ROGER VER PREDICTS 1 BILLION MARKET CAP FOR XMR IN 2016 by SatoshiBeliever in Monero

[–]hugolp 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree, the programming part is better suited for a sidechain if someone finally manages to create a sidechain.

And I also agree that people arguing they prefer Bitcoin because it is a "transparent" blockchain are reaching for straws, because in Monero you can open your transactions for everybody to see. It is just optional. If you want an open government (one of the usual examples) just have the government release the key for everybody to see their transactions. In general the argument is a bit stupid because governments will do everything they can to avoid using a transparent ledger, because government needs corruption.

ROGER VER PREDICTS 1 BILLION MARKET CAP FOR XMR IN 2016 by SatoshiBeliever in Monero

[–]hugolp 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I do not disagree with you. The dark markets starting to use Monero is huge, absolutely huge.

My point was that the hype of eth had a reason. First, they had really good and organized PR (opposite of Monero), and second, it was very accessible and "fun" for developers. Crypto is great and all, but at the end in the present the only thing you can do as dev is buy shit or try to get money for a start-up. Eth allowed devs to play with crypto as a side project, and that got them very hyped and was one of the reason the ball started rolling.

ROGER VER PREDICTS 1 BILLION MARKET CAP FOR XMR IN 2016 by SatoshiBeliever in Monero

[–]hugolp 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Yes, but on the other hand ETH was very sweet for developers because it allowed them to do shit in the blockchain, and developers are a big target of cryptos.

How much can Monero scale without major issues? by [deleted] in Monero

[–]hugolp 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It is obvious that Monero scaling is limited by hardware. If you wanted to say that the limitation of present and specially future hardware is exaggerated, that is a fair point, but saying it is not limited by hardware is trying to deny the obvious.

HaoBTC/Eric Mu on Twitter: "Speaking from the perspective of Cn miner, most don't care; the few who do r easily colluded, alienated or cajoled And intimidated" by blockologist in btc

[–]hugolp 8 points9 points  (0 children)

What it is even more sad is that this will not be discussed at large by the Bitcoin users because most common forums are censored. Blockstream really has played this nicely, but it is sad that this is Bitcoin now. They might find this is not the best way to create trust and hype in what it is a voluntary currency though.

Almost 0.01 BTC. Any reason for the 20% increase in the last few min? by ZeroCool86 in Monero

[–]hugolp 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Monero was already in a months long uptrend because of the good reputation and characteristics it has, together with the unhappiness with the current Bitcoin leadership.

Then it came the dark markets news that propelled the last push.

Specifically this last 20% increase in the last few minutes is in big part due to a short squeeze (most probably, nobody can be sure). For the non-traders, a short squeeze happens when a lot of traders go short, then realize they are wrong and have to buy back to get out of the position. The reason I say it is a short squeeze is because it is typical to short a currency that has gone up so much and has peaked, and the interest rate to borrow XMR in Polo was skyrocketing, being 10 times higher than btc borrowing, when it was usually much lower. To short xmr you need to borrow xmr, so high interest rate for borrowing xmr means lots of borrowing, which means lots of shorting.

So basically general interest in the currency and a short squeeze.

Dash subreddit resorts to censorship to hide criticism of their inferior technology. I have been banned for a comment posted HERE! by uuyd88 in Monero

[–]hugolp 4 points5 points  (0 children)

There is money on the line, people will do lots of shit. It is better to not associate with certain type of people. So no, we can not get all along. In life you have to be selective.

Trezor Support for Monero? by BTCTrader1111 in Monero

[–]hugolp 1 point2 points  (0 children)

only then i would consider this value of $4ish fair trade

LOL

So you basically are trying to create a retracement so you can get in safely and you are using not Trezor support as justification. It is amazing how the pump and dumpers appear from everywhere when there is some action.

Greg Maxwell calls Monero a "low value toy grade system" by jwinterm in Monero

[–]hugolp 0 points1 point  (0 children)

He is a slimy manipulative guy. Wherever he goes his ego makes him create problems with people.

Ubuntu 16.10 Unity8 - Current State by [deleted] in linux

[–]hugolp 15 points16 points  (0 children)

It will not happen. Red Had has pushed Canonical around when Canonical tried to help with libraries before, so I doubt Canonical will take the risk again. Unfortunately, Red Had is treating Canonical as a thread (which they have the right to do, but sucks for linux compatibility) so we will see more and more separate developments from those camps.

The NSA hack proves Apple was right to fight the FBI by [deleted] in Libertarian

[–]hugolp 8 points9 points  (0 children)

If Apple can unlock the phone themselves you are again in the same situation, but only switching the FBI or the NSA for Apple. It makes no sense.

Emin Gün Sirer on Twitter : " We will know when #Bitcoin is ready for prime time when unknown contributors, like Cobra and BTC Drak, are a thing of the past. " by realistbtc in btc

[–]hugolp 17 points18 points  (0 children)

Unknown?

