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Topic: rpietila Altcoin Observer - page 167. (Read 387493 times)

legendary
Activity: 1218
Merit: 1000
July 15, 2014, 10:56:22 AM
i don't see any unique in this CRYPTCOIN, just a random POW/POS clone

For now sure, but looking at the charts we have an obvious breakout after a steep selloff. We can either ignore or accept the technical signals that are pointing to the upside.

We mainly do not care about that kind of things in this thread.

Pumping is just a matter of having adequate capital and willing to expend energy. No pump advertisements here, thank you! Smiley

I dont see CRYPT as a shit pump n dump clone Tongue (I believe we are seeing movement here because of fundamental reasons). This is a 2.0 gen x11 pow/pos anon coin trying to compete with DRK. I really think it has long term potential in terms of having a unique mixing algo - http://cryptco.org/Cryptcoin-CryptCast-Anonymous-Whitepaper.pdf.

cheers everybody  Cool
legendary
Activity: 826
Merit: 1002
amarha
July 15, 2014, 10:44:57 AM
Here is another good example of an attack against a PoS only coin: https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/m.7848188

To make it short they did a doublespend attack on a private fork and then unleashed it to the network, resulting in bittrex losing bitcoins.

The real problem is see with this is, if due to those attack the exchanges get bankrupt it will hurt a lot of innocent people who were just trading their coins there and thats bad for crypto in general...


Peercoin/Novacoin doent have this problem, as they are using the pow blocks to generate the pos hashes:
https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/ppc-disclosure-stake-generation-vulnerability-131940
and added centralized auto-checkpointing to it to secure it further (tho their system is still gameable, just harder).

Why do you say Peercoin isnt relevant? Its still the pos coin with the highest marketcap which is forked from bitcoin.

I would say that Peercoin is less relevant today because of two reasons: The first being that it's still under the central checkpointing scheme as far as I know. I have heard that it's been planned to remove it though, and that's a good thing. And the second reason is with NXT and now NEM coming soon I'm guessing Peercoin is going to have a hard time with such strong competitors. Maybe I'm wrong though. I don't have anything against Peercoin at all. It's just my current perception that it's not as relevant as it once was.
hero member
Activity: 532
Merit: 500
July 15, 2014, 10:33:36 AM
Here is another good example of an attack against a PoS only coin: https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/m.7848188

To make it short they did a doublespend attack on a private fork and then unleashed it to the network, resulting in bittrex losing bitcoins.

The real problem is see with this is, if due to those attack the exchanges get bankrupt it will hurt a lot of innocent people who were just trading their coins there and thats bad for crypto in general...


Peercoin/Novacoin doent have this problem, as they are using the pow blocks to generate the pos hashes:
https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/ppc-disclosure-stake-generation-vulnerability-131940
and added centralized auto-checkpointing to it to secure it further (tho their system is still gameable, just harder).

Why do you say Peercoin isnt relevant? Its still the pos coin with the highest marketcap which is forked from bitcoin.
legendary
Activity: 826
Merit: 1002
amarha
July 15, 2014, 10:19:35 AM
People accept the risk of the theoretical >50% attack when they use PoW networks.

At the moment there is a similar theoretical risk of a 'Nothing at Stake' attack on a PoS network.

People accept the risk of what a >50% attacker could do to a PoW network if they were a non-rational(economically speaking) bad actor. So why do people dismiss PoS simply because it currently has the possibility of a theoretical non-rational attack?

Seems very contradictory to me.

Except it's not theoretical, and it's not non-rational. Had you bothered reading the links I posted you would have learned that Peercoin was successfully attacked this way.

You don't even need to actually own any coins to attack a PoS coin. You can use coins you don't own anymore, meaning you can't even use the argument "Why would a stakeholder want to destroy the value of his own stake?".

Peercoin isn't relevant at this point and PoW coins have been attacked before too so the same logic applies.

From what I understand from the V. Buterin and Come-From-Beyond discussion on the NXT forum there is a solution for this problem anyway.

Also, if you think that someone attacking the a PoS network is significantly more likely than someone mounting a >50% attack on a PoW network then that's fine as well and I'm not making an argument otherwise.

I just wanted to point out the apparent double standard of some people who consider the chance of a >50% attack not sufficient to warrant the dismissal of PoW as valid method while dismissing PoS due to a similar weakness at this time.
hero member
Activity: 966
Merit: 1003
July 15, 2014, 10:17:49 AM
why was it even released?

Probably to inform people what changes they did to BlackCoin's PoS.

This was all that was really needed to make the changes known (admittedly they should have mentioned removing coin age in the summary..). It's barely more than a twitter post:

Quote from: press release
The proposed changes are intended to improve security in
BlackCoin’s PoS protocol and were made with optimization
in mind. With the new protocol possible attack vectors are
reduced to a minimum and the incentive to support the network
by having a full node running continuously is clearly increased.
This will allow BlackCoin and PoS to continue to scale for
mass adoption while plugging and mitigating potential risks.

