Sunday, November 30, 2014

The Internet's Own Boy

The Internet’s Own Boy: The Story of Aaron Swartz


The film follows the story of programming prodigy and information activist Aaron Swartz. From Swartz’s help in the development of the basic internet protocol RSS to his co-founding of Reddit, his fingerprints are all over the internet. But it was Swartz’s groundbreaking work in social justice and political organizing combined with his aggressive approach to information access that ensnared him in a two-year legal nightmare. It was a battle that ended with the taking of his own life at the age of 26. Aaron’s story touched a nerve with people far beyond the online communities in which he was a celebrity. This film is a personal story about what we lose when we are tone deaf about technology and its relationship to our civil liberties.




The Internet's Own Boy

Billion Dollar Hippy

Steve Jobs Documentary – Billion Dollar Hippy


Steven Paul “Steve” Jobs was an American entrepreneur, marketer, and inventor, who was the co-founder, chairman, and CEO of Apple Inc.




Billion Dollar Hippy

The Debt

Warren Clarke, Barbara Marten, Amanda Abbington, Martin Freeman, Hugo Speer


Producers:

British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) (in association with)

Strand Productions


Distributed by:

British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) (2003) (UK) (TV)

High Point Film and Television (Non-US) (all media)


Titles by:

Huge Designs




The Debt

Capitalism: A Love Story

Capitalism: A Love Story




Capitalism: A Love Story

The Ascent of Money

The Ascent of Money: A Financial History of The World by Niall Ferguson


Professor Niall Ferguson examines the origins of the pillars of the world’s financial system, and how behind every great historical phenomenon — empires and republics, wars and revolutions — there lies a financial secret.


Episode 1: Dreams of Avarice. From Shylock’s pound of flesh to the loan sharks of Glasgow, from the ‘promises to pay’ on Babylonian clay tablets to the Medici banking system, Professor Ferguson explains the origins of credit and debt and why credit networks are indispensable to any civilization.


Episode 2: Human Bondage. How did finance become the realm of the masters of the universe? Through the rise of the bond market in Renaissance Italy. With the advent of bonds, war finance was transformed and spread to north-west Europe and across the Atlantic. It was the bond market that made the Rothschilds the richest and most powerful family of the 19th century. And today governments are asking it to bail them out.


Episode 3: Blowing Bubbles. Why do stock markets produce bubbles and busts? Professor Ferguson goes back to the origins of the joint stock company in Amsterdam and Paris. He draws telling parallels between the current stock market crash and the 18th-century Mississippi Bubble of Scottish financier John Law and the 2001 Enron bankruptcy. He shows why humans have a herd instinct when it comes to investment, and why no one can accurately predict when the bulls might stampede.


Episode 4: Risky Business. Life is a risky business — which is why people take out insurance. But faced with an unexpected disaster, the state has to step in. Professor Ferguson travels to post-Katrina New Orleans to ask why the free market can’t provide adequate protection against catastrophe. His quest for an answer takes him to the origins of modern insurance in the early 19th century and to the birth of the welfare state in post-war Japan.


Episode 5: Safe As Houses. It sounded so simple: give state-owned assets to the people. After all, what better foundation for a property-owning democracy than a campaign of privatisation encompassing housing? An economic theory says that markets can’t function without mortgages, because it’s only by borrowing against their assets that entrepreneurs can get their businesses off the ground. But what if mortgages are bundled together and sold off to the highest bidder?


Episode 6: Chimerica. Since the 1990s, once risky markets in Asia, Latin America and eastern Europe have become better investments than the UK or US stock market. The explanation is the rise of ‘Chimerica’, the economic marriage of China and the United States. But does it make sense for poor Chinese savers to lend to rich American spenders?




The Ascent of Money

The Last Days Of Lehman

A good film / movie on the greed of the banking and finance industry – the last days of Lehman Brothers, wont be the last investment bank to go down – why? greed in banking is out of control and more banks will follow…




The Last Days Of Lehman

2005 The Smartest Guys In The Room

Enron – The Smartest Guys In The Room


A documentary about the Enron corporation, its faulty and corrupt business practices, and how they led to its fall.




2005 The Smartest Guys In The Room

2003 The Crooked E

The Unshredded Truth About Enron


The Crooked E: The Unshredded Truth About Enron is an American television movie aired by CBS in January 2003, which was based on the book Anatomy of Greed by Brian Cruver. The film, which stars Brian Dennehy, Christian Kane and Mike Farrell, and was directed by Penelope Spheeris, was a ratings hit for the network.




2003 The Crooked E

2003 The Corporation

Among the 40 interview subjects are CEOs and top-level executives from a range of industries: oil, pharmaceutical, computer, tire, manufacturing, public relations, branding, advertising and undercover marketing; in addition, a Nobel-prize winning economist, the first management guru, a corporate spy, and a range of academics, critics, historians and thinkers are also interviewed.




2003 The Corporation

2000 The Trillion Dollar Bet

A documentary about the demise of Long Term Capital Management.




2000 The Trillion Dollar Bet

Barbarians at the gate

The content is based on real events, much of the story is satirized.




Barbarians at the gate

1985 Billion Dollar Day

“Commercial Breaks filmed round the clock in London, New York and Hong Kong as three men gambled on which way the dollar would turn….”


The day in question was 4th June 1985, with the programme being aired on BBC 2 some weeks later.




1985 Billion Dollar Day

Friday, November 28, 2014

RieCoin's prime sextuplet

Last week, Riecoin – a project that doubles as decentralized virtual currency and a distributed computing system – quietly broke the record for the largest prime number sextuplet. This happened on November 17, 2014 at 19:50 GMT and the calculation took only 70 minutes using the massive distributed computing power of its network. This week the feat was outdone and the project beat its own record on November 24, 2014 at 20:28 GMT achieving numbers 654 digits long, 21 more than its previous record.


Since the rise of Bitcoin as the largest computing system in the world some have expressed concerns about the expanding energy consumption being used to keep the currency running. Bitcoin calculations consist of computing “hash” functions required to keep the transactions secure. With this in mind innovators in the field of cryptography and virtual currencies have delved into the concept of systems that could secure their transactions by using some more interesting computations than just hash functions. Riecoin is one such endeavor, and it produces one prime sextuplet every two and a half minutes.


A prime sextuplet consists of six prime numbers packed together as tightly as possible. For sextuplets, “as tightly as possible” means that the largest is 16 plus the smallest of the numbers. The distribution of prime numbers is not completely understood and -while it’s widely believed to be so- it’s not known if there are infinitely many of these prime sextuplet structures; thus these results are interesting to researchers of number theory and other applied fields.


The tests that Riecoin performs to check whether the numbers are actually prime are probabilistic; this means that there was a tiny possibility that not all the record numbers were prime. This possibility was tiny, remote, and not expected to actually matter, however mathematicians won’t settle with this and demand actual proof of primality. For this reason the numbers were independently tested using deterministic software.


Recently, Riecoin performed an update of their software that allowed the participants of its network to focus computing resources on a single sextuplet for longer than the usual two and a half minutes. This allowed them to work on larger numbers and reach the record breaking 633 and later 654 digits. This will be performed once per week, potentially generating new records each time. The first two instances were successful in finding new records.


The records are independently verified and kept here: http://anthony.d.forbes.googlepages.com/ktuplets.htm


The record sextuplet is where


N = 689702036532655186685581028503873005405874329363269153979622096014346785019088707220301256048568366498602811 964467654774670820091972463194208186476882699386082393716593309811371422836387527549653095824492750394092045 532275098135652952423078356472379653908988713872759020566218763497459878106775183203857648413997381256598543 877696056491021898353604500233203798629403923570165634119564742536549584121471881689569379964364152289494693 118199337926886001843460903637314310532482306798517536171711379098711480663572269535063407688377687623951196 977582998449120940358830276897328119483620011984713125859631603652231485340570118364685553782567043880668996 08076



source: http://www.cryptoarticles.com/press-releases/riecoin-breaks-world-record-for-largest-prime-sextuplet-twice



RieCoin's prime sextuplet

EnergyCoin mobile staking

Android wallets for altcoins are nothing new under the sun, yet not all of them works as smooth as one would like.


Having tested several different altcoin Android wallets over the past fe months, only a handful seem to be working the way I would want them to. Energycoin have released their Android wallet yesterday, so let’s take a look at how it holds up!


Even though the ENRG Android wallet was originally scheduled to be released on October 31st, there were some last minute delays which pushed back the release date by about three weeks. Then again, I’d rather have a wallet that actually works properly instead of getting something that works half the time.


Do keep in mind this is only the first version of the Energycoin Android wallet, and more functionalities will come in future updates. One of the features being available from the start is mobile staking, which is a new “trend” for mobile wallets since a few months. As I currently have no ENRG in my Android wallet, I can’t tell you how well it works, but once I manage to get some funds sent over, we will do an update article.


Other available features include a transaction ledger providing all incoming and outgoing transaction details, the ability to have up to 3 different payment addresses; and a contact list where you can add other ENRG addresses and associate them with a tag. Pretty basic things, but they all seem to work well.


Once the next Android wallet version will be released, one of of the upcoming features we can expect will be in-wallet trading. That feature will be made available by using the Bittrex API , as ENRG is listed there. While other exchanges list Energycoin as well, MintPal is currently still down, and I am not sure if Palth has an API for such a feature.



source: http://www.cryptoarticles.com/crypto-news/energycoin-android-wallet-released-with-working-mobile-staking



EnergyCoin mobile staking

Thursday, November 27, 2014

Ethereum

Over the past year, there has been an increasingly large amount of discussion around so-called “Bitcoin 2.0″ protocols – alternative cryptographic networks that are inspired by Bitcoin, but which intend to make the underlying technology usable for far more than just currency.