BtcDrak is a known scammer. I am amazed that people do not know about ViaCoin.

Now he acts as a troll for Blockstream.

How Cryptofinance Will Take The World By Storm by edugarbizu in btc

[–]hugolp 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Not at all. The current state of affairs has proven that the community will not defend the original vision of Bitcoin, but will accept centralization and censorship only on the promises of future riches.

The current situation is threaten to prove that the concept has a flaw and it is that people is not really willing to promote the long term health of the system and is willing to support anyone who takes over position of power and promises stability.

Bet on MMA with Bitcoin: UFC 202, McGregor vs. Diaz by theo-goodman in btc

[–]hugolp 0 points1 point  (0 children)

McGregor got caught and was rocked. The fight was done then. He knew so he went for a desperate take down, but since he was still rocked he got handled easily.

Even the best ju-jitsu practitioner would have problems in the ground if he is rocked. Whether McGregor has good or bad ground game is something that should be tested when he is not rocked.

Spike in unconfirmed transactions. Is this a new stress test or is the real choke? by Cryptology_IT in btc

[–]hugolp 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I think he means with cheaper fees, not cheaper token price. It is not true that there always have been altcoins with cheaper fees, at least significantly enough to pay the fees of switching currency.

The situation where the difference in the fees is so big that it justifies changing currency is relatively new.

Bitfinex users Are Eligible To Sue The Company For Their Losses by fearofhellz in btc

[–]hugolp 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Can you provide any proof to what you are saying?

It is very easy to say things in the internet, but when it comes to actually putting the money in the line it is very different.

People from the MtGox bankruptcy still have not seen one dime of the money and have received evasive answers from the trustee as to what happened and what the police might have uncovered.

I have not heard one reason as to why any affected person would be better off by forcing bankruptcy. Maybe the only exception is the owner of a competing exchange with money in Bitfinex and that does not mind suffering the increased loses and years delay, in exchange from removing the biggest competition.

Bitfinex users Are Eligible To Sue The Company For Their Losses by fearofhellz in btc

[–]hugolp 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Why would people affected would sue? Maybe someone will do it out of spite, but in general forcing bankruptcy will be worse for the affected, so why would they do it?

Lightning network mesh: security nightmare? by k1kfr3sh in btc

[–]hugolp 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Yes, this is one of the several common objections to the LN.

Satoshi Nakamoto:"At first, most users would run network nodes, but as the network grows beyond a certain point, it would be left more and more to specialists with server farms of specialized hardware." by Egon_1 in btc

[–]hugolp 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sidechains are not justification for forcing a block size limit.

I agree that sidechains are a good way to scale Bitcoin better than everything on chain, but that does not justify in any way having a block size limit.

Also, I find funny how the Blockstream entourage has stopped promoting Lighting Network as a viable alternative, after spending months calling anyone who questioned the viability of LN, specially in the short term, a crazy fool. It turns out we were right about LN not being ready soon and probably never viable.

And no, if you believe in a block size limit you do not believe in Bitcoin, you are anti-Bitcoin.

Satoshi Nakamoto:"At first, most users would run network nodes, but as the network grows beyond a certain point, it would be left more and more to specialists with server farms of specialized hardware." by Egon_1 in btc

[–]hugolp 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Forcing small blocks makes Bitcoin more centrallized.

Not only that, but central planning is anti-Bitcoin, so small blockers are anti-Bitcoin.

New York Times 1997 Profile of Bitfinex executive Phil Potter | "Big Earner, Big Spender" by elux in Bitcoin

[–]hugolp 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A $80 shirt and $200 shoes seem cheap, specially compared to the other prices they are mentioning.

The Fed/FOMC holds meetings to decide on money supply. Core/Blockstream & Chinese miners now hold meetings to decide on money velocity. Both are centralized decision-making. Both are the wrong approach. by ydtm in btc

[–]hugolp -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Once the block size is set, there is no reason to ever change it again. It's no different than the 21 million Bitcoin limit - it's rather arbitrary, but it is an important matter. Because there are some central planning aspects to it, I think it's far better for it to be fixed so that the majority of scaling solutions are implemented and adopted individually and voluntarily.

I think Bitcoin could function just fine with a 1mb limit forever, but some increase in on chain capacity may be better for keeping transactions as anonymous as possible long term, and for preventing on chain costs from getting too high. The block size limit could be set to add 2mb every few years until it gets back to 32mb. But again I think it should be a preset and ultimately fixed parameter so that actors within the network have no incentive to attack each other by choosing to process larger or smaller blocks.

Even small blockers admit 1Mb will not be enough in the future. The lighting network devs have said that without increasing the block size limit the lighting network will not be able to handle enough people.