I mean come on .. look at the last sentence and tell me that this isn't a marketing ad?

add: I'm sorry if this seems overly critical, blackcoin's done nothing to offend me and i'm not looking to bash it too hard. My point is that I've literally seen longer summaries on Hastelloy than this 'white paper'. The proposed solution is supposed to fix major technical flaws in PoS .. and maybe they have; however, I cannot point people to that paper and say "look how Blackcoin devs saved PoS!"

Yes, they could've just as well used these bullet points instead (source):

  • Coin Age will no longer be a factor to generate Proof-of-Stake interest. There is a need for more nodes online and staking. More staking nodes will also speed up the BlackCoin network and transaction time. Do keep in mind the staking rewards are not affected by this change.
  • The stake modifier will be changed at every modifier interval
  • Further blockchain timestamp changes will be made to avoid Proof-of-Stake blocks from orphaning.
  • BlackCoin will no longer be using the Scrypt algorithm for its Proof-of-Stake phase, and will revert back to SHA-256D. Using Scrypt offers no real advantages , and is in fact slower compared to some of the other alternatives.
donator
Activity: 1722
Merit: 1036
July 15, 2014, 10:16:43 AM
i don't see any unique in this CRYPTCOIN, just a random POW/POS clone

For now sure, but looking at the charts we have an obvious breakout after a steep selloff. We can either ignore or accept the technical signals that are pointing to the upside.

We mainly do not care about that kind of things in this thread.

Pumping is just a matter of having adequate capital and willing to expend energy. No pump advertisements here, thank you! Smiley
legendary
Activity: 1218
Merit: 1000
July 15, 2014, 10:03:41 AM
Pleeeease no chart analysis :-)

lol, ill be back here when the price has doubled (with pics)  Tongue


ps. the devs are still very active- https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/anncrypt-cryptcoin-x11-pos-p2p-anonymity-0-premine-commander-618377

pss. read the whitepaper- http://cryptco.org/Cryptcoin-CryptCast-Anonymous-Whitepaper.pdf
newbie
Activity: 50
Merit: 0
July 15, 2014, 09:56:44 AM
i don't see any unique in this CRYPTCOIN, just a random POW/POS clone

For now sure, but looking at the charts we have an obvious breakout after a steep selloff. We can either ignore or accept the technical signals that are pointing to the upside.

The reason I like this thread so far is that it concentrates mostly on fundamentals of coins.

Pleeeease no chart analysis :-)
legendary
Activity: 1218
Merit: 1000
July 15, 2014, 09:41:47 AM
i don't see any unique in this CRYPTCOIN, just a random POW/POS clone

For now sure, but looking at the charts we have an obvious breakout after a steep selloff. We can either ignore or accept the technical signals that are pointing to the upside.
sr. member
Activity: 300
Merit: 250
July 15, 2014, 09:33:16 AM
.....
Anon feature without using master nodes is also in development
What kind of technology Cryptcoin using to protect user's privacy ? I can't find any information on official thread and website. The dev simply say it's "being implemented": https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/m.7516737

How can CRYPT be called anonymous coin if people can easily compile a rich list like this:
http://chainz.cryptoid.info/crypt/#!rich

Honestly i don't see any unique in this CRYPTCOIN, just a random POW/POS clone.

legendary
Activity: 1218
Merit: 1000
July 15, 2014, 09:04:14 AM
Are charts allowed in here?

I'd like to point out a huge opportunity i see in CRYPTCOIN. As you'll see in the charts below:

- Prices are down 10X from where they were less than a month ago
- Volume is starting to pick up again and we've had a solid breakout yesterday
- Orderbook is stacked heavily to the buy side

1 MONTH




1 WEEK




ORDERBOOK



Some info on CRYPT:
11 Million Coins Total, 3 Million in Circulation (Very Rare Coin!)
X11 algorithm (CPU & GPU mineable)
Block Time: 1.5 Minutes, 2.75% PoS interest annually
Current Block Reward: 31 CRYPT
Current Market Cap: $600,000

Anon feature without using master nodes is also in development
newbie
Activity: 42
Merit: 0
July 15, 2014, 09:00:29 AM
People accept the risk of the theoretical >50% attack when they use PoW networks.

At the moment there is a similar theoretical risk of a 'Nothing at Stake' attack on a PoS network.

People accept the risk of what a >50% attacker could do to a PoW network if they were a non-rational(economically speaking) bad actor. So why do people dismiss PoS simply because it currently has the possibility of a theoretical non-rational attack?

Seems very contradictory to me.

Except it's not theoretical, and it's not non-rational. Had you bothered reading the links I posted you would have learned that Peercoin was successfully attacked this way.

