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2126
Living Room / Re: Why George Orwell wrote 1984
« Last post by Renegade on January 10, 2014, 08:02 AM »
Unfortunately, in these circumstances, being pragmatic matters. All too often it becomes "A, B, or get shot." So you're not "permitting" them to frame things, you're trying to live until Tuesday might be a better day to fight it all.

When it comes down to being coerced into making a decision, that's an entirely different matter. Threatening to kill you, imprison you, or take away your livelihood or everything you own is coercion.

But sometimes we are not coerced into choosing evil.

When you choose evil without coercion, even if it is a lesser evil, there's something seriously WRONG there.

The strongest people with the strongest convictions are able to refuse to choose evil in the face of imminent death. Those people are rare. I don't think that I have that in me. I think few people do.

I don't think that it is fair to blame someone who is coerced for what they do. It is more sensible to have pity for them and their situation.

"Live to fight another day" is pretty much always a good thing.
2127
Living Room / DuckDuckGo over 1 BILLION searches in 2013
« Last post by Renegade on January 10, 2014, 07:55 AM »
https://duck.co/blog...riends-newsletter-45

DuckDuckGo friends, happy new year!

In 2013, over one billion searches were made on DuckDuckGo. Needless to say, it was a great year for us.

We're looking forward to similar greatness in 2014. We have a lot of big things planned for this year that we hope will address a lot of the excellent feedback you have been giving us for some time. So please stay tuned.

We also are continually focused on growing the DuckDuckGo community. Join us at duck.co to help shape your search engine.

Thank you for your continued support!

The DuckDuckGo Staff

Congrats to them on a job well done! :D
2128
Living Room / Re: Why George Orwell wrote 1984
« Last post by Renegade on January 10, 2014, 01:03 AM »
So whenever given a choice between A and B, it's important to remember there's also a third option: neither.

Exactly.

On the topic of total control...

Camp 14 : Total Control Zone

FAIR WARNING: This is about a fellow who was born into a North Korean death camp and escaped. It might not be all that wonderful for some to watch. Of particular note is how and what he thought, e.g. that beating a girl to death in a school classroom was normal, that torture was normal, that he thought the rest of the world was exactly like where he was, etc. Oddly enough, if you think about it a little bit, you probably know (or are) people who have similar though patterns, though your circumstances be different...



http://www.camp14-film.com/

2129
Living Room / Re: Why George Orwell wrote 1984
« Last post by Renegade on January 09, 2014, 06:16 PM »
This is one of the things that bothers me:

...but I would support it against Nazism or Japanese imperialism, as the lesser evil. Similarly I would support the USSR against Germany because I think the USSR cannot altogether escape its past and retains enough of the original ideas of the Revolution to make it a more hopeful phenomenon than Nazi Germany.

I don't think supporting evil really ever works out very well.

Remember, Stalin murder far, far more people than Hitler. Hitler was an amateur. Stalin was a pro. Mao was even better than Stalin when it came to murdering people.

http://www.hawaii.ed...owerkills/MURDER.HTM

And while a lot of people may call the Nazis "fascists", remember what Hitler had to say about it...

We are socialists.



Perhaps a bit meta, but still on the topic of authors, from J.R.R. Tolkien:

http://peacerequires...ters-of-jrr-tolkien/

My political opinions lean more and more to Anarchy (philosophically understood, meaning abolition of control not whiskered men with bombs) – or to ‘unconstitutional’ Monarchy. I would arrest anybody who uses the word State (in any sense other than the inanimate realm of England and its inhabitants, a thing that has neither power, rights nor mind); and after a chance of recantation, execute them if they remained obstinate! If we could get back to personal names, it would do a lot of good. Government is an abstract noun meaning the art and process of governing and it should be an offence to write it with a capital G or so as to refer to people.

Remember the meaning of "anarchy" and the etymology - "an" meaning "no" and "archos" meaning "rulers" -- "no rulers". It does not mean "no rules". Well, unless you're Humpty Dumpty...
2130
Living Room / Re: Does anyone here use Bitcoins?
« Last post by Renegade on January 09, 2014, 05:46 PM »
Economist Paul Krugman on why he's not a fan of bitcoin:

http://www.nytimes.c...s-and-barbarism.html

Krugman is just a complete idiot. His basic premise is that if we all just "believe" hard enough, things will magically become wonderful and rainbow farting unicorns will be given to every child.