The earliest implementation of this idea was Namecoin, a Bitcoin-like currency created in 2010 which would be used for decentralized domain name registration. More recently, we have seen the emergence of colored coins, allowing users to create their own currencies on the Bitcoin network, and more advanced protocols like Mastercoin, Bitshares and Counterparty which intend to provide features such as financial derivatives, savings wallets and decentralized exchange. However, up until these point all of the protocols that have been invented have been specialized, attempting to offer specific and rich feature sets targeted toward specific industries or applications usually financial in nature. Now, a group of developers including myself have come up with a project that takes the opposite track: a cryptocurrency network that intends to be as generalized as possible, allowing anyone to create specialized applications on top for almost any purpose imaginable.


One common design philosophy among many cryptocurrency 2.0 protocols is the idea that, just like the internet, cryptocurrency design would work best if protocols split off into different layers. Under this strain of thought, Bitcoin is to be thought of as a sort of TCP/IP of the cryptocurrency ecosystem, and other next-generation protocols can be built on top of Bitcoin much like we have SMTP for email, HTTP for webpages and XMPP for chat all on top of TCP as a common underlying data layer.


So far, the three main protocols that have followed this model are colored coins, Mastercoin and Counterparty. The way the colored coins protocol works is simple. First, in order to create colored coins, a user tags specific bitcoins as having a special meaning; for example, if Bob is a gold issuer, he may wish to tag some set of bitcoins and say that each satoshi represents 0.1 grams of gold redeemable from him. The protocol then tracks those bitcoins through the blockchain, and in that way it is possible to calculate who owns them at any time.


Mastercoin and Counterparty are somewhat more abstract; they use the Bitcoin blockchain to store data, so a Mastercoin or Counterparty transaction is a Bitcoin transaction, but the protocols interpret the transactions in a completely different way. One can have two Mastercoin transactions, one sending 1 MSC and the other 100000 MSC, but from the point of view of a Bitcoin user that does not know how that Mastercoin protocol works they both look like small transactions sending 0.0006 BTC each; the Mastercoin-specific metadata is encoded in the transaction outputs. A Mastercoin client then needs to search the Bitcoin blockchain for Mastercoin transactions in order to determine the current Mastercoin balance sheet.


I personally have had the privilege of talking directly to many of the originators of the colored coins and Mastercoin protocol, and have participated considerably in the development of both projects. However, over about two months of research and particpation, what I eventually came to realize is that, while the underlying idea of having such high-level protocols on top of low-level protocols is laudable, there are fundamental flaws in the implementations, as they stand today, that may well prevent the projects from ever gaining anything more than a small amount of traction.


The reason is not that the ideas behind the protocols themselves are bad; the ideas are excellent, and the response of the community alone is proof that they are trying to do something that is very much needed. Rather, the reason is that the low-level protocol that they are trying to build their high-level protocols on top of, Bitcoin, is simply not cut out for the task. This is not to say that Bitcoin is bad, or is not a revolutionary invention; as a protocol for storing and transferring value, Bitcoin is excellent. However, as far as being an effective low-level protocol is concerned, Bitcoin is less effective; rather than being like a TCP on top of which one can build HTTP, Bitcoin is like SMTP: a protocol that is good at its intended task (in SMTP’s case email, in Bitcoin’s case money), but not particularly good as a foundation for anything else.


The specific failure of Bitcoin is particularly concentrated in one place: scalability. Bitcoin itself is as scalable as a cryptocurrency can be; even if the blockchain balloons to over a terabyte, there is a protocol called “simplified payment verification”, described in the Bitcoin whitepaper that allows “light clients” with only a few megabytes of bandwidth and storage to securely determine whether or not they have received transactions. With colored coins and Mastercoin, however, this possibility disappears. The reason is this. In order to determine what color a colored coin is, you need to not just use Bitcoin simplified payment verification to prove that it exists; you also need to trace it all the way back to its genesis, and do an SPV check each step of the way. Sometimes, the backward scan is exponential; and with metacoin protocols there is no way to know anything at all without verifying every single transaction.


And this is what Ethereum intends to fix. Ethereum does not intend to be a Swiss Army knife protocol with hundreds of features to suit every need; instead, Ethereum aims to be a superior foundational protocol, and allow other decentralized applications to build on top of it instead of Bitcoin, giving them more tools to work with and allowing them to gain the full benefits of Ethereum’s scalability and efficiency.


At the time that Ethereum was being developed, there was a large amount of interest in allowing financial contracts on top of cryptocurrencies; the basic type of contract being a “contract for difference”. In a contract for difference, two parties agree to put in some amount of money, and then get money out in a proportion that depends on the value of some underlying asset. For example, a CFD might have Alice put in $1000, Bob put in $1000, and then after 30 days the blockchain would automatically return to Alice $1000 plus $100 for every dollar that the LTC/USD price went up during that time period and send Bob the rest. These contracts allow people to speculate on assets at high leverage, or alternatively protect themselves from cryptocurrency volatility by canceling out their exposure, without any centralized exchange.


At this point, however, it is clear that contracts for difference are really only one special case of a much more general concept: contracts for formula. Instead of having the contract take in $x for Alice, $y from Bob, and return to Alice $x plus an additional $z for every dollar that some given ticker went up, a contract should be able to return to A an amount of funds based on any mathematical formula, allowing contracts of arbitrary complexity. If the formula allows random data as inputs, these generalized CFDs can even be used to implement a sort of peer-to-peer gambling.


Ethereum takes this idea and pushes it one step further. Instead of contracts being agreements between two parties that start and end, contracts in Ethereum are like a sort of autonomous agent simulated by the blockchain. Each Ethereum contract has its own internal scripting code, and the scripting code is activated every time a transaction is sent to it. The scripting language has access to the transaction’s value, sender and optional data fields, as well some block data and its own internal memory, as inputs, and can send transactions. To make a CFD, Alice would create a contract and seed it with $1000 worth of cryptocurrency, and then wait for Bob to accept the contract by sending a transction containing $1000 as well. The contract would then be programmed to start a timer, and after 30 days Alice or Bob would be able to send a small transaction to the contract to activate it again and release the funds.


Aside from this narrow contract-for-difference model, however, the whitepaper outlines many other transaction types that will become possible with Ethereum scripting, of which a few include:


Multisignature escrows, of a similar spirit to the Bitcoin arbitration service Bitrated, but with more complex rules than Bitcoin. For example, there will be no need for the signers to pass around partially signed transactions manually; people can authorize a withdrawal asynchronously over the blockchain one at a time and then have the transaction finalized automatically once enough people make their authorizations.

Savings accounts – one interesting setup works as follows. Suppose that Alice wants to store a large amount of money, but does not want to risk losing everything if her private key is lose or stolen. She makes a contract with Bob, a semi-trustworthy bank, with the following rules: Alice is allowed to withdraw up to 1% per day, Alice with Bob approval can withdrawn any amount, and Bob alone can withdraw up to 0.05% per day. Normally, Alice will only need small amounts at a time, and if Alice wants more she can prove her identity to Bob and make the withdrawal. If Alice’s private key gets stolen, she can run to Bob and move the funds into another contract before the thief gets away with more than 1% of the funds. If Alice loses her private key, Bob will eventually be able to recover her funds. And if Bob turns out to be evil, Alice can withdraw her own funds twenty times faster than he can. In short, all of the security of traditional banking, but with almost none of the trust.

Peer-to-peer gambling – any kind of peer-to-peer gambling protocol can be implemented on top of Ethereum. A very basic protocol would simply be a contract for difference on random data such as a block hash.

Creating your own currency – using Ethereum’s internal memory store, you can create an entire new currency inside of Ethereum. These new currencies can be constructed to interact with each other, have a decentralized exchange, or any other kind of advanced features.

This is the advantage of Ethereum code: because the scripting language is designed to have no restrictions except for a fee system, essentially any kind of rules can be encoded inside of it. One can even have an entire company manage its savings on the blockchain, with a contract saying that, for example, 60% of the current shareholders of a company are needed to agree to move any funds (and perhapps 30% can move a maximum of 1% per day). Other, less traditionally capitalistic, structures are also possible; one idea is for a democratic organization with the only rule being that two thirds of the existing members of a group must agree to invite another member.


The financial applications, however, only scratch the surface of what Ethereum, and cryptographic protocols on top of Ethereum, can do. While Ethereum’s financial applications may be what initially excites many people in the cryptocurrency community, the long-term promise is arguably in the ways that Ethereum can work together with other, non-financial, peer-to-peer protocols. One of the main problems that non-financial peer-to-peer protocols have faced so far is the lack of incentive – that is to say, unlike centralized for-profit platforms, there is no financial reason to participate. In some cases, participation is in some sense its own reward; it is for this reason that people continue to write open source software, contribute to Wikipedia, and make comments on forums and write blog posts. In the context of peer-to-peer protocols, however, participation is often not a “fun” activity in any meaningful sense; rather, it consists of putting in a large quantity of resources, letting a daemon run in the background potentially hogging CPU and battery power, and forgetting about it.


For example, there have already for a long time been data protocols such as Freenet that essentially provide everyone with decentralized uncensorable static content hosting; in practice, however, Freenet is very slow, and few people contribute resources. File sharing protocols all suffer from the same problem: although altruism is good enough for spreading popular commercial blockbusters around, it becomes markedly less effective for those with less mainstream preferences. Thus, perversely, the peer-to-peer nature of file sharing may actually be helping the centralization of entertainment and media production, not hindering it. All of these problems, however, can potentially be solved if we add incentivization – empowering people to build not just nonprofit side projects, but also businesses and livelihoods, around participating in the network.


