 'questionable PoW 'argument could be made for vanilla cryptonight moreso.  Whereas some of the decisions for choosing alternative PoW in BBR have been clearly outlined, both a little earlier in this thread and the boolberry one.

You've stated many times that you never brought into the litecoin hype back then and not falling for it today. boolberry is not the one with hype. Monero is.  You are asking why buy into BBR when we have XMR? implying XMR is BTC and BBR is LTC (ie - it's nothing more than a copy paste with bells n whistles).

I've actually heard you say that if boolberry overtakes monero all confidence in the market will be eroded and the experiment is failed or something along those lines... as if bbr is an xmr clone with marketing gimmicks, insanity..That is a dangerous line of thinking

BTC is BTC and then you have your alt.. if you subscribe to the school of thought popular in this thread there is only room for a silver and gold. Picking XMR in favor of BBR like picking steel when you have a palladium bar because you say it's just 'steel with a bit more shine to it' . Actually i would call bytecoin tenebrix, monero fairbrix and boolberry litecoin

I was mining ltc since launch and also buying once it hit exchanges., no sane person particularly cared that it was faster, nor did I beleive anyone worthwile proclaimed it's technically superior. It was more of an experiment of putting your recently dormant CPU to use, it was also interesting as a hedge to escape the forthcoming asic centralisation. My views on LTC are that it was a massive long con perpetuated by artforz et al but that's not relevant and ltcs useleness took a long time to become apparent. if you did buy into it you would of been rewarded handsomely


Where did he claim claymore was a bytecoin dev?. I think he is referring to the intentional slow_hash crippling
which was left over during the copy paste process and somehow sneaked past the eyes of the collective 'large dev team', during their expansive audit and review of the codebase.. something which is hardly a stretch to say could have been exploited by those that wrote it in the first place (or indeed an independent third party who knew how to read or write code to a basic level)


Well, DGA did substantial work on the pow speedup (and NoodleDoodle, Wolf and others).

Nice own goal from you tho, because he also optimized the boolberry hashing code: https://github.com/cryptozoidberg/boolberry/commit/9e31e74048a4b2a92e048637a29bc0f9160c2432

yeah, theres a difference between an optimization and an un-unoptimization

hero member
Activity: 976
Merit: 646
July 29, 2014, 12:21:05 AM
What dga is saying is spot on as usual, what zoidberg says about boolberry being the technically stronger coin is absolutely correct and how anyone can try and pretend otherwise is beyond me. Maybe not superior in flowery talk and penning eccentricities like boolberry bulletins, not superior with creating as many threads- the majority of this thread is monero promo and back and forth discussion specifically around monero which seems to have become a synonym for cryptonote.. maybe not superior in convincing the unwashed masses it's is indeed the only thing worth investing in aside from bitcoin, . whilst everything else is a cheap clone or shitcoin, or in terms of bitcointalk allstar celeb endorsement  and greasing up the palms of exchanges though


But this is your opinion. It's not spot on that BBR is the technically stronger coin, this is not "absolutely correct".

The pow change is questionable and the pruning is linear pruning, it's a fixed space saving per block, nothing that will reduce the chain like true transaction pruning does.

You have bought into Zoid's marketing hype.

Like I have said many times, this is the Litecoin fiasco all over again. I remember when I was told by many experts that Litecoin was faster [1], more secure, safer, technically superior to Bitcoin because it's Bitcoin plus awesome sauce on top.

I never bought into the Litecoin hype back then and I'm not falling for it today. All of the BBR arguments sound like the same fluff Litecoin supporters shouted back then.

[1] And that apparently was enough reason to hail a Litecoin take over where many people started panic buying Litecoins because Bitcoin now was on its way out. What a joke.

I mostly agree with you about Litecoin... but from your own point of view, isn't Monero is just a Litecoin ?
Because it was just a copypaste fork of bytecoin, even with questionable changing block time... (still have no idea why tft did that).
And now many experts says that Monero is better.

BBR was made because i realized potential problems of CN, and i'm trying to solve it. Research took some time, and this is my main fault i guess - i spent time for real improments instead of just launch copypaste fork.

And now i really surprised - why you call BBR LiteCoin ?

hero member
Activity: 532
Merit: 500
July 29, 2014, 12:18:20 AM
Real world is not only your's problem Smiley

So just curious how you going to solve this issue ?... bitcoin is also in more than real world and have blockchain much bigger than any CN coin(at least at that moment  Smiley ).
And it still load's it from network.
So you see the problem in slow protocol ? Or somewhere else  ?


Learn to use github before you guys badmouth monero Wink
https://github.com/rfree2monero/bitmonero/commits/dev-rfree

Its also mentioned in the weekly missives.
So yeah, we are currently rewriting that code and its a priority.
legendary
Activity: 2968
Merit: 1198
July 29, 2014, 12:14:12 AM
So just curious how you going to solve this issue ?... bitcoin is also in more than real world and have blockchain much bigger than any CN coin(at least at that moment  Smiley ).
And it still load's it from network.