For an excellent experiment illustrating just what a total moron he is, have a look into Bernankoin:

https://bitcointalk....x.php?topic=375010.0

For a literal illustration of what kind of nitwit Krugman is, see here:

https://bitcointalk....sg4393471#msg4393471

ATM I'm not trading COYE, but I'll trade you 10 of my BEK for 20 of yours. Just send me multiples of 10 BEK and keep multiples of 10 BEK for yourself and we'll call the deal done. Send to this address: BndanZXsyDjnrP8dkwgbo87jExvk96tj8z ;D
-RenegadeMind link=https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=375010.msg4393471#msg4393471 date=1389208453

And the reply:

Ill take you up on that trade!  Traded you 2000 BEK for 1000 BEK, great deal! :)
-artiface link=https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=375010.msg4394106#msg4394106 date=1389210538

And yes. He did send me 1,000 BEK.

To really get the joke though, you need to understand a bit monetary policy, a splash of economics, what Quantitative Easing is (printing money), what a "rewards system" is in crypto currency, and how Bernankoin illustrates QE through its rewards system (named "Quantitative Easing").

Krugman is a troll.

Here's another bit of trolling by Krugman:

http://krugman.blogs...itcoin-is-evil/?_r=0

Bitcoin Is Evil
-KrugTroll

There's nothing else in the article worth quoting.

In the comments:

However, Mr Krugman is right about bitcon being evil, at least for socialists. Bitcoin threatens socialist economies, central banks and all government monopolies on money. It is a libertarian tool, so all socialists should hate it.
-Roger McKinney - Broken Arrow, OK

Bitcoin threatens centralisation and collectivism. It is anathema to authoritarians and rent-seekers. Bitcoin is "neutral". To understand what "neutral" means in terms of a currency, I'd strongly recommend viewing a few of the videos posted with Andreas Antonopolous. Here's a link to many videos with him speaking:

https://www.youtube....ntonopoulos&sm=3

Here's a video entitled "Bitcoin Neutrality - Andreas Antonopolous"



The concept of neutrality is really, really important to understanding what Bitcoin is, and in light of what Bitcoin is, further understanding on just how corrupt our current system of fiat currency is.

But, the comment there on Krugtroll's article is quite correct. Socialists should both hate and fear Bitcoin (and by extension, all crypto currencies) because they strip the state of much of its power to dominate and control people.

Remember, Bitcoin has its roots in crypto-anarchism or cypherpunk. It is an anti-political technology. Krugman is a collectivist and hates Bitcoin because of this.

The growth of the Internet will slow drastically, as the flaw in "Metcalfe's law"--which states that the number of potential connections in a network is proportional to the square of the number of participants--becomes apparent: most people have nothing to say to each other! By 2005 or so, it will become clear that the Internet's impact on the economy has been no greater than the fax machine's. - Paul Krugman, 1998

 :)

Exactly. This fool is one of the crowd that helped bring you the sub-prime mortgage crisis. His credibility is negative.

The mining window is closing as it is getting increasingly difficult to do (unless you have really serious dedicated hardware). When I first started I was getting over 10,000 coins a day ... Now I'm lucky to break 100.

While it sucks to mine less, this is actually a good thing. It shows that there are more miners (diggers) out there digging for Ðogecoins. The more miners a currency has, the more secure the network.

I touch on this topic a bit in this blog post:

http://cynic.me/2014...ists-hate-shitcoins/

The mining window is closing as it is getting increasingly difficult to do (unless you have really serious dedicated hardware). When I first started I was getting over 10,000 coins a day ... Now I'm lucky to break 100.

Bingo StoicJoker.

That's the big flaw that keeps bothering me. "Look, here's a new crypto-currency and only a hundred people know about it! Nice advantage to us! Then later when it gets popular the algo will slow down and no one can get much more!"

Reminds me of the day when I cared about Magic the Gathering and bought a pizza with two Sengir Vampires!  :D  (The clerk made a note of the sale and said he would pay back his register.)

There are a lot of considerations in looking at rewards systems. Your comment applies to some, but not all currencies.

I wrote up a joke currency here:

https://bitcointalk....x.php?topic=390735.0



It's a joke from top to bottom.

But the rewards system completely eliminates the objection that you just raised. It's based on the Fibonacci series.

Now, while this is an extreme example, there are other currencies that have done similar things to eliminate the scenarios where early adopters jump in and snatch up massive amounts of coins. Some do the exact opposite and reward early adopters.