Incentivized data storage – essentially, a decentralized Dropbox. The idea works as follows: if a user wants to have a 1GB file backed up by the network, they would construct a data structure known as a Merkle tree out of the data. They would then put the root of the tree, along with 10 ether, into a contract and upload the file onto another specialized network that nodes wishing to rent out their hard drive space would listen for messages on. Every day, the contract would automatically pick a random branch of the tree (eg. “left -> right -> left -> left -> left -> right -> left”), ending at a block of the file, and give 0.01 ether to the first node to provide that branch. Nodes would store the entire file to maximize their chance of getting the reward.

BitMessage and Tor – Bitmessage is a next-generation email protocol that is both fully decentralized and encrypted, allowing anyone to send messages to any other Bitmessage user securely without relying on any third parties except for the network. However, Bitmessage has one large usability flaw: instead of sending messages to human-friendly email addresses, like “bob@gmail.com”, you need to send to garbled 34-character Bitmessage addresses (eg. “BM-BcbRqcFFSQUUmXFKsPJgVQPSiFA3Xash”). Ethereum contracts offer a solution: people can register their names on a special Ethereum contract, and Bitmessage clients can query the Ethereum blockchain to get the 34-character Bitmessage address associated with any name behind the scenes. The online anonymizing network Tor suffers from the same problems, and thus can also benefit from this solution.

Identity and Reputation Systems – once you can register your name on the blockchain, the logical next step is obvious: have a web of trust on the blockchain. Webs of trust are a key part of an effective peer to peer communication infrastructure: you don’t just want to know that a given public key refers to a given person; you also want to know that the person is trustworthy in the first place. The solution is to use social networks: if you trust A, A trusts B, and B trusts C, then there is a pretty good chance that you can trust C, at least to some extent. Ethereum can serve as the data layer for a fully decentralized reputation system – and potentially ultimately a fully decentralized marketplace.


Many of the above applications consist of actual peer-to-peer protocols and projects that are already well under development; in those cases, we intend to establish partnerships with as many of these projects as we can, and help fund them in exchange for bringing their value into the Ethereum ecosystem. We want to help not just the cryptocurrency community, but also the peer to peer community as a whole, including file sharing, torrents, data storage and mesh networking. We believe that there are many projects, especially in the non-financial area, that can potentially bring great value to the community, but for which development is underfunded precisely because they lack an opportunity to effectively introduce a financial component; perhaps Ethereum may be what ultimately pushes dozens of these projects to the next stage.


Why are all of these applications possible on top of Ethereum? The answer lies in the currency’s internal programming language. An analogy here may be made with the internet. Back in 1996, the web was nothing but HTML, and all people could do with it was serve static web pages on sites like Geocities. Then, people decided that there was a great need for people to submit forms in HTML, so HTML added a forms feature. This was like a “colored coins” of web protocols: try to solve a specific problem, but do it on top of a weak protocol without looking at the larger picture. Soon, however, we came up with Javascript, a programming language inside the web browser. And it was Javascript that solved the problem: because Javascript is a universal, Turing-complete programming language, it can be used to build apps of arbitrary complexity; Gmail, Facebook and even Bitcoin wallets have all been made with the language. And this was not because the Javascript developers decided that they wanted people to build Gmail, Facebook, and Bitcoin wallets; they just wanted a programming language. What we can do with the language is up to our own imaginations. And that is the spirit that we want to bring to Ethereum. Ethereum does not intend to be the end of all cryptocurrency innovation; it intends to be the beginning.


Along with its main feature of a Turing-complete, universal scripting language, Ethereum will also have a number of other improvements over existing cryptocurrency:


Fees – Ethereum contracts will regulate its Turing-complete functionality and prevent abusive transactions such as memory hogs and infinite loop scripts by instituting a transaction fee for each computational step of script execution. More expensive operations, such as storage accesses and cryptographic operations, will have higher fees, and there will also be a fee for every item of storage that a contract fills up. To encourage contracts to clean up after themselves, if a contract reduces the amount of storage that it uses a negative fee will be charged; in fact, there is a special SUICIDE opcode to clear a contract and send all funds and the hefty negative fee back to its creator.

Mining algorithms – there has been a lot of interest into making cryptocurrencies whose mining is resistant against specialized hardware, allowing ordinary users with commodity hardware to participate without any capital investment and helping to avoid centralization. So far, the main antidote has been Scrypt, a mining algorithm that requires a large amount of both computational power and memory to compute; however, Scrypt is not memory-hard enough, and there are companies building specialized devices for it. We have come up with Dagger, a prototype proof of work that is even more memory-hard than Scrypt, as well as prototype proof-of-stake algorithms such as Slasher that get around the issue of mining entirely. Ultimately, however, we intend to host a contest, similar to the contests that determined the standards for AES and SHA3, where we invite research groups from universities around the world to devise the best possible commodity-hardware-friendly possible mining algorithm.

GHOST – GHOST is a new block propagation protocol pioneered by Aviv Zohar and Yonatan Sompolinsky that allows blockchains to have much faster block confirmation times, ideally in the range of 3-30 seconds, without running into the issues of centralization and high stale rate that fast block confirmations normally bring. Ethereum is the first major currency to integrate a simplified single-level version of GHOST as part of its protocol.


Ethereum is potentially a massive and wide-reaching undertaking, and will take months to develop. With that in mind, the currency will be released in multiple stages. The first stage, the release of the whitepaper, has already happened. Forums, a wiki and a blog have been set up, and anyone is free to visit them and set up an account and comment on the forums. On January 25, a 60-day fundraiser will launch at the confrence in Miami, during which anyone will be able to purchase ether, Ethereum’s internal currency, for BTC much like the Mastercoin fundraiser; the price will be 1000 ether for 1 BTC, although early investors will get roughly a 2x benefit to compensate for the increased risk that they’re taking for participating in the project earlier. The fundraiser participants will not just get ether; there will also be a number of additional rewards, likely including free tickets to conferences, a spot to put 32 bytes into the genesis block, and for the top donors even the ability to name three sub-units of the currency (eg. the equivalent of the “microbitcoin” in BTC).


The issuance of Ethereum will not be any single mechanism; instead, a compromise approach combining the benefits of multiple approaches will be used. The issuance model will work as follows:


Ether will be released in a fundraiser at the price of 1000-2000 ether per BTC, with earlier funders getting a better price to compensate for the increased uncertainty of participating at an earlier stage. The minimum funding amount will be 0.01 BTC. Suppose that X ether gets released in this way

0.225X ether will be allocated to the fiduciary members and early contributors who substantially participated in the project before the start of the fundraiser. This share will be stored in a time-lock contract; about 40% of it will be spendable after one year, 70% after two years and 100% after 3 years.

0.05X ether will be allocated to a fund to use to pay expenses and rewards in ether between the start of the fundraiser and the launch of the currency

0.225X ether will be allocated as a long-term reserve pool to pay expenses, salaries and rewards in ether after the launch of the currency

0.4X ether will be mined per year forever after that point

There is an important distinction compared to Bitcoin and most other cryptocurrencies: here, the eventual supply is unlimited. The “permanent linear inflation” model is designed to make ether neither inflationary nor deflationary; the lack of a supply cap is intended to dampen some of the speculative and wealth inequality effects of existing currencies, but at the same time the linear, rather than traditionally exponential, inflation model will mean that the effective inflation rate tends to zero over time. Additionally, because the initial currency supply will not start from zero, the currency supply growth in the first eight years will actually be slower than Bitcoin, giving fundraiser participants and early adopters a chance to benefit substantially in the medium term.


At some point in February, we will release a centralized testnet – a server which anyone can use to send transactions and create contracts. Soon after that, the decentralized testnet will come, which we will use to test different mining algorithms and make sure that the peer to peer daemon works and is secure, and take measurements to look for optimizations to the scripting language. Finally, once we are sure that the protocol and the client is secure, we will release the genesis block, and allow mining to begin.


Since Ethereum includes a Turing-complete scripting language, it can be mathematically proven that it can do essentially anything that a Bitcoin-like blockchain-based cryptocurrency potentially can do. But there are still problems that the protocol, as it stands today, leaves unresolved. For example, Ethereum offers no solution for the fundamental scalability problem in all blockchain-based cryptocurrencies – namely, the fact that every full node must store the entire balance sheet and verify every transaction. Ethereum’s concept of a separate “state tree” and “transaction list”, borrowed from Ripple, mitigates this to some extent, but nevertheless no fundamental breakthrough is mine. For that, technology like Eli ben Sasson’s Secure Computational Integrity and Privacy (SCIP), now under development, will be required.


Additionally, Ethereum offers no improvements on traditional proof-of-work mining with all its flaws, and proof of excellence and Ripple-style consensus are left unexplored. If it turns out that proof of stake or some other proof of work algorithm is a better solution, then future cryptocurrencies may use proof of stake algorithms like MC2 and Slasher instead. If there is room for an Ethereum 2.0, it is in these areas that it the improvements will lie. And ultimately, Ethereum is an open-ended project; if the project gets enough funding, we may even be the ones to release Ethereum 2.0 ourselves, carrying over the original account balances onto an even further improved network. Ultimately, just as is our slogan for the currency itself, the only limit is our imaginaion.



source: http://bitcoinmagazine.com/9671/ethereum-next-generation-cryptocurrency-decentralized-application-platform/



Ethereum

QuarkCoin

One of the more interesting alternative cryptocurrencies to have come out of the dungeon that is the Bitcointalk altcoin forum is something called “Quark” (or sometimes “QuarkCoin”) – a cryptocurrency that aims to be “super secure” by employing multiple advanced hash algorithms in place of Bitcoin’s plain SHA256.


