Brendan Burgess
Founder
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Edward Snowden referred to Bitcoin in a recent interview within the last couple of months (available on youtube). For obvious reasons, Snowden has a keen interest in all things privacy related. In the earlier days of bitcoin, some people bought into the fallacy that bitcoin was anonymous. The truth is that (for the most part) it's quite the opposite. The bitcoin blockchain provides an immutable record of all transactions. If you can be linked to one transaction, then a whole trail of transactions are associated with you - and plain for all to see.There was a question about some criticism by Edward Snowden that the public ledger was its biggest flaw. He seemed to agree that it was a problem but that they were working on it. ( I don't claim to understand this argument.)
Yes, that sounds like Antonopoulos. He doesn't get drawn in on the whole speculative aspect. That to him is not helpful to the bitcoin project. It's logical too. Bitcoin settling at a price just above zero may be a disaster for speculators. However for the functioning of Bitcoin as it was intended, so long as the price settles anywhere above zero, then it can function.He genuinely does not seem to care about the value of Bitcoin as long as it has some value.
"Bitcoin will be successful when the 5 core principles are widely adopted"
These are(I think)
- privacy
- open source
- borderless
- decentralisation
- lack of censorship
Without a doubt, he'd be glad to see them gone. Antonopoulos always talks in terms of investing in skills (associated with building the blockchain) as opposed to price speculation. As has been discussed on here, the speculative aspect adds nothing to achieving those 5 core principles....it's a side show.If Bitcoin settled down at a valuation of $1, and maintained those principles, do you think that many of the faithful would consider it a success?
Maybe AA would be glad to see them gone.
The most interesting this is that the audiobook of that sells even better!
He was saying he is keeping the price low and also giving out free tickets to students and those who cant afford them.
I am not sure how the last part works when tickets are getting sold out...
1. Yes, btc has an enormous appetite for energy but that there's probably space for one such PoW based crypto given that there is real value in having a totally immutable ledger.
2. Miner centralisation has peaked as they're no longer swapping out kit every few months - which means the smaller guys will catch up. ...but that it will take some time for this to filter through.
Interesting - had not heard of that. As you say there have been a number of 51% attacks recently - with zencash being the most recent in the last 24 hours. Here's a metric of costs involved in carrying out a 51% attack. They suggest that there isn't enough hashing power readily available to tackle bitcoin - but I guess that's what might come into question in line with what he's suggesting.You just reminded me, in response to the question on power usage, he did suggest he had some concern for the rise & convergence in mining ASICs and how they could potentially be manipulated to undermine or steal cryptos.
The three recent 51% attacks on Verge and one on Bitcoin Gold show there are challenges with the PoW model.
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