This should be enough, given the objection/concern, to illustrate just how important rewards systems are for a currency. (The other consideration there is "pre-mining".)

2131
Living Room / Re: Movies or films you've seen lately
« Last post by Renegade on January 04, 2014, 08:25 AM »
It's a Wonderful Life

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0038650/

https://en.wikipedia...27s_a_Wonderful_Life



Watched it for the first time after hearing David Knight give a short explanation on some bits of the film. Fantastic film. I can see why it's a classic.
2132
Living Room / Re: 3D Printing Under Attack
« Last post by Renegade on January 03, 2014, 05:52 AM »
Ok... this is just way too cool! Jeff Berwick interviewing Cody Wilson!



Cody Wilson is the fellow who brought you Defense Distributed and 3D printed guns (the wiki weapons project). He's also involved in the Dark Wallet project.

Peace, love, and anarchy! ;D
2133
          Originally posted @
http://www.ultimate-...hread.php?p=32208540

THE RENEGADE MINDS CHRISTMAS GIVEAWAY!

This is about YOUR favourite music, and MY favourite music.

PART 1 (THE FIRST 5 - YOUR FAVOURITE MUSIC!):

I'm giving out 5~10 free Guitar & Drum Trainer licenses, a $50 value, to the first 5 musicians who post screenshots of their favourite songs. Doesn't matter what I like - Post what YOU like!

PART 2 (EVERYONE AFTER THE FIRST 5 - MY FAVOURITE MUSIC):

After the first 5, if you post a screenshot of a song or band that I like, you get a free license as well. It doesn't need to be my favourite - I only need to like it. (See below.)

HINT #1: Don't post screenshots of boy band music.
HINT #2: Post a YouTube link if you think I might not know your music. If I can check it out and get into it quick, you win. If I get bored and close it, well, them's the breaks.

Yeah, I know... what I like is totally arbitrary, but what the heck? It keeps it fun. I'm looking to spread some Christmas cheer here, so don't get offended if my eyes gloss over because I've never even heard of band ABC123 or whatever. I like a lot of music across a very broad range of genres, so you've got a very good chance that I'll like "Brazzlebrop" singing "Doozle my Froozlefrap" if the music is actually good. ;)


WTH is GDT?

Guitar & Drum Trainer is software to help you learn new music easier and faster. It's used by everyone from hobbyists to professionals. (There's a screenshot below.)


HOW TO WIN (FIRST 5):

[list=1]


That's all there is to it. The first 5 get a free GDT license.

5 free GDT Christmas licenses to the first 5 people to post screenshots here of their favourite songs!


HOW TO WIN (AFTER THE FIRST 5):

[list=1]



RULES:

[list=1]
  • You must have at least 5 posts here in the forums and an account older than this post.
  • Your screenshot must be visible - no text links. See below for how to take & post a screenshot.
  • If I can't see the screenshot, it doesn't count. (imgur.com is a good and reliable site. I will make extra efforts there.) 
  • If you are one of the first 5 to win, and post a song from one of MY favourite bands or songs, you get TWO (2) licenses - 1 for you, and 1 for you to give away to a fellow musician.
  • You can post up to 5 screenshots.
  • I need to know the name of the song & band, so if your music file isn't tagged properly to display in the GDT title bar, you need to tell me the song name & band name. If I can't tell what it is, it doesn't count towards being one of my favourites.
  • The contest is open until Boxing Day (midnight December 26th). (I may extend this if it's fun.)
  • All winners will be notified after the contest closes. (This lets people post the same bands/songs on a neutral basis.)


SCREENSHOTS:

For those not familiar with how to post a screenshot:

[list=1]
  • Visit http://imgur.com/.
  • Drag & drop the screenshot onto the web site to upload it.
  • Copy the BBCode IMG tag.
  • Paste that in your post.


Here's an example:



The code for that is (with added spaces):

[ IMG ] http://i.imgur.com/76GjSZO.png [ / IMG ]

To easily take screenshots, Screenshot Captor is free (and really, really good!):

https://www.donationcoder.com/Software/Mouser/screenshotcaptor/index.html


BONUS FOR EVERYONE!!!

I'm giving Ð10 Dogecoins to everyone that posts a screenshot! (Up to 1,000 Dogecoins. Up to 100 people that love doges!)