The currency has acquired significant interest in the past few weeks, especially so because it has been picked up not just inside the Bitcoin community, but also among two mainstream figures: Bill Still, an American journalist, film producer and author responsible for the films The Money Masters and The Secret of Oz, and Max Keiser, host of a show with millions of viewers on the Russia Today TV network. So what is this new coin that seems to have so suddenly come out of nowhere, and why has it succeeded in getting so much attention where even Peercoin and Primecoin have failed?


Quark differs from Bitcoin in three key ways: its proof of work algorithm, its block interval and its distribution model. The proof of work algorithm in any (Bitcoin-like) cryptocurrency is the function that miners must compute in order to create valid blocks; in Bitcoin, for example, a valid block must have a SHA256 hash starting with 0000000000000000000 (that’s fifteen hexadecimal zeroes). Because SHA256 is essentially a pseudorandom function, the only way to create such a block is to keep trying, making an average of 260 attempts, before you eventually create a block that is valid. Artificially making block creation so hard is a security measure; it ensures that attackers will not be able to flood the network with illegitimate blocks, and therefore a fraudulent transaction history, without having more computing power than the entire legitimate network combined.


The proof of work algorithm in Quark is more complicated than Bitcoin, but not excessively so; instead of using just one hash function as Bitcoin does, Quark uses six: BLAKE, Blue Midnight Wish, Groestl, JH, Skein and Keccak. The six algorithms are implemented in series, with nine steps; three of the steps randomly apply one of two out of these six functions depending on the value of a bit. The point of this is twofold. First, it is intended to make Quark more resistant against the “black swan” risk of a single hash function getting cracked. Second, it is intended to make the currency secure against specialized hardware or even GPUs; “Being only CPU mined,” the introduction reads, “this coin offers the average individual the rewards of mining.”


The block interval in Bitcoin is 10 minutes, meaning that the “difficulty” (ie. the number of zeroes that a valid proof of work must have its SHA256 hash start with) automatically adjusts so that the network produces one block per ten minutes. In Quark, the interval is an ambitious 30 seconds. The distribution model in Bitcoin is an exponential decay model: for the first 210000 blocks (~4 years), 50 BTC is released per 10 minutes, for the next 210000 blocks 25 per 10 minutes, then 12.5 per 10 minutes, and so on in an exponential decay until eventually issuance will stop entirely in 2140. Quark’s issuance model is a similar exponential decay, but much faster; it starts off at 2048 QRK per block for three weeks, then 1024 for three weeks, and so on until it reaches 1 QRK per block after about seven months. Unlike Bitcoin, however, Quark then stays at 1 QRK per block forever – a “permanent linear inflation” model whose inflation rate will start off at 0.5%.


So What Are The Flaws?


Unfortunately, although Quarkcoin tries to make a number of bold and daring improvements on the Bitcoin parameters, it arguably fails in its objectives on almost every count. We can go through the various changes that Quarkcoin made, and see that almost each and every one of them either does a substandard job of doing what it is intended to do or even introduces problems of its own.


First, the hashing algorithms. As described above, the intent of having six hash algorithms is (1) to protect against “black swan” attacks on hash algorithms, and (2) to make the coin unfriendly to specialized hardware. The first purpose seems reasonable at first glance; if one of the six hash functions get cracked, that particular block will always be found instantly, and the other five hash functions will remain standing. However, the way that it was done manages to be simultaneously superfluous and inadequate.


One thing that must be understood about hash functions is that, unlike most public-key algorithms, hash functions are often very opaque in their implementations, relying on complicated permutations and arbitrary substitutions and transforms rather than elegant mathematics involving modular exponentiation or elliptic curve points. The design of hash functions attempts to maximize properties known as diffusion, confusion and nonlinearity – essentially, professional cryptographers literally come together and try to figure out how to make a function as opaque and jumbled up as possible so that no one, including the cryptographers themselves, can figure out what’s going on inside.


As a result, hash functions tend to naturally have many built-in redundancies, and it shows. When the MD5 hash function was cracked, it went down slowly. In 1993, researchers first found a “pseudo-collision” – two changes to an internal parameter called an initialization vector that lead to the same output. In 1996, researchers found a “collision” – two inputs that produce the same output – to one specific internal component of MD5, the compression function. It was not until 2004 that these insights were converted into a full collision attack on MD5 itself. Even today, MD5 is actually not fully broken; althoush collisions, finding X and Y such that MD5(x) = MD5(y), can be done in only a million computational steps, pre-images, or finding X such that MD5(x) = Y for a prespecified Y, still take over 2100 steps (although no longer quite the initial 2128. Hence, hash functions like SHA256 are already highly redundant and black-swan proof. In fact, if a critical black swan event does occur, it will likely be something like P=NP or quantum computing that affects all hash functions at once.


Furthermore, there is one place where the algorithm does not use redundant hash functions: the Merkle tree. Quark’s Merkle tree still uses good old SHA256. What’s more, an attack on Bitcoin’s Merkle tree does not even need the harder pre-image attack – a mere collision attack, albeit a highly specialized one, will suffice to make a double spend and even fork the entire network. The process is simple: make two transactions, T1: A -> B and T2: A -> A, such that hash(T1) = hash(T2). Publish T1. Then, publish T2 later and spread around blocks containing T2 in place of T1. Now, suppose B tries to spend the bitcoins that he received in a transaction T3. Some nodes, which have T1, will see that T3 is spending the bitcoins from T1 and thus recognize T3 as legitimate, and eventually a miner will make a block, B1, containing T3. Other miners, that have T2, however, will see T3 as invalid because it is spending bitcoins that have been sent to A, and thus reject B1. They will eventually make a new block B2 without T3. From there, the blockchain will split in half, with some blocks following B1 and others following B2. All this requires only a relatively simple collision attack against SHA256, and Quark does nothing against this.


The second application of Quark’s multi-hash mechanism is its resistance to ultraefficient mining through specialized hardware. However, the combined hash function created by composing BLAKE, groestl and the other functions does not have any particularly special properties; it is simply a hash function which takes up nine times as many lines of code. Producing specialized hardware devices (ie. ASICs) for mining it will certainly take nine times as much work, but once they exist they will be every bit as efficient as Bitcoin ASICs. They only do not exist now because there is not enough interest in Quark. A better way to make an ASIC-resistant coin is to use so-called “memory-hard hash functions” – functions that take a large amount of memory, as well as time, to calculate, so devices that attempt to do the computation millions of times in parallel will need to have petabytes of memory on hand; Litecoin does this, as does Primecoin with its sieve-based prime number chain algorithm, albeit unintentionally.


Next, we come to Quark’s 30 second block time. The idea of making blockchains with faster confirmations is a seductive one; Litecoin started the trend with its 2.5-minute blocks, Primecoin has 1-minute blocks, and now even faster coins like Krugercoin exist with 15-second blocks. Although accepting payments with any of these currencies is equally near-instant, as confirmations are not really required for security in most applications, such currencies have definite advantages in high-security applications such as gambling sites and depositing to exchanges. However, below roughly one minute such currencies run into two problems. First, there is the issue of “stale” blocks – when a miner finds a valid block, it takes about twelve seconds for that block to propagate through the network, and if any other miners find a valid block in those twelve seconds their work is essentially wasted. With a 10-minute block time, this is only a two percent decrease in de-facto network security. With a 2.5-minute block time, it becomes eight percent and with a 1-minute block time it becomes about 17% – significant, but far from fatal. Below one minute, however, these stales start to seriously threaten the security of the network.


The second issue is one of centralization. Suppose that miners are now organized into mining pools, where one mining pool necessarily has more market share than the others. Suppose this top mining pool has a 25% market share, and its next competitor is at 15%, and the baseline stale rate is 33%. Solo miners have 67% efficiency due to the stale rate. The 15% mining pool, however, itself mines the block 15% of the time, and so starts immediately working on the next block without delay. Hence, the 15% pool’s stale rate is only 33% * 0.85, or 28% – or 72% efficiency. The 25% pool enjoys 75% efficiency. Thus, new miners have an incentive to join the largest pool, making it even more powerful. This effect inevitably leads to large centralized mining pools which, combined with the reduces network security, means that one mining pool will almost certainly have de-facto control over the entire network. With Bitcoin and its 2% stale rate, this is not a significant issue. With Primecoin at 17%, this is a moderate concern. With Quark, this is arguably a fundamental flaw.


One possible solution to the first problem comes from a recent paper by Yonatan Sompolinsky and Aviv Zohar which suggests a way to actually include stale blocks as part of the blockchain; if a new currency integrated this, it may be able to address the security loss potentially down to even below a 10-second block time. However, the solution does not fully address the second concern; if these stale blocks that are part of the chain receive their mining rewards, then the currency becomes much weaker because there is no longer any incentive not to support fraudulent double-spending attacks, and if the stale blocks do not receive their rewards the efficiency centralization issue remains. Perhaps with some compromise, however, 10-30 second block times can be made viable in the future.


Finally, we have the distribution model. 50% of all Quark units were distributed within three weeks, a much steeper distribution curve than Bitcoin or any other cryptocurrency except perhaps Mastercoin and Ripple. Many have come to call his model a de-facto premine, “premine” being the technical term for when a currency is created with a number of units already in the hands of some centralized party. The Quark developers have made a post addressing this concern, saying that their currency is more fairly distributed than any other altcoin, showing that the percentage of all Quark units owned by the top 100 addresses (59%) is actually right in the middle of those of other major cryptocurrencies (cf. Namecoin at 56%, Litecoin at 48% and Peercoin at 64%).


