@arnoudkAll this FUD about doubling your coins is just crazy. It means that the author does not understand the concept of value in a currency.
In a hard fork scenario, you will have coins on two chains, for as long as two chains exist. But that does not mean that you have doubled the value of your coins, as only one chain will have value and the other chain will be valueless.
In the brief period that two chains exist, you could trade coins. My CoreChainCoin for your ClassicChainCoin. To pull this off, the transactions will have to be 'tainted' with newly mined coins. Otherwise, you cannot distinguish between the two chains.
If you swap coins with someone who ends up being on the losing chain, he has in effect given you his coins. There are no additional coins introduced, and nobody got scammed.
Newly mined coins cannot be spent for 120 confirmations. I doubt very much that it will take 120 blocks before one of the chains is a clear winner / loser. Let's assume (unrealistically) that hash rate is distributed 50/50 (unrealistically, because there is a 75% threshhold for the fork). In this scenario, it would take the equivalent time of 240 confirmations to get 120 confirmations on each chain. That is 120 (blocks) * 20 (minute per block due to hash power split) = 2400 minutes. That's 40 hours. Almost 2 days. And that assumes that whoever wants to pull off this so-called attack will spend their newly mined coins as soon as possible. I guess they'll have to pay whoever mines the first post-fork block a nice premium for sending that specific transaction their way a.s.a.p., or they would have to be very lucky to mine it themselves.
All I see is FUD.
You're welcome. It's the thought that counts! (And there's always tomorrow's stash of upvotes!)(Btw, I'd like to upvote your comment but it appears that I've already used all my currently available rating power here at the bitcoin forum)
You did extremely well, keep spreading the positivity and back it up with fact.You're welcome. It's the thought that counts! (And there's always tomorrow's stash of upvotes!)(Btw, I'd like to upvote your comment but it appears that I've already used all my currently available rating power here at the bitcoin forum)
“The creators of the new software face potential liability and criminal sanctions unless they register with the Feds,”
Well stated!Forbes's Mr Bloomberg really does not seem to like Bitcoin all that much!
So when his previous article full of non-argument FUD did not work out, he is trying a new approach: legal threats.
I don't know how legal, or illegal, a bitcoin classic chain is in the eyes of some judges in the USA. The problem with the USA legal system, is that they seem to think their opinion is applicable to the world. Talk about arrogance. I don't expect any judge to really understand bitcoin, so why would the opinion of an uninformed person in a costume have any value?
It has value, only because a law is an opinion, backed by the threat violence. If a judge decides that you broke some law, he will kidnap you and lock you up in a cage. Or they will steal your possessions. Or both.
A law is just a piece of paper with someone's opinion on it, stamped and signed by someone else. The law could be anything, and just because something is law does not make it right, or moral. Nazi Germany was legal. Killing people is legal (if you call it war). Locking people up indefinitely in a cage without charging them of anything is legal (if you call them terrorists). Stealing people's property is legal (if you call it taxation). Limiting people's freedom to move around is legal (if you call it a border crossing). Feeding the homeless is illegal, even though the homeless person is grateful and the sender is doing it out of free will. Drugs are illegal, even if the person taking the drugs is only damaging his own body and is not hurting anyone else. Defending your property against theft is illegal (if the thief is wearing an IRS costume).
I don't much care if there are laws that make bitcoin legal, or illegal. If it is illegal, it is a good warning to the developers to leave the USA and go live in a less dictatorial regime. But if something is written down in a law or not, by itself, is irrelevant for a morality discussion.
Thus, referring to a law is a threat. At the very least a threat to your freedom and to your property. It is very much like a death threat - in that they steal years of your life.
So the author is resorting to personal threats. That's all there is to this article. More scaremongering.
If the USA becomes the USSA and locks up bitcoin programmers - they show clear as day what kind of people they are. It will not kill bitcoin, others in other countries will take over. Anonymity will be improved. And the next iteration is that much harder to threaten.
Wow, thank you for this wonderful compliment! It is comments like these that really make my day.Well stated!
Thank you tremendously for taking the time to share your insightful thoughts regarding law in general and law in the USA.
I'm an American (although I've spent a lot of time outside of the country) and I couldn't agree with you more. Your words are extremely inspiring and thought-provoking.
I don't know what is a greater threat to governments - people being able to use sound money (that they cannot print for their own purposes), or people thinking about these concepts."You take the blue pill, the story ends. You wake up in your bed and believe whatever you want to believe. You take the red pill, you stay in Wonderland, and I show you how deep the rabbit hole goes."―Morpheus, to Neo
I don't know what is a greater threat to governments - people being able to use sound money (that they cannot print for their own purposes), or people thinking about these concepts.Wow, thank you for this wonderful compliment! It is comments like these that really make my day.
I've personally spent many years going from statist (just because that's what you are taught when you are little and you never question it), to libertarian/minarchist (well you at least need a government for defense, otherwise the country will get run over by bad guys!), to voluntaryist/anarchist (wait a minute, a country border is an imaginary line that everyone pretends is there, it is a shared delusion. And it's morally wrong to steal from someone, through taxation, even if the goal is mutual defense). It is a long journey, and one that can be challenging. It can be hard to entertain the possibility that maybe, just maybe, a world without government is superior. There is so much programmed fear. When you reach that phase, you realize that government itself is also a delusion and that the very concept of a government is self-contradictory. There is just so much programming to undo, and so many words to define clearly. I'm just so glad to be able to pay it forward now.
I'd recommend reading Larken Rose's book The greatest superstition - his clarity of thought is just amazing. If the above sounds out-of-this-world (but you are curious to explore), reading that book will change your life, because it will change the way you look at the world and it will change the decisions you make. It is a Matrix red pill moment.
[quote]"You take the blue pill, the story ends. You wake up in your bed and believe whatever you want to believe. You take the red pill, you stay in Wonderland, and I show you how deep the rabbit hole goes."―Morpheus, to Neo
Cool! Why don't you post your favorite quote from that book here on the forum, once you are done reading it?@arnoudk
You're welcome and thank you very much for recommending the book by Larken Rose. I am positively going to check it out!
@arnoudCool! Why don't you post your favorite quote from that book here on the forum, once you are done reading it?
As you live in the USA, you could use purse.io to order it on Amazon for a discounted price
@arnoudOops. I got the title of Larken Rose's book wrong. It is The Most Dangerous Superstition.
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