Or 100 Bernankoins! (Up to 100,000 Bernankoins!)

Take your pick! Dogecoins or Bernankoins? It's up to you!

Post your Dogecoin or Bernankoin address with your screenshot and I'll send you some super-awesome crypto currency for the future!

EVERYONE WINS!


Good luck, and MERRY CHRISTMAS~!


(I hope I didn't forget anything...)
-RenegadeMinds
2134
Living Room / Re: You're a sly one. Mr.........Disney?
« Last post by Renegade on December 23, 2013, 09:27 AM »
And this is how pirates add value to content. They make content usable.

If you can't use the content, what good is it?

+1 for piracy. They improve products and make them usable.
2135
Living Room / Re: Does anyone here use Bitcoins?
« Last post by Renegade on December 21, 2013, 08:53 PM »
Bitcoin = world reserve crypto currency

I'm not sure I understand: what would being a 'world reserve crypto currency' involve?
I cant quite tie it in with the current definition of a reserve currency a la http://en.wikipedia....iki/Reserve_currency.

http://words.stevekl...ve-on-cryptocurrency

Near the end:

Basically, BTC is sort of the ‘world reserve currency’ of cryptocurrencies.

2136
Living Room / Re: Does anyone here use Bitcoins?
« Last post by Renegade on December 17, 2013, 08:05 AM »
Semi-quasi-pseudo-related...

http://www.millionai...p;lang=#.UrBYyfQW3up

Ðogecoin is another crypto currency. The video there is just subbing in dogecoin stuff.

Anyways, it's just part of the doge meme and Ðogecoin cryptocurrency, and funny, and the way they sub in the images and text in the video is just pretty damn cool. :D
2137
Living Room / Re: Does anyone here use Bitcoins?
« Last post by Renegade on December 16, 2013, 07:29 AM »
Here's a history of Bitcoin infographic. It is very large.

http://www.visualcap...coin-infographic.jpg

Not hot linking it for obvious reasons.
2138
Living Room / Re: Does anyone here use Bitcoins?
« Last post by Renegade on December 12, 2013, 10:53 AM »
I cant quite tie it in with the current definition of a reserve currency a la http://en.wikipedia....iki/Reserve_currency.

That's actually a great resource; you just have to realize that unlike fiat, the reserve is not held by one group.  Because BC is the anchor for the trading in all of the other CCs, that's why he refers to it in that manner.  At least, that was my understanding.

Yes.

You clicked post just a moment before I did. :)
2139
Living Room / Re: Does anyone here use Bitcoins?
« Last post by Renegade on December 12, 2013, 10:52 AM »
Bitcoin = world reserve crypto currency

I'm not sure I understand: what would being a 'world reserve crypto currency' involve?
I cant quite tie it in with the current definition of a reserve currency a la http://en.wikipedia....iki/Reserve_currency.

From the article:

A reserve currency (or anchor currency) is a currency that is held in significant quantities by governments and institutions as part of their foreign exchange reserves, and that is commonly used in international transactions.

Edited to make more sense:

A reserve currency (or anchor currency) is a currency that is held in significant quantities by people as part of their savings, and that is commonly used in transactions.

Bitcoin fits that for the crypto world.

Don't worry about the specific details - they're not relevant. Look at the big picture. Or, take it as a metaphor. Either or.

Other than fiat, almost all currency pairs are in BTC, LTC, and XPM, with the vast, overwhelming majority in BTC.

Here's an edge case... If you want to buy Netcoins (NET), you need to buy them in LTC or XPM. So, if you want them, most likely you need to go from USD or EUR (or whatever) to BTC to LTC/XPM to NET.

But pretty much everyone deals in BTC.

DOGE coins are really new and catching on fast. They're really fun. Check the forum here:

http://doges.org/

Here's a joke from me in 1 thread:

http://doges.org/ind...=469.msg2716#msg2716

Dogecoins are sold mostly for games or bitcoins right now. Again, back to bitcoins.  It's the "reserve" of the crypto currency world. Everyone accepts it. Everyone deals in it. Most currency pairs include BTC.

I just mined a bunch of Lottocoins. If anyone wants some, I'm selling them for bitcoins. :D (I'm keeping my dogecoins!)

But seriously - nobody measures alt crypto in anything but BTC. (When dealing with more than 1 crypto.)
2140
Living Room / Re: Does anyone here use Bitcoins?
« Last