However, this is somewhat misleading; of all of these other currencies, the percentage in question is the percentage out of those coins that are already in circulation. In the case of Litecoin, Peercoin and Namecoin, there are still many millions of currency units left to be distributed – and there is no particular reason why these new currency units should go to the same early adopters who were lucky enough to secure entire percentages of the currency’s money supply earlier in its life cycle. With Quark, the currency will take 100 years for its money supply to expand by 50%, so the 59% is not likely to go down by much any time soon. Ultimately, it is very hard to create a currency with a fair distribution model, and any specific technical approach will likely only last a few months before people with money and resources catch up to it at least to some extent. The only stable approach may be to simply premine it and then give out 0.001% to the first 100000 people that show up with a passport or at least a unique cell phone number.


The concerns that Quark seeks to address – Bitcoin’s slow block times, the unfairness of altcoin distribution and the threat of specialized hardware – are all very valid issues, and Quark’s recent success highlights the importance of these problems. However, Quark in its current state is not the solution. Litecoin and Primecoin are both very valid alternatives that seek to target many of the same goals, and have done so much more successfully. Hopefully, in time an even better cryptocurrency will be developed that will actually have all of the desired properties that we currently want; and ultimately every attempt and even every mistake made along the way is a stepping stone to achieving that goal.



source: http://bitcoinmagazine.com/8972/quarkcoin-noble-intentions-wrong-approach/



QuarkCoin

NuBits (NBT)

NuBits (NBT) was created by Jordan Lee, the same person that founded the market-lacking Peershares.


Peershares is essentially an asset that feeds off of the Peercoin network, bringing with it a variety of features to offer small businesses and company startups. The fundamental purpose behind NuBits is to correct fatal flaws that occur within the Bitcoin and Peercoin distribution networks as described by Jordan Lee:


“The critical flaw is that Peercoin and Bitcoin use the same fungible unit for share and currency functions. Shares must have the capacity to appreciate and reflect changes in the perceived value of the network while currency must remain stable regardless to be effective. It is impossible to accommodate these diverse pricing needs in a single unit.”


The analogy between Bitcoin and gold is very clear. Bitcoin has a fixed money supply and no inherent centralization. The price of Bitcoin, the cost of mining, and the available supply are all determined by the free market. In Bitcoin, there is no concept of “shares” versus units of currency. This is because Bitcoin is not a business venture; it is a resource. Thinking about owning shares of gold — as if gold were a business like Amazon or Apple — is obviously strange. You just own gold, and you just own bitcoin. It makes sense to own shares of a mining operation or other Bitcoin-related business, but bitcoin itself is just a currency.


There are two main principals behind NuBits, which are NuShares and the voting process achieved by a decentralized community. NuBits (the currency) is regulated by holders of NuShares, who take ownership of the Nu network. NuShares holders can vote to increase or decrease supply in order to stabilize NuBits’ price. Supply can be decreased by “parking” NuBits in return for an interest payment when funds are un-parked, and the supply can be increased by voting to mint new coins and award them to elected NuBits custodians.


The primary goal of NuShares owners is to maintain a NuBits price of 1 USD. In the case of hyperinflation of the U.S. dollar, NuShares owners can vote to peg NuBits to a different currency or a basket of commodities. By creating more coins to keep prices down, and increasing interest rates for parking to restrict supply and keep prices up, Jordan Lee and the NuBits team hope that they have found the solution to cryptocurrency volatility.


If Bitcoin is a close approximation of gold, NuBits is on the other end of the spectrum – a close approximation of a central bank. The apparent difference is that NuShares works on a distributed model and allows all NuShares holders to vote on the actions of the NuShares “central bank.” Time will tell how democratic and decentralized the NuShares organization actually turns out to be.


Buy-side Liquidity is the term derived for the NuBits being pegged to 1 USD at any given moment. This is best described in the official whitepaper on the NuBits website:


“Custodians provide the sell side liquidity as they place NuBits granted to them for sale. This leaves the buy side, the side where liquidity supports the price at one USD. While the market will naturally have a buy side, it may be thin, particularly when demand for NuBits is in decline. A pool of liquidity is needed to stabilize the price, to assure holders of NuBits that they can exit a large position at will and it is also needed to provide the signal to raise interest rates before the price has a chance to drop below one USD.”


As NuBits goes further in-depth on buy- and sell-side liquidity, it becomes more obscure to the average user. Aside from this, there is another portion of the currency that relies heavily on the end user, which is pool tracking. Pool tracking is a mechanism to keep the currency decentralized by granting users “custodian” status for each person or organization providing liquidity.


‘The NuBit address they receive a grant at will be used to sign messages. A new RPC called liquidityinfo will be implemented. The purpose of calling the method is to have the Nu client propagate the order information through the entire network of Nu clients.”


Cryptocurrency today may be the closest thing to a truly free market that has ever existed. One of the great benefits of this is that there is plenty of room for experimentation and there are no limitations on the actions of innovators. Bitcoin was certainly an experiment; one that might have some warts, but has succeeded wildly by any measure. NuBits is an experiment in the same vain, and now that Jordan Lee has brought it into the world, it seems obvious that it is an experiment that had to happen sooner or later.


The markets since launch has seen very positive growth, with NuBits breaking the top 15 of all market capitalizations, and at time of writing is sitting at the number 11 position. The markets are currently pegged at $1 USD, achieving the goal of NuBits’ initial intention.


There is a lot to debate about the virtues of the NuBits/NuShares model, but at least right now the project is accomplishing exactly what it set out to do. Whether the currency continues to function well – and whether the stated goal is a worthwhile one – will make for interesting spectating and speculating in the coming months.



source: http://www.coinssource.com/crypto-coins/nubits/



NuBits (NBT)

PandaCoin V3

At the beginning of this week, developers of Pandacoin have released a new addition to their wallet: PandaBank, featuring some revolutionary new features to its blockchain.


Released on Valentine’s Day this year, the Pandacoin team set out with a mission to create a cryptocurrency, designed to create global appeal through ease of use. Coined as the “Dogecoin of Asia,” Pandacoin developers have worked relentlessly to bring Pandacoin to many South Asian territories where Dogecoin and other altcoins.


Pandacoin is a PoS/PoW hybrid, so that both miners and stakeholders are able to secure the network and generate coins. Upon opening PandaBank, the wallet will automatically start syncing the entire blockchain, which takes many hours and a lot of bandwidth and storage space. Once synced, the stored coins will begin to accrue interest through PoS, where the length of time that coins are held compounds the number of coins that you will generate. Most prominently, Panda simplified the way that users obtain, hold and transfer their coins.


The Pandacoin team strives to make the coin as fair to its holders as possible with a permanent 2.5% PoS interest rate that is designed to keep inflation in the coin steady. They have also allocated some funds to its community members for giveaways, bounties hosted on the coin’s subreddit, and for casino adoption. By giving back to the community through giveaways and bounties, the team has developed a successful way of generating interest in the coin. The Reddit community at /r/PandaCoinPND has also implemented a Pandacoin tip bot, where users can tip each other coins for posts.


With its most recent v3.0.0 update, Pandacoin revealed that every PandaBank wallet will have a built-in “Lite” and “Hybrid” mode. The Lite mode requires no downloading of the blockchain, so your coins show up instantly and transactions can be made.


The Hybrid mode allows for the blockchain to download in under half an hour, as compared to days with other cryptos.


The total time of downloading the blockchain has dropped 5000% from previous versions, dropping it from 4 to 24 hours down to 5 to 15 minutes on average. The new update also features Instant Sync Technology, which allows users to see transactions and use their coins immediately. However, do note that when the wallet is in Lite mode, you cannot earn interest on your coins and are not helping secure the network.


Panda improves upon wallets by offering a fix for the lack of user-friendly features, such as the extremely extensive blockchain download and sync times. This helps give users a reason to keep coming back. Panda has a great set of focused developers, a multitude of pools, and great community backing that will allow it to excel and expand cryptocurrency to South Asian markets, and abroad!



source: http://www.coinssource.com/pandacoin-hits-v3-0-with-revolutionary-new-blockchain-features/



PandaCoin V3

Feathercoin - NeoScrypt & Android Wallet

As ASIC devices transformed the world of Bitcoin mining, ASIC devices for Scrypt currencies threaten to do the same thing. The technological arms race that this technology creates means that those who have invested heavily in GPU mining would potentially lose their investments overnight.


NeoScrypt, a strong memory intensive key derivation function, was developed by John Doering, aka “Ghostlander”, a developer for Feathercoin and Phoenixcoin, to tackle that problem.

A new password based memory intensive cryptographic solution designed for general purpose computer hardware. A particular 32-bit implementation is described and evaluated.



GPU Miner Development – https://forum.feathercoin.com/index.p…


NeoScrypt, a Strong Memory Intensive Key Derivation Function – white paper – http://phoenixcoin.org/archive/neoscr…


NeoScrypt – the latest proof of work algorithm – press release – http://www.feathercoin.com/neo-scrypt…


NeoScrypt – source code – https://github.com/ghostlander/NeoScrypt


NeoScrypt GPU Miner – source code – https://github.com/vehre/neo-gpuminer


NeoScrypt CPUminer – source code – https://github.com/ghostlander/cpumin…


NeoScrypt CPUMiner – BitCoinTalk – https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?top…


 


Feathercoin Wallet


The Android version of the Feathercoin wallet.

This app is a fork of the original Feathercoin Wallet from Joined Security Area.

