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Topic: [XMR] Monero - A secure, private, untraceable cryptocurrency - page 361. (Read 4671575 times)

legendary
Activity: 3570
Merit: 1959
5) You are a shop owner, and have registered a Monero address with the IRS as your official retailer address. You use this address for receiving payments from all of your customers. At the end of the year, the tax man uses the view key you provided them with to check how much you received, so that you pay the appropriate taxes....

Good stuff, but seriously, the IRS using your viewkey? The IRS forms are ancient, they have nothing for that sort of thing, so how will that ever work in this day and age? I understand it and agree, but I don't see the IRS actually giving any shits about that kind of thing. It's hard enough to claim BTC on tax forms, let alone any other crypto!  Roll Eyes

Monero is doing pretty well. Great to see ongoing developement.

Monero is so undervalued it's crazy. I'd still buy more if I could. Tongue
full member
Activity: 247
Merit: 100
Monero is doing pretty well. Great to see ongoing developement.
sr. member
Activity: 450
Merit: 250
Monero Privacy is NOT a crime or something to feel guilty about:

https://www.reddit.com/r/Monero/comments/6uldp2/monero_privacy_is_not_a_crime_or_something_to/

1) You are traveling through parts of a country with a medium to high violent crime rate. You need to use some of your Bitcoin to pay for something. If every person you transact with knows exactly how much money you have, this is a threat to your personal physical safety.

2) You are a business that receives a payment from a supplier. That supplier will be able to see how much money your business has, and therefore can guess at how price sensitive you are in future negotiations. They can see every single other payment you’ve ever received to that Bitcoin address, and therefore determine what other suppliers you are dealing with and how much you are paying those suppliers. They may be able to roughly determine how many customers you have and how much you charge your customers. This is commercially sensitive information that damages your negotiating position enough to cause you relative financial loss.

3) You are a private citizen paying for online goods and services. You are aware that it is common practice for companies to attempt to use ‘price discrimination’ algorithms to attempt to determine the highest prices they can offer future services to you at, and you would prefer they do not have the information advantage of knowing how much you spend and where you spend it.

4 You sell cupcakes and receive Bitcoin as payment. It turns out that someone who owned that Bitcoin before you was involved in criminal activity. Now you are worried that you have become a suspect in a criminal case, because the movement of funds to you is a matter of public record. You are also worried that certain Bitcoins that you thought you owned will be considered ‘tainted’ and that others will refuse to accept them as payment.

Monero solves these privacy issues by automatically applying privacy techniques to every single transaction made. You can have confidence that it is not possible to own ‘tainted’ Monero. This is a concept in economics known as ‘fungibility’ and is historically considered an important characteristic for any currency to have.

Regards,


   So Monero is kind of like not showing your tax returns.  Should be one big supporter in the US white house....   

5) You are a shop owner, and have registered a Monero address with the IRS as your official retailer address. You use this address for receiving payments from all of your customers. At the end of the year, the tax man uses the view key you provided them with to check how much you received, so that you pay the appropriate taxes....
legendary
Activity: 1007
Merit: 1000
Monero Privacy is NOT a crime or something to feel guilty about:

https://www.reddit.com/r/Monero/comments/6uldp2/monero_privacy_is_not_a_crime_or_something_to/

1) You are traveling through parts of a country with a medium to high violent crime rate. You need to use some of your Bitcoin to pay for something. If every person you transact with knows exactly how much money you have, this is a threat to your personal physical safety.

2) You are a business that receives a payment from a supplier. That supplier will be able to see how much money your business has, and therefore can guess at how price sensitive you are in future negotiations. They can see every single other payment you’ve ever received to that Bitcoin address, and therefore determine what other suppliers you are dealing with and how much you are paying those suppliers. They may be able to roughly determine how many customers you have and how much you charge your customers. This is commercially sensitive information that damages your negotiating position enough to cause you relative financial loss.

3) You are a private citizen paying for online goods and services. You are aware that it is common practice for companies to attempt to use ‘price discrimination’ algorithms to attempt to determine the highest prices they can offer future services to you at, and you would prefer they do not have the information advantage of knowing how much you spend and where you spend it.

4 You sell cupcakes and receive Bitcoin as payment. It turns out that someone who owned that Bitcoin before you was involved in criminal activity. Now you are worried that you have become a suspect in a criminal case, because the movement of funds to you is a matter of public record. You are also worried that certain Bitcoins that you thought you owned will be considered ‘tainted’ and that others will refuse to accept them as payment.

Monero solves these privacy issues by automatically applying privacy techniques to every single transaction made. You can have confidence that it is not possible to own ‘tainted’ Monero. This is a concept in economics known as ‘fungibility’ and is historically considered an important characteristic for any currency to have.

Regards,


   So Monero is kind of like not showing your tax returns.  Should be one big supporter in the US white house....   
newbie
Activity: 17
Merit: 0
Monero Privacy is NOT a crime or something to feel guilty about:

https://www.reddit.com/r/Monero/comments/6uldp2/monero_privacy_is_not_a_crime_or_something_to/

1) You are traveling through parts of a country with a medium to high violent crime rate. You need to use some of your Bitcoin to pay for something. If every person you transact with knows exactly how much money you have, this is a threat to your personal physical safety.

2) You are a business that receives a payment from a supplier. That supplier will be able to see how much money your business has, and therefore can guess at how price sensitive you are in future negotiations. They can see every single other payment you’ve ever received to that Bitcoin address, and therefore determine what other suppliers you are dealing with and how much you are paying those suppliers. They may be able to roughly determine how many customers you have and how much you charge your customers. This is commercially sensitive information that damages your negotiating position enough to cause you relative financial loss.