I explained that it has to do with exponential growth. If you have 100 live nodes and and you add 100 users, each of whom has to download the chain, then each of those 100 nodes has to on average upload the entire chain. That's a lot of upload for nodes on asymmetric or metered connections. If you have 1000 live nodes and add 100 nodes then it's only a 10% of the blockchain upload for each of them.

So over time this will likely become less of a problem, using the p2p will be okay.

That said, it's still an issue for Bitcoin. If you run a full node you often have to be very careful about upstream network usage. QoS features were identified as a need years ago, but still not added (the recommended work around is to use router QoS features, but that's not really a full substitute)

Also, bitcoin implemented exactly the feature I described for untrusted download of a static blockchain: https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/ann-bitcoin-blockchain-data-torrent-145386
hero member
Activity: 532
Merit: 500
July 29, 2014, 12:11:33 AM

Where did he claim claymore was a bytecoin dev?. I think he is referring to the intentional slow_hash crippling
which was left over during the copy paste process and somehow sneaked past the eyes of the collective 'large dev team', during their expansive audit and review of the codebase.. something which is hardly a stretch to say could have been exploited by those that wrote it in the first place (or indeed an independent third party who knew how to read or write code to a basic level)


Well, DGA did substantial work on the pow speedup (and NoodleDoodle, Wolf and others).

Nice own goal from you tho, because he also optimized the boolberry hashing code: https://github.com/cryptozoidberg/boolberry/commit/9e31e74048a4b2a92e048637a29bc0f9160c2432
hero member
Activity: 518
Merit: 521
July 29, 2014, 12:09:32 AM
AnonyMint has made his position on BBR clear:

...

He's confirmed that BBR's PoW "seems to lack entropy"

I've posted in other threads about the comparison between XMR and BBR's proof of work schemes.  The bottom line is that they're optimizing for fundamentally different things.  I have a hunch that in the long term, both will turn into DRAM bandwidth-limited currencies, but for very different reasons, but that's an attribute that places ASIC-accelerated approaches on a reasonably similar bar.  The GPUs will be faster than the CPUs.  The ASICs will be faster than the GPUs.  But the ratio will be less large than it is with Bitcoin.  In the short term, BBR will be relatively more GPU-friendly than XMR is, but I don't think that there's much difference for them with ASIC-based implementations.

Disagree.

I explained (start of discussion) how it is possible that Cryptonote's default (i.e. Monero's) PoW might possibly be reduced to a faster more optimized cache in the ASIC by trading computation for space.

The statement about the "seems to lack entropy" is as vague as AnonyMint's other attacks against the XMR proof of work for having weaknesses related to its use of AES.

Note my statement about misuse of AES round as a one-way hash function has cryptanalysis support (1 round only diffuses over 32-bits and less than 12 rounds is known to have attacks). Nevertheless it is an orthogonal point to the point I made above about optimization for ASICs.

Remember - he doesn't like either of them, if you're going to start dredging all this crap up.  I'm in the opposite boat - I suspect they're both fine for now, but I make that statement cautiously for both, with the understanding that they may need to be modified (in relatively small ways) at some point in the next few years.

You may never know that someone is getting a disproportionate amount of coins because they cracked the PoW and didn't tell you. Wink

What 'caution' and what 'crap' again?

You've already demonstrated your laziness upthread with failure to apply sufficient reading comprehension. Get control of your emotions please. This is a rational discussion.

I assume you have intellectual insight to add here, if you can somehow sieve your emotions out of the way.

There is one known "weakness" in the BBR proof-of-work that should be fixed at some point in the future,  but it's similar in importance to the way AES is used in XMR:

Disagree if you are also implying there is only one weakness in XMR's PoW. I explained potential vulnerability to ASICs. And worse I worry that such an ASIC would be highly proprietary if it ever comes and thus perhaps only available to a few.

BBR doesn't use AES-NI.

Both might make a serious cryptographer nervous if the function was being used **as a hash function** that needed all of the strong properties of a hash function,

Agreed and afaik I was the first person to point that out about Cryptonote on May 6.

but neither is overly-flawed as a *proof-of-work* function, barring future analysis.

In XMR's PoW, the use of the AES round as a random oracle to lookup memory locations within the scratchpad is likely not a uniform distribution, thus it potentially subjects the hash to a crack which employs a smaller scratchpad which statistically yields the solution at a sufficient success rate to justify the optimization. This is essentially related to a Birthday attack.

In BBR's PoW, it is employing entropy from the blockchain to replace the computation of confusion and diffusion that a hash function (AES in XBR) does to achieve random uniform lookups within the scratchpad. If this entropy is insufficient, then similar crack can be applied.

If I didn't have something much more potentially lucrative that is keeping me fully preoccupied, I would endeavor to go attempt to crack these PoW and keep it secret to make a lot of money mining. Maybe someone already has. And you don't know!