It fixes the connectivity problem of version 1.097


Source code at: https://github.com/wellenreiter01/feathercoin-wallet-2



Feathercoin - NeoScrypt & Android Wallet

Monday, November 24, 2014

Multigateway: Decentralized Cryptocurrency Exchange

Soft launch of the Supernet v0 wallet was announced November 14th by James on the Slack channels with a cheerful:


“Supernet v0 launched yesterday, took everyone by surprise. gotta love decentralization :)” -JL777


Users of the Supernet may now withdraw Bitcoin, Litecoin, Peercoin and NXT directly out to Visa and Mastercards around the globe! Payouts are done in US dollars and local banks set fiat exchange rate.


Users can also be relieved to trade on the first live decentralized crypto currency exchange!


The software is available for download at the Multigateway website and functions similar to the NXT wallet client, with the exception of some Supernet magic.


The Multigateway (MGW) is not only safer, but it may also be the cheapest. It charges no deposit fees and the withdrawal fees equal the minimum transaction fee per coin. Currently, users must convert their coin manually, be it Blackcoin or Dogecoin to NXT, in order to transfer to another crypto coin. But will soon change with InstantDEX which expected to allow 3 second or less conversions, programmable trade bots and much more!


Investors can invest in MGW, but the real ROI is expected from InstantDEX which will have competitive fee and leverage MGW’s minimal fees and tech.MGW works by creating assets on top of NXT’s long standing decentralized asset exchange.Coin assets such as mgwBTC are traded for deposits of Bitcoin, Blackcoin, Viacoin, etc. at a ratio of 1 to 1. MGW is a full reserve, decentralized exchange with live proof of solvency!


Deposited crypto currencies are stored on server clusters of 3. These are secured through multisignature transactions, where 2 out of 3 servers must agree for withdraws to occur.

Each server is monitored and secured by an independent party, partnered up with the Supernet.


The number of Multisignature parties is not limited by MGW, but by the the Bitcoin protocol.


According to JL777, core Bitcoin devs have coded multisignature transactions beyond m of 3 as non standard. This means miners and nodes need to compile these manually or enable this feature on their own accord, which most don’t. It is not enabled by default. This may be driven by concerns of blockchain bloating.


Because of this, it takes a long time for greater multisig transactions to be confirmed by the BTC network, which would not allow MGW to operate properly and would be the end of InstantDEX. If this was to change or if coins that have solved this problem were to join the MGW then further distributed clusters could be set up, and the possible combinations are stellar.


Though going from 1 out of 1 one key or a central trusted party, to 2 out of 3 may seem like not that much of a change, it is actually massive. Its the difference between a central point of failure and a network. It is perhaps the simplest differentiation between a centralized and decentralized model. However, collusion among parties is still a concern, which is why reputation may be essential to this experiment of multi signatures.


With that in mind, I will highlight the core parties that have stepped up to secure the core MGW cluster as of time of publishing.There are two MGW clusters. MGW#0 controls BTC, LTC, DRK, BTCD and VRC coins. This is the main Supernet cluster and is secured by Coinomat, MyNXT.info team and Frohike.


Coinomat is an automatic crypto coin and fiat exchange that serves as a gateway from Visa and Mastercard to crypto currencies. It also provides instant conversions among various crypto currencies such as Bitcoin, Litecoin and Peercoin.

The second key holder of MGW#0 is MyNXT.info “a group of 15 people between investors, advisors, developers and designers,” says abuelau, a Sr. Member of the NXT community, early adopter, and member of the team. MyNXT.info is an NXT blockchain explorer, mobile wallet and web advertizment agency, fully powered by NXT.

MyNXT were motivated to join “after we saw the hacks on MtGox and Bter,” said abuelau, adding: “Every time I need to exchange NXT or other coins I am nervous with the possibility of losing my coins while they are at the exchange, so anything that helps make it more secure is welcome.”


Frohike is “a German unix server administrator. He specializes in server hardening and security. He’s been involved since June in the team… working with James and recently he joined SuperNET as server admin for the forum and websites,” said VanBreuk, Hero Member of the NXT community and general manager of the MGW development process.


I reached out to Frohike for comment but he did not reply but publishing time.Unlike cluster number two, live proof of solvency for MGW#0 is not active yet, since they are migrating coins and assets to production servers. The website and api for this monitoring is expected to be available, soon according to VanBreuk.


The second cluster called MGW#2 is responsible for controlling Blackcoin, Viacoin and Dogecoin!


This one is secured by Cobaltsky, Hero Member of the NXT community, artist and developer. Along side Marcus03 Sr. Member who is also developing an NXT mobile wallet and Jeffdiesel, also a Hero Member.


Decentralizing everything


Anyone can set up their own MGW cluster, as you would expect from a community focused on decentralization. However, for the time being, interested parties must reach out to JL777 or other core Supernet developers to be given access to the private repo. This might change in the future after the main development is finished.


Coin developers, businesses and individuals interested in joining the Supernet are welcome to reach out at the Supernet forums publicly or contact JL777 directly through a private message.


The Supernet is putting out a call for innovative and active crypto coin communities. Its very difficult to be noticed and compete as a crypto coin these days; there’s over 500 coins on coinmarketcap and great coins may be getting lost among the masses.


The Supernet has some general standards by which to review coins. A solid answer to the question “What value can your crypto coin tech bring to customers?” may be all you need to join.


Keep in mind, however, that MGW is still in its beta stages. Compared to 1 out of 1 cold storage solutions for the average exchanges, or deposit accounts for bank like crypto coin organizations, MGW is many times more decentralized, both for its trading platform and its distributed multisignature servers.However, until NXT releases its “Phased transactoins” feature, the NXT asset side of things will not support multisignature. This means that the coin assets that mirror each crypto coin are controlled manually and could be exploited by dumping them on the market.


MGW beta will end when phasing is live on the NXT network. Until than, each MGW key holder is responsible for a third of a hot wallet with relevant coin assets. The amount of coin assets on the hot wallet are the average expected volume per coin.The remaining ‘unbound’ assets, which are not expected to be traded for the crypto currencies yet are currently being held in escrow by anon136’s renown escrow services.Its time to take distributed finance to the next level, and the Supernet’s Multigateway has just raised the bar.



source: http://bitcoinmagazine.com/18567/multigateway-the-first-decentralized-crypto-currency-exchange/



Multigateway: Decentralized Cryptocurrency Exchange

“DETEKT” Goverment spyware

A recently-proposed piece of legislation called the “Freedom Act” could have limited the NSA’s authority, yet it failed to obtain the necessary votes in the Senate.


That’s why third party human rights groups like the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Amnesty International, and Privacy International are devising their own solutions to combat government surveillance. The groups have partnered with security researcher Claudio Guarnieri to release an open-source tool called “Detekt” that scans Windows systems for known government spyware.


“Detekting” Government Spyware


“It has been well documented that governments are using surveillance technology to target human rights defenders, journalists, NGOs, political opponents, religious or ethnic minorities and to conduct countrywide surveillance.”


Detekt looks for traces of FinFisher and Hacking Team RCS, malware well-known to be used by governments to spy on activists and journalists. The tool is entirely open-source, so anyone can review the code and make sure the software doesn’t have any hidden malicious properties. However, other than checking for FinFisher and RCS, Detekt doesn’t really do much.


Modifying spyware to avoid detection by antivirus programs isn’t particularly difficult. Since Detekt’s detection methods are also open-source, it’s safe to assume that FinFisher and RCS will quickly and easily be updated to avoid Detekt. Furthermore, this tool only checks for known government spyware. It’s highly unlikely that governments around the world only rely on these two tools. It’s safe to assume that there are many other spyware tools that we don’t even know about, and as a result, go unnoticed by Detekt. So it’s important to not gain a false sense of security just because Detekt doesn’t find anything on your computer.


Detekt isn’t perfect; even the creators admit it.


“Because Detekt is a best-effort tool and spyware companies make frequent changes to their software to avoid detection, users should keep in mind that Detekt cannot conclusively guarantee that your computer is not compromised by the spyware it aims to detect. However, we hope that the availability of this tool will help us to detect some ongoing infections, provide advice to infected users, and contribute to the debate around curbing the use of government spyware in countries where it is linked to human rights abuses.”


Detekt is referred to as a “quick experiment” on its website, and is intended primarily to “raise awareness” of government spyware than to actually stop it. Domestic surveillance is no longer limited to authoritarian countries. Even supposedly “free” countries like the United States have dragnet surveillance, implemented by the same people we voted into office. The creators of Detekt hope to restore online privacy in an age of nearly unchecked surveillance.



source: https://www.cryptocoinsnews.com/digital-rights-groups-release-tool-detekt-government-spyware/



“DETEKT” Goverment spyware

Sunday, November 23, 2014

BBT Episode 22: Feathercoin Neoscrypt

This episode is the largest to date, testing a few different style formats we would like you’re feedback on.


This includes the powerpoint style recap of the conference. We will be going to TNABC in Miami in January and would like to hear from you all on if this format style is worth the time for that conference.




BBT Episode 22: Feathercoin Neoscrypt

Saturday, November 22, 2014

Mozilla Now Accepting Bitcoin

Mozilla, the open-source development community behind the popular Firefox web browser, is now accepting bitcoin donations.


The Mozilla Foundation, the non-profit entity that provides support for the community’s broad open-source development, will be partnering with Coinbase to accept bitcoin contributions. The California-based bitcoin services provider announced the deal on its blog, where it reinforced that, per its policies toward charities, it will not charge fees for the donations it processes.


With the news, Mozilla joins the growing number of non-profit organizations that support open-source and free Web-focused initiatives, including the Wikimedia Foundation, that are accepting bitcoin. In recent months, charitable organizations around the world have slowly begun to turn to digital currency to facilitate donations while removing costs associated with legacy payment methods.


