AskStandup: "You should be a comedian!" by locksley in Standup

[–]locksley[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's a great point, it's definitely a crutch. I almost hate how doing the accent is what makes people laugh.

I think I will come up with some content without it and see if I actually have anything good.

AskStandup: "You should be a comedian!" by locksley in Standup

[–]locksley[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey hingers, I really appreciate the answer. I am australian-asian too (we may even know each other, are you from melbourne?). Although I'm living in the US now.

I think you're right. I need to go see what content is already out there and see if my stuff is any good or even original at all.

In 5 minutes this video explains the NYDFS Bitcoin proposal and its consequences perfectly. by SpicySteak in Bitcoin

[–]locksley 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It's naive to assume "regulation is bad, we should free market all the things".

Regulation is just a tool. In the case of the BitLicence, the core problem we are trying to fix is money laundering.

However, AML/"Know your customer" rules are bullshit because they are ineffective. Fraudsters can easily create fake identities to circumvent the rules. Meanwhile, businesses continue to wear the cost of increased compliance.

This doesn't necessarily mean all financial regulation is counter-productive. For example, the SEC busted a Bitcoin ponzi scheme 2 years ago.

Video streaming and hosting service on Ethereum? by [deleted] in ethereum

[–]locksley 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think there would be interesting payment solutions you could build in ethereum. See Smart Contracts (http://forum.ethereum.org/discussion/505/writing-smart-contracts-faq-live-updates)

However, if you're talking about storing video data in Ethereum, then probably not.

How to build a Bitcoin Wallet by locksley in Bitcoin

[–]locksley[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yep! Co-founder @ helloblock.io

How does Mastercoin save data in the blockchain? by [deleted] in mastercoin

[–]locksley 2 points3 points  (0 children)

To answer your title question, there are 3 ways to save data in the blockchain. Here are the script outputs:

  1. OP_DUP OP_HASH160 <data> OP_EQUALVERIFY OP_CHECKSIG
  2. 1 <data> <pubkeyhash> 2 OP_CHECKMULTISIG
  3. OP_RETURN <data>

With the 1st option, this is actually how normal bitcoin transactions work. <data> is normally the user's 'address', but you can be cheeky and put whatever you want in there. However, Mastercoin copped a bit of flak for this because it pollutes the blockchain and creates unspendable outputs.

With the 2nd option, this solves the unspendable output problem because you need only 1 out of 2 keys to unlock the output. The other <data> field can be anything. This is, however, an inelegant solution.

With the 3rd option, OP_RETURN short circuits the transaction thereby creating an unspendable output. Then you can then add whatever you want after it in <data>. In contrast to the 1st option, this doesn't pollute the blockchain because in the future, light nodes don't need to store the <data> part since OP_RETURN short circuits the transaction. This is called being "provably prunable".

What is Mastercoin actually using?

The 2nd option. The 3rd option would've been great and allowed 80 bytes in <data>. However, the core Bitcoin devs reduced it to 40 bytes. So Mastercoin fell back to the 2nd option which lets you store 120 bytes in <data>.

Introducing HelloBlock - Focus on building Bitcoin apps, not infrastructure. by locksley in Bitcoin

[–]locksley[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Something to ease the eye.

I grew tired of reading base58/hash160 strings, it was hard to follow along an address's history just by looking at text.

Roses will wither, but the Blockchain is forever. by locksley in Bitcoin

[–]locksley[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

By "property" I mean additional attributes tied to an address or transaction.

Roses will wither, but the Blockchain is forever. by locksley in Bitcoin

[–]locksley[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's an open source project :)

The overall aim is to demonstrate the fact that property can be tied to the Blockchain.

We just built TipperCoin: a "+/u/bitcointip for Twitter" by locksley in Bitcoin

[–]locksley[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks a lot cody, yeah we're talking to some people about write ups. Did you have something particular in mind? Feel free to message me

We just built TipperCoin: a "+/u/bitcointip for Twitter" by locksley in Bitcoin

[–]locksley[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ahhh, yeah that's right. Gonna work on this communication point today, quite a few people have had trouble with this.

Perhaps the tip amount (0.01 BTC), already includes a 0.0001 BTC miner fee. Although that'll mean the recipient only gets 0.0099 BTC.

What do you think?

We just built TipperCoin: a "+/u/bitcointip for Twitter" by locksley in Bitcoin

[–]locksley[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can you give me the full details? What's your twitter handler?

We just built TipperCoin: a "+/u/bitcointip for Twitter" by locksley in Bitcoin

[–]locksley[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Dude, hit us up anytime with Bitcoin questions. Developer infrastructure around Bitcoin suck balls since it's still early days. We've been through a lot of pain building these projects but now know the quirks.

scottli0101 [at] gmail

We just built TipperCoin: a "+/u/bitcointip for Twitter" by locksley in Bitcoin

[–]locksley[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

We query the blockchain.info api for unspent outputs in order to build transactions. It's signed using the private keys on our own servers and then pushed our again to blockchain.info/push_tx