The truth about them both is that they've both used well-studied cryptographic primitives (good) and changed the *inside* of them to achieve a goal of memory hardness.  It's always dangerous to poke around inside the algorithms, but proof-of-work leaves a lot more breathing room as far as we know -- this is still a fairly under-studied field.

Dunning–Kruger effect. You don't know!

All of this misquoting of the mythical man month is silly, and ignores a more important point:  1-2 developers can do great things.  So can 7.  So can a dozen -- that's Amazon's preferred team size, for example.

You entirely missed the point of distinction between innovation and refinement. You continuously demonstrate lax reading comprehension.


P.S. I never wrote that the ideal team size is 1 or 2 for all scenarios. Rather I said that for raw innovation, the ideal is 1 or 2 and for refinement via open source, the core team size should be larger (with hopefully a Benevolent Dictator to keep innovation from being stifled by consensus gridlock or chaos) and the community of eyeballs should be unbounded.


Stop grasping at bull$#!#.

It is spewed all over your mirror.

(links will be added shortly to this post, come back in a few minutes)

Edit: dga is hard-headed, because I told him all of this before and he prefers his Dunning-Kruger effect...

Update:  I also read your linked thread's comments about the use of AES.  You're not looking at the big picture.  In the context of a proof-of-work scheme (NOT as the hash to verify integrity), the limitation of 128 bits at each step is unimportant.

In terms of you missing the 'big picture' see my points up-post.

CryptoNote employs AES encryption as a random oracle so that all possible cache table elements should be equally probable at each random access. But AES encryption isn't designed to be a random oracle. Thus there may exist attacks on the structure of the probabilities of random accesses in the table.

Note the AES vulnerability isn't required to implement an ASIC that out peforms. It is an orthogonal potential attack. There might be a way to trade computation for space within some structure that deviates from uniform random distribution given by the misuse of AES encryption.
legendary
Activity: 2968
Merit: 1198
July 29, 2014, 12:04:47 AM
which was left over during the copy paste process and somehow sneaked past the eyes of the collective 'large dev team', during their expansive audit and review of the codebase..

Are you mentally ill, stupid, or just being deliberately offensive and dishonest?

I already explained to you there was no "large dev team" at launch. There was one guy (TFT) who worked on it very part time, and a few of us who commented a bit on the thread and agreed with the premise of forking (at the time it was more of a relaunch) off from the 82% BCN ninjamine/premine, plus a few minor fixes). That is all there was. No team, no audit, no review. In fact some suggestions were made by the community to slow down the launch. They were ignored.

All of this is verifiable by looking back at the old postings, so you don't have to take my word for it.

hero member
Activity: 976
Merit: 646
July 29, 2014, 12:04:42 AM
Monero and others have to provide a link for downloading blockchain file instead of loading this from network cloud, tha's actually a real centralization.

Two minor technical corrections:

1. The centralization aspect of this will likely be removed at some point, as done by bitcoin. The static blockchain will still be verified (once).
I guess if it will still be verified (once) - you will still meet the same problem - long PoW check... or did i miss something ?

You are correct, but we consider the verification time acceptable for installing a full node at this time. There are 1440 blocks per day. At 50 blocks/sec per core that is less than 30 seconds per day single threaded. A year of blockchain is 3 hours. If multithreaded on a quad core this will be under an hour. In practice I doubt that p2p downloads are that fast now anyway.
I guess this numbers is for powerfull cpu. Laptop's users gonna have much slower hash calculation time.
2. The primary reason for a static blockchain download is not PoW verification, it is to reduce load on the p2p. Relatively few p2p nodes are accessible for incoming connections, so the ones that are get hammered very hard by new nodes connecting and downloading the block chain. Periods of rapid adoption are the worst, because there are so many new users downloading the block chain. We encourage (and spend money to host) the static downloads to reduce the load on existing nodes. High load in turn leads to fewer people being willing to operate accessible nodes, which makes matters even worse on the ones who do.

With all respect to you smooth, I doubt that it's true.
Based onmy knowlage of protocol, i can say that clients while downloading the blockchain automatically switch to some other nodes if it's do response faster.

Sorry but you are mistaken. You are confusing a local problem with a global problem. They might switch to another node, but then the other node just gets overloaded. We have real world experience with a rapidly growing network and in practice almost every accessible node gets overloaded (or at least heavily loaded) with chain download traffic. And that is even with some users downloading the static chain, though at the time we were not encouraging it as strongly.

Exponential growth rate of the network will slow down at some point and this will cease to be an issue (new users as a fraction of existing nodes will be smaller). But it is a real issue if the growth rate is high.


Real world is not only your's problem Smiley

So just curious how you going to solve this issue ?... bitcoin is also in more than real world and have blockchain much bigger than any CN coin(at least at that moment  Smiley ).
And it still load's it from network.
So you see the problem in slow protocol ? Or somewhere else  ?


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