You don't even need to actually own any coins to attack a PoS coin. You can use coins you don't own anymore, meaning you can't even use the argument "Why would a stakeholder want to destroy the value of his own stake?".
legendary
Activity: 1596
Merit: 1030
Sine secretum non libertas
July 15, 2014, 08:53:09 AM
Nothing is 'secure' except relative to a threat model.  When people say PoS is insecure, as best I can tell, they mean their personal threat model defeats PoS.

PoS vulnerability does not strictly depend on an arational/irrational actor because of replays rolling back to before a liquidation of stake.
legendary
Activity: 826
Merit: 1002
amarha
July 15, 2014, 08:48:37 AM
People accept the risk of the theoretical >50% attack when they use PoW networks.

At the moment there is a similar theoretical risk of a 'Nothing at Stake' attack on a PoS network.

People accept the risk of what a >50% attacker could do to a PoW network if they were a non-rational(economically speaking) bad actor. So why do people dismiss PoS simply because it currently has the possibility of a theoretical non-rational attack?

Seems very contradictory to me.
sr. member
Activity: 336
Merit: 260
July 15, 2014, 08:17:50 AM
It's sad that respected developers arm these newbies with irrelevant half-truths and these newbies go spread those on the forums. In the end, they lose, because they start believing these now irrelevant half-truths and miss out on good investments.

None of them have been convincingly shown to be secure

Oh well, what do you think are the criteria for them to be considered secure by you, personally? How long should this or that PoS implementation be around to prove it's secure?
legendary
Activity: 2968
Merit: 1198
July 15, 2014, 08:14:12 AM

Peercoin's PoS implementation has nothing to do with NXT's PoS implementation.

PoS may be broken in one system, but perfectly safe in another.

Just like PoW may be susceptible to 51% attack and successful double spending and selfish mining in Bitcoin, but not susceptible to those attacks in Myriadcoin due to its 5 independant PoW algos.

It is true there are different variations of PoS. None of them have been convincingly shown to be secure most especially not the versions used in 99% of the new PoS shitcoins that appear daily.
legendary
Activity: 826
Merit: 1002
amarha
July 15, 2014, 08:13:50 AM

Peercoin's PoS implementation has nothing to do with NXT's PoS implementation.

PoS may be broken in one system, but perfectly safe in another.

Just like PoW may be susceptible to 51% attack and successful double spending and selfish mining in Bitcoin, but not susceptible to those attacks in Myriadcoin due to its 5 independant PoW algos.

Not to mention PPCoin/Peercoin is around 2 years old and was the first implementation of PoS ever. It was a trailblazer but it's not really relevant to discussing modern day PoS systems.
sr. member
Activity: 336
Merit: 260
July 15, 2014, 08:10:04 AM

Peercoin's PoS implementation has nothing to do with NXT's PoS implementation.

PoS may be broken in one system, but perfectly safe in another.

Just like PoW may be susceptible to 51% attack and successful double spending and selfish mining in Bitcoin, but not susceptible to those attacks in Myriadcoin due to its 5 independant PoW algos.
newbie
Activity: 42
Merit: 0
July 15, 2014, 08:06:04 AM


6. PoS



What? PoS is potentially the most revolutionary development in cryptocurrency tech since Bitcoin. Just because some people have taken advantage of the hype doesn't automatically brand any PoS coin a 'shitcoin'.

PoS is broken. See these posts by gmaxwell (nullc).

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=6798997

https://pay.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/1uoq6e/what_do_you_guys_think_of_proof_of_stake_mining/cek8epc?context=3
legendary
Activity: 826
Merit: 1002
amarha
July 15, 2014, 07:56:54 AM
Since humans are kind of lazy creatures resistant to change, does anyone else think BTC won't gain any real traction without the presence of financial armageddon in the USD or Euro?  Most people here know it seems like mathematical certainty for those fiat currencies to collapse at some point in time, but not many people are good at estimating how long they kick the can down the road.  Some think collapse is imminent, others cite things like Japan and say you can put things off 50 years or more.

What are people's estimates in this thread for when the bread lines start.  Then an even better question, if you're in a system of collapse with things like bread lines and probably martial law, what are the odds cryptocurrency would be utilized at all.  Until local grocery stores accept BTC directly, it seems like there's a long way to go.

I think you're right and I think that it could easily take 50 years for capital to flow out of the USD.

Huge global financial crises will help accelerate Bitcoin's growth but I wouldn't expect Bitcoin to be taking anything over any time soon. Doesn't mean it isn't going to carve out it's own niche in the global market though.

In unrelated news I bought some XMR and BBR in a 3:1 ratio and I'm hoping to see them turn around.

Were there any specific triggers for the last two bubbles, or did everyone just sort of wake up and start buying again?
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