The announcement followed a post on the bitcoin subreddit that asked why the Mozilla Foundation had yet to embrace bitcoin donations.


According to Mozilla vice president Geoffrey MacDougall, who posted a link to the donation page in response, the long-awaited move came after what he called a robust internal process focused on security and compliance.


MacDougall noted:


“We’re a large organization and it takes us a while to move things through legal, privacy and security review. There were a lot of steps to getting this in place, but we got it done.”


The move comes more than a year after Mozilla first broached the idea of accepting bitcoin.


At the time, MacDougall took steps to open a dialogue with the bitcoin Reddit community and commented that “there are a number of people on my team” advocating for bitcoin donations.


The Mozilla donations page was operational at press time, though some users had reported difficulties accessing the page earlier in the day.



source: http://www.coindesk.com/mozilla-accepting-bitcoin-donations/



Mozilla Now Accepting Bitcoin

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

NCR to Integrate Bitcoin

Global payments conglomerate NCR has announced that one of its merchant point-of-sale (POS) systems will soon offer bitcoin support.


The integration of bitcoin into the NCR Silver POS is expected to happen sometime before the end of this year. The system will also support mobile bitcoin wallet payments and will be a free service attached to its POS platform.


NCR is one of the world’s largest payments companies. Founded in 1884 as a cash register maker, NCR offers a number of hardware and software solutions and reported more than $6bn in revenue in 2013.In recent years, NCR has moved to take a broader share of the mobile payments space through strategic partnerships. Citing the evolving nature of digital payments, NCR indicated that it wanted to provide a greater degree of flexibility to its customers, which includes supporting technologies like bitcoin.NCR Small Business director of business development Reggie Kimble suggested in a press statement that bitcoin is starting to make a bigger impact on the broader payments landscape, saying:


“Gone are the days when cash and cards were the only payment options available to customers shopping at small businesses. Offering bitcoin as a payment alternative allows small businesses the flexibility they need to better serve their growing number of customers who prefer digital payment solutions.”


The move brings bitcoin payments to users of NCR’s tablet-based Silver payments POS product, which targets small businesses and startups that have minimal infrastructure.



Though whether NCR will pursue a broader integration of digital currency in the future remains to be seen, its support of bitcoin can be interpreted as part of a broader move to embrace mobile payments.Over the past two years, the company has moved to position itself as a major player in the increasingly important space. This includes several integrations with its Silver POS product that take advantage of both new and established payment offerings.In January 2013, NCR and PayPal inked a deal to integrate the two companies’ offerings, leveraging NCR’s hardware to connect merchants to PayPal’s payment channels. Merchants who currently use the NCR Silver POS can opt to use PayPal when accepting payments.


NCR has also taken steps in recent months to take advantage of the upswing in interest surrounding the Apple Pay payments service, which includes opening support for the service to NCR Silver customers.



source: http://www.coindesk.com/payments-giant-ncr-integrate-bitcoin-small-business-service/



NCR to Integrate Bitcoin

Saturday, November 8, 2014

Huge Bitcoin Mining Farm Burned

It’s 2014, and this is what a mining accident looks like.


A massive fire reportedly broke out at a Bitcoin mining facility in Thailand last month, devastating all three of its buildings and possibly millions of dollars in hardware. The fire might just be a wakeup call to all the startups trying to mine Bitcoin on the cheap.



Details of the fire are sketchy, though local media reported flames raging through a warehouse full of servers near Bangkok on October 14. This week, a photo of the devastation popped up on the forum BitcoinTalk, which identified the facility as one owned by the mining operative Cowboyminers. According to Coindesk, Cowboyminers are a collective of European expats based in Bangkok.


Both Cowboyminers and Spondoolies-Tech, the company that made much of the mining hardware in the warehouse, have popped up in the BitcoinTalk thread to discuss the fire. It seems like no one was hurt, but the equipment was uninsured, so ouch.


What we still don’t know is what started the fire. Spondoolies-Tech commented that the “buildup was definitely not according to US electric code,” though Cowboyminers denied that the electrical wiring caused the fire. We’ve reach out for any additional details.


In any case, the fire highlights the possible pitfalls for any Bitcoin mining startup. Bitcoin mining’s appeal is its relative simplicity—you just need computing power. But setting up a facility is more complicated than throwing a bunch of hardware together in a room. Every detail of the traditional data center is designed with cooling in mind, from the placement of vents to the hot aisle/cold aisle layout of the equipment.



And regardless of how the fire started at the Thai facility, it clearly spread, possibly because of a flammable acoustic foam. A traditional datacenter would have also had sprinklers—or in fancier iterations, gas fire extinguishing systems—that detected smoke or heat early on to minimize the damage. Of course, these systems don’t come cheap.


source: http://gizmodo.com/a-huge-fire-took-out-a-bitcoin-mining-operation-1655981855



Huge Bitcoin Mining Farm Burned

Friday, November 7, 2014

KorePhone - the SmartPhone

One of the upcoming features mentioned in our previous KoreCoin articles is called KOREPhone.


At first, I assumed this was just another functionality for their KoreVoIP solution, but it turns out KOREPhone is an actual smartphone. Some more details have been provided in a recent press release, so let’s take a look!The KOREPhone will integrate the KoreCoin system for both commerce and communication purposes, which opens up a lot of possibilities for both consumers and merchants alike. One of those features is sending wallet transactions anonymously, by using the KORE network. Like we have seen from the KoreVoIP functionality, users are able to call other users through their KORE wallet address. The same functionality will be available on the KOREPhone, removing the need to remember phone numbers or even add contacts.


Don’t be mistaken though, as the KOREPhone is still a smartphone which offers the traditional functions as well. Making a regular phone call by dialing a number or selecting someone in your contacts list will also be possible. The KOREPhone will come with some essential applications, which are currently available for alpha testing. All of the KoreCoin client functionalities, such as market information and KoreVoIP functionalities, will be coming to the KOREPhone as well. The KORE team is currently in talks with various manufacturers around the world in order to bring the KOREPhone to market at a fair price. A ‘call to arms’ will be sent out to the developers worldwide so they can modify their applications in order to be compatible with KOREPhone technology. Keep an eye on the XDA Forums for this call to action.



source: http://www.cryptoarticles.com/crypto-news/korephone-the-smartphone-which-integrates-korecoin-functionalities



KorePhone - the SmartPhone

LibrexCoin developer part of AltCoin P&D group

Late last night, while I was browsing the BitcoinTalk forums , I stumbled upon a thread where the discussion in regards to BlockNet was taking a different turn. To be more precise, claims were being made against one of the BlockNet coins, LibrexCoin (LXC) in this case.


The developer of LibrexCoin, who goes under the name of KidKrypto on BitcoinTalk (possibly a secondary/shill account), turns out to be a part of one of the biggest pump and dump groups plaguing the altcoin scene as of late. LXC Developer involved with P&D Group Altcoin Pros? For those of you who are unaware of what Altcoin Pros exactly is, this is a notorious pump-and-dump group who have been pumping various coins and then dumping them into oblivion. Nothing unusual in the world of altcoins unfortunately, but still, worrying. Leader of Altcoin Pros is perhaps one the most notorious names in altcoin history, none other than Bobsurplus. Not a name you ever want to encounter if you have any honest intnetions in the world of digital currency and altcoins.


So how is the LXC developer connected to Altcoin Pros? Well, there are two ways of proving just that. First of all, KidKrypto was dumb/lazy enough to make a post in the official Altcoin Pros thread on BitcoinTalk, which you can find here.


“This group can and will make you money. It is more a group than just Bobs although he does guild it and play a huge role. The group works together and makes things happen. I’ve been in this for 2 months and have easily doubled each month my btc investment in the coins the group markets. I’m sure at some point this group. IMO is he should charge 5btc for new members to separate the wheat from the chafe. “


-KidKrypto, October 13th 2014


The above quote also paints an interesting picture of how these pump and dump groups work. Members have to pay a rather hefty fee to get in, but in the end, they will make their money back only if the follow the herd.


Chat log where KidKrypto confirms LXC is his coin


An interesting chat log surfaced during the research conducted by several people regarding this matter. We see a conversation between Kid Krypto, where he confirms LXC is his coin. The other person in this conversation is Argakiig, the SONIC developer. No one is saying Argakiig or SONIC are involved in this pump and dump group, or any other nefarious activities for that matter. This just happens to be a conversation between these two people, and we don’t know their relationship to one another.


KidKrypto = poopielaxatixe31


Some other things are coming to light in this chat log, such as the fact KidKrypto and poopielaxatixe31 are one and the same person. Furthermore, KidKrypto admits to using his shill account to spread FUD user LongandShort. Some people have nothing better to do I guess? Furthermore, KidKrypto also admits he trolled the SDC thread because “they trolled his coin first”. All this shows to me is there are way too many kid egos involved in digital currency, and we need to start weeding them out sooner rather than later.


Official statement from the BlockNet team:

The BlockNet team had caught wind of these conversations being exposed sooner or later, and they have issued an official statement in regards to the claims made against LXC.


STATEMENT ON A RUMOURED SECOND SMEAR CAMPAIGN AGAINST THE BLOCKNET

It has come to our attention that the people implicated in the previous smear campaign against the Blocknet are preparing another one, timed to cause a selloff on Bittrex today.

We’re unsure of the nature of the claims to be made, but since it doesn’t take a genius to guess what a malicious group of trolls would choose, we’ll venture a hypothesis.