3) You are a private citizen paying for online goods and services. You are aware that it is common practice for companies to attempt to use ‘price discrimination’ algorithms to attempt to determine the highest prices they can offer future services to you at, and you would prefer they do not have the information advantage of knowing how much you spend and where you spend it.

4 You sell cupcakes and receive Bitcoin as payment. It turns out that someone who owned that Bitcoin before you was involved in criminal activity. Now you are worried that you have become a suspect in a criminal case, because the movement of funds to you is a matter of public record. You are also worried that certain Bitcoins that you thought you owned will be considered ‘tainted’ and that others will refuse to accept them as payment.

Monero solves these privacy issues by automatically applying privacy techniques to every single transaction made. You can have confidence that it is not possible to own ‘tainted’ Monero. This is a concept in economics known as ‘fungibility’ and is historically considered an important characteristic for any currency to have.

Regards,
full member
Activity: 142
Merit: 100
ohhh i have sinned -.- sold xmr yesterday and now he grows back -.- i should trust... thats deserved xD
legendary
Activity: 3570
Merit: 1959
Great coin here now, Sign up now and receive a free 48h Monero mining contract.
A smart way to start with Monere if you don't have the BTC to start with mining.

Start with mining here

Trail ends soon, hurry up!
can anyone please confirm this mining contract
Is this for real or scam?

He's trying to use a reflink so he makes money off you signing up, so I'm guessing it's a scam but do let us know if you give it a try? Tongue
member
Activity: 96
Merit: 10
any formal updates on this wallet?? Looks like they have been plugging away on github . https://github.com/mymonero/mymonero-app-js/commits/master



I would not advise to use another's software
So you can lose your coins
member
Activity: 116
Merit: 10
Quack.
legendary
Activity: 2968
Merit: 1198
I remember hearing about a month ago monero had a bug in the software that allowed people to mint new coins, and that its a problem because it being anonymous you cant see how many coins there are to check


... That bug, had it been exploited (as it was in some other cryptonote-based coins but not Monero), would been visible on the blockchain....


Kindly expand on this - how would one be able to identify which coins were "minted" as opposed to legitimately mined on the blockchain?

Because they would have had invalid key images. It's something vaguely analogous to if the amount was -100 instead of 100 but the code had been missing a check for negative numbers. Once the check is added the bogus key images are immediately detected and rejected. Those coins that actually got exploited (BCN, XDN, some others) need to disable the check for older blocks to avoid rejecting them.

Monero was never exploited and doesn't need such an exception.


Hi Smooth, and thanks for your reply

So to be clear, does this mean that we know the bug was not exploited because the Monero blockchain rejects invalid key images, and any rejected key images would be visible on the blockchain if they existed?

Correct
hero member
Activity: 952
Merit: 552
Impressive updates!
Great project, great plan and great development team!
It must work out!

Looking forward to the next six months..
full member
Activity: 1204
Merit: 110
Impressive updates!
Great project, great plan and great development team!
It must work out!
newbie
Activity: 4
Merit: 0
Its an interesting read, but it really kind of just says more mixins = better.
Seems like common sense but I'm sleepy.
legendary
Activity: 2242
Merit: 3523
Flippin' burgers since 1163.
"RingCT 2.0: A Compact Linkable Ring Signature Based Protocol for Blockchain Cryptocurrency Monero" - by Sun et al. (2017)

https://www.docdroid.net/8eLcBMr/ringct.pdf

https://www.reddit.com/r/Monero/comments/6tlxpp/ringct_20_a_compact_linkable_ring_signature_based/

Thanks for sharing dEBRUYNE. It is incredible how hard Monero is being worked on and improved over the years.
Long live planned protocol updates (hard forks).

Quote
Abstract. In this work, we initially study the necessary properties and
security requirements of Ring Con dential Transaction (RingCT) proto-
col deployed in the popular anonymous cryptocurrency Monero. Firstly,
we formalize the syntax of RingCT protocol and present several formal
security de nitions according to its application in Monero. Based on our
observations on the underlying (linkable) ring signature and commitment
schemes, we then put forward a new efficient RingCT protocol (RingCT
2.0), which is built upon the well-known Pedersen commitment, accu-
mulator with one-way domain and signature of knowledge (which alto-
gether perform the functions of a linkable ring signature). Besides, we
show that it satis es the security requirements if the underlying build-
ing blocks are secure in the random oracle model. In comparison with
the original RingCT protocol, our RingCT 2.0 protocol presents a sig-
ni cant space saving
, namely, the transaction size is independent of the
number of groups of input accounts included in the generalized ring while
the original RingCT suffers a linear growth with the number of groups,
which would allow each block to process more transactions.
legendary
Activity: 2268
Merit: 1141
"RingCT 2.0: A Compact Linkable Ring Signature Based Protocol for Blockchain Cryptocurrency Monero" - by Sun et al. (2017)

https://www.docdroid.net/8eLcBMr/ringct.pdf

https://www.reddit.com/r/Monero/comments/6tlxpp/ringct_20_a_compact_linkable_ring_signature_based/
sr. member
Activity: 654
Merit: 250

monero to the moon? do u still believe in that? i am waiting for month to see any movement in monero while most other cryptos go and and up and up .....

What? Cheesy
80% of coins on poloniex is red! All of them are going down from two weeks..
News like this strengthen Monero position, and later the price will be skyrocketing! You will see Wink
full member
Activity: 375
Merit: 101
legendary
Activity: 1164
Merit: 1010
Hey guys, what's the best miner for CPU right now? I've come across a few, but they're all old. No recent updates to cpu miners?
legendary
Activity: 3836
Merit: 4969
Doomed to see the future and unable to prevent it
cḿon guys! xmr is losing -.- lets break the 50$ wall and go to 100

Soon*
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