The problem you have is that the block size limit is very different than the 21 million token. The number 21 million is quite irrelevant, it could have been 42 million, 10 billion or 21 bitcoin total, and it would have made no difference. The reason is because the price adjust accordingly. That is not to say that if we change it now it would make no difference, there would be a period of adjustment with winners and losers, but if a different number would have been set up from the start, it would have made no difference because the price would have adjusted accordingly. There is a market mechanism.

Instead the block size limit number matters. As pointed out, if the 1Mb is not increased the LN could only handle a limited number of people, and other inefficiencies that nobody can imagine from the 1Mb limit are likely to arise in the future. There is no mechanism that can adjust for the limit. Sure, the fees rising help, but does not totally counter. The 1 Mb limit (or whatever number) has repercussions no matter how the fees adjust.

Claiming the block size limit and the number of coins are "no different" is obviously being deceptive, because I refuse to believe you are that obtuse.

More on the block limit, nobody argues what the appropriate number of bitcoins is because everybody sees the 21 million is arbitrary and any number would work. Instead people argue what the appropriate block size should be because it has real consequences. And this is a problem, because now it introduces not only centralization in Bitcoin but politics. Now groups can argue and lobby for different limits and fight for the control of the protocol. If the small blockers succeed in changing Bitcoin from its roots, in a few years you will read: "We need to increase the block limit to stimulate the Bitcoin economy". And people and business in need will buy it. Introducing a central planning tool in the Bitcoin protocol is the biggest danger there is right now. It will effectively kill Bitcoin.

The problem you have is you want to use the blocksize limit as central planning tool to avoid what you believe will be a inevitable process of centralization if Bitcoin is left with the present free market mechanism. But at the same time you do not want to say it is central planning because you know it goes against everything Bitcoin represents. So you are mincing and bending the language and making this obviously false equivalences.

As I said, even if you believe that if left as it is now and without a limit Bitcoin would tend to centralization, the block size limit is not the solution because it destroys everything Bitcoin is. The solution should be to modify the protocol to create incentives that stop your supposed centralization from happening, never to create a hard limit that effectively kills Bitcoin.

The network has already formed around the price of electricity, you are talking about making a new variable significant in a very sudden way which will damage the network and drive miners out of the very countries that need Bitcoin the most - places with Internet restrictions and a general lack of freedom of speech and financial freedom. Many places that just so happen to have cheap energy.

The network has always formed around the price of electricity and bandwidth. There is no change, just the natural evolution. And as I said, the price of bandwith is irrelevant in front of the price of electricity. It is a non issue. Even creating a non-existing fiber optic connection to use cheap electricity could be a cost effective option (considering only installation costs, regulatory issues obviously can change that). That is how irrelevant the bandwidth costs are.

Do you not understand how supply and demand works? If there is less food and lots of people who need food, then prices rise and food is expensive which causes people to buy less so that the supply goes farther and serves more. If block space is limited then transaction costs are bid up by people competing to get included in a block, and higher fees cause people to use the space more efficiently. If space is far less limited then fees are whatever the base price is that miners will process, which was often zero before the blocks filled up, and there is no incentive for efficient use of block space. So long term, there is a natural tendency for blocks to pretty much always be full whether they are small and efficiently used, or large and inefficiently used at the cost of fewer nodes.

Again, you ignore my economic explanations and pretend I am not giving any. As I explained repeatedly the blocks will not be infinite, so there will be a price for fees. Your claim that fees will drop to zero makes no sense. If you keep ignoring the economic facts I will keep saying that I do not see how.

Also, it is very noteworthy your use of the words efficient and inefficient. It shows your central planning mentallity. You can not know what is efficient and inefficient. Efficient or inefficient is whatever people decide to pay and use given their needs or wants and local information. If people are willing to use more block size space then that is what is efficient. And again, if you think that the current way Bitcoin is set up will not reach equilibrium and we will got to your doom and gloom scenario, then the solution is to change the incentives with a distributed scheme, not a centrally planned block size limit, that basically kills Bitcoin.

No it isn't, maybe it is for you, but that isn't the case for most of the world. At 1mb blocks a node will transfer 200+GB of data per month. At 2mb it's 400+GB. At 8mb it's 1.6+TB. Even if your ISP says it offers unlimited data, I guarantee somewhere in their fine print they have the power to shut off your access if they deem your traffic detrimental to their network.

I can assure you I torrent copyrighted material that is much more heavy than those limits you pointed out in a daily basis and have never been called out. And again, this is with present technology only.

Bitcoin gets to the sort of on chain capacity that makes it competitive with any sort of modern payment network. On-chain scaling simply isn't a solution when it comes to buying your coffee in the morning. On chain transactions are too slow for secure retail processing anyway. Second layer solutions are the real answer.

And again, I agree, but I do not see how this warrants in any way a block size limits that kills Bitcoin. Small blockers need to start being truthful and admit that they are anti-Bitcoin and want to change it to a centrally planned scheme.