Bobsurplus (who also goes by the name of International Rob) is rumoured to have pumped LibrexCoin (LXC). LXC is part of the Blocknet. Therefore, by implication, our guess is that the smear campaigners will claim that Bobsurplus is involved with the Blocknet in some respect. BobSurplus is not involved in the Blocknet in any respect. He has no place on the Foundation.

He has no influence over how funds are spent. And he has no role in any other respect.


We are unable to comment on whether Bobsurplus maintains contact with any of the participating coins on the Blocknet – and we have no basis to assume if there is any contact, it is of an illicit nature. But we can confirm that we have no contact in any respect with Bobsurplus either directly or indirectly on behalf of any participating coins. So in short, all claims that Bobsurplus is in any way involved with the Blocknet are false and have no basis.



source: http://www.cryptoarticles.com/crypto-news/is-the-librexcoin-developer-part-of-bobsurplus-altcoin-pump-and-dump-group-altcoin-pros



LibrexCoin developer part of AltCoin P&D group

BitcoinDark

BitcoinDark is a community driven project which aims to fulfill the original ideals of crypto-currency: Decentralization, Openness, and Anonymity.


In line with the original idea of Bitcoin, the aim is to create a decentralized currency and payment system, however because BitcoinDark has NXT Core Features and also forms the Core of SuperNet, BTCD will also support direct P2P trading, asset exchange, private sports betting and much more!


Development of features are now well underway( https://github.com/jl777/libjl777) by the core BTCD developer jl777 (James) and will include the following:


*Teleport Technology

*Core of the SuperNetwork

*BTCD included NXT features (MGW, Asset Exchange, InstantDEX, Privatebet)

*Turing Complete Scripting in C

*Dividends in BTC for BTCD Holders

*Anonymous BTCD Debit Cards for Fiat Withdrawal


Teleport Technology:

Anonymous teleporting of funds occurs off the blockchain but is verified using the blockchain – utilizing the benefits of a public record without leaking any personal information. BitcoinDark uses an implementation of the Teleport idea to enable trustless private transactions; teleport transmits funds via telepods by transporters. All information needed to spend funds is included in the telepod and sent via the encrypted network to the destination – the telepods are then cloned and passed around to ensure that commerce can be conducted in private.


The above is made possible because all BTCD nodes automatically become a privacyServer: the optimal decentralized solution to the problem of information leakage. The privacyServer sends the encrypted data to the destination – bouncing between jump servers making it impossible to track. This unique system makes BTCD a secure option for private and corporate use.


For Technical Aspects of Teleport Please Read the Darkpaper: http://www.flipgorilla.com/p/23023990364728535/show#/23023990364728535/0


If Ethereum has been labeled the destroyer of Bitcoin and Altcoins, then the SuperNetwork along with BTCD will be labeled as the savior.


For More information about the SuperNetwork and it’s importance check out the following:


http://209.126.70.170/SuperNET.pdf


https://forum.thesupernet.org/index.php?topic=41.0


http://thesupernet.org/


BTCD Core included NXT Features:

Planned NXT features will be implemented into the core of BTCD. BTCD will be an entire platform, and act as a cryptocurrency supernetwork and the following NXT features will be integrated:


MultiGateway

Multigateway (MGW) is a third party service developed on top of the NXT network that allows you to move cryptocurrencies in and out of the NXT Asset Exchange,the peer-to-peer exchange that offers decentralized trading with no trading fees.


Asset Exchange

Asset Exchange is a decentralized marketplace. It is where any any asset, digital or physical, can be traded peer to peer without the need for a centralized third party. The Asset Exchange concept is often generally referred to as Coloured Coins in the cryptocurrency world.


InstantDEX

The goal of InstantDEX is to provide a fully decentralized peer-to-peer realtime trustless trading environment. InstantDEX will allow for trading of any NXT asset, BTCD, bitcoind-crypto against each other.


Privatebet

Privatebet will allow people to make bets directly with each other in a decentralized way. It will let people create their own personal bet with a designated arbiter in addition to automatically supporting a range of standard events with betting interest, like sports betting. Privatebet will only accept crypto and no personal information will be required from its customers. In addition, when combined with BTCD Teleport Privacy Tech, personal bets and transactions will remain completely private.


Turing Complete Scripting in C

BitcoinDark is a cryptocurrency with a Turing complete scripting that has the largest base of developers. As the tradebot is coded in C, millions of programmers know the tradebot language and can easily utilize this tool.Consequently, this allows cryptocurrency developers and enthusiasts to write node specific tradebots, encrypted communications, access to website APIs and any coin’s RPC interface.


Dividends in BTC for BTCD Holders

BitcoinDark will be the first cryptocurrency to pay regular dividends in a form other than itself, in a game-changing new development that will shift the way investors view different currencies.

A percentage of revenues generated from InstantDEX and Teleport fees will be paid to BTCD holders. Payments can be made in any currency or asset, to the associated address in the BTCD wallet’s built-in asset exchange.BitcoinDark is the only cryptocurrency that will reward holders with income denominated in Bitcoin.


Anonymous BTCD Debit Cards for Fiat Withdrawal

Crypto ⇒ Cash! An Anon Card is similar to a traditional pre-paid debit MasterCard but will allow BitcoinDark users the ability to anonymously transfer BTCD to fiat. Anon cards will enable users to bridge the divide between Crypto and the Traditional Banking system. What this means is that you will be able to load your Anon card with BTCD and convert to fiat to make purchases or withdrawals.

However, Anon cards allow users to keep personal information private. Traditional debit cards are directly linked to users through personal information that is required in order to receive them, but with Anon Cards, no personal information is required to receive a card so your personal information will remain private, and your use of the card anonymous.


**Total Number of Coins**: ~1.2 Million

**Target Blocktime**: 1 minute

**Time to Maturity**: 110 Confirmations

**Proof of Stake Reward**: 5% per year

**Minimum Coin Stake Age**: 8 hours


addnode=107.170.59.196

addnode=146.185.188.6

addnode=74.91.20.250:39997

addnode=54.85.50.15:50288

addnode=107.170.148.50:14631

addnode=65.129.66.246:57762

addnode=31.220.4.41

addnode=98.226.66.65

addnode=193.219.117.63

addnode=62.210.141.204

addnode=128.199.172.165

addnode=192.99.143.114

addnode=178.20.169.208

addnode=195.34.100.2:42038

addnode=5.101.107.239:60056


Exchanges:
http://bter.com/




BitcoinDark

LitecoinDark

LitecoinDark is a project which aims to fulfill the original ideas of crypto-currency: Decentralization, Anonymity and just fun.

The goal is to launch a fast, anonymous coin based on Litecoin. We are trying to add PoS in LitecoinDark to prevent 51% attacks.

Also, we have been working on the 2nd generation cryptocurrency for months. This will be a game changer that shocks the cryptoworld.


Technical specifications:

Algorithm: Scrypt

Halving: 12813 blocks

Target spacing: 1 minute

Target timespan: 5 hours

Coinbase maturity: 5 blocks

Maximum coins: 82.003.200

P2P port: 11040

RPC port: 21040


Block reward:

76.882 – 89.694 Reward: 4

89.695 – 102.507 Reward: 2

102.508 – 115.320 Reward: 1


Multipool:
CoinKing.io


Exchanges:
http://cryptsy.com/


Litecoindark Development:

There is quite a lot of room for improvements, as well as feature additions that could greatly help

this blockchain to survive and thrive in today’s crypto-economy.

We are working hard to add new features!


Litecoindark Nodes:

addnode=86.81.234.92:11040

addnode=79.94.45.47:11040

addnode=54.194.99.126:11040

addnode=88.213.221.77:11040

addnode=79.94.45.47:11040

addnode=54.194.99.126:11040

addnode=24.199.222.230:11040

addnode=104.37.187.38:11040

addnode=198.199.110.87:11040

addnode=211.155.86.138:11040

addnode=209.73.144.179:11040

addnode=194.79.23.168:11040

addnode=24.199.222.232:11040

addnode=88.213.221.77:53037




LitecoinDark

Thursday, November 6, 2014

ChangeTip

he killer app for bitcoin may have been unleashed.


And it isn’t about massive retail acceptance, conquering PayPal or usurping Apple Pay. It’s all about small change affecting a massive modification in behavior. Micropayment appreciation.


ChangeTip, a San Francisco-based startup, has been enabling the exchange of tiny amounts of bitcoin on social media since February of this year. Love a post published by a favorite blogger? Buy her coffee ($1.50). Think a YouTube video is beyond awesome? Buy the producer a beer ($3.50). The service allows the no-fee transfer of small-change rewards to the people who produce your favorite content on the web.



It’s easy to tip. You just mention ChangeTip, the recipient and a tip amount in a social network post, and the ChangeTip bots, constantly patrolling the web, take care of the rest. The value of your tip is sent from the sender’s wallet account to the receiver’s, at no charge. However, beginning January 15, there will be a 1% withdrawal fee to move your tips out of your ChangeTip account.


Tipping is becoming viral. On Github, Reddit, Twitter and other social media, the exchange of micromoney is rampant. Until now, ChangeTip has only been available on select social media services but with its new Tip.Me domain service, the digital show of appreciation may be nearing its tipping point.


Here’s how it works: First, you claim a Tip.Me domain, then share that URL on your blog, website or social profile — and you’re set. ChangeTip has even designed website button icons, similar to “Like” buttons that say “Tip Me” for easy web placement.


Social change begins incrementally. Using “spare change” to show appreciation might just be the spark to light bitcoin’s mass adoption fire.



source: http://insidebitcoins.com/news/changetip-micropayments-may-bring-bitcoin-to-the-tipping-point/26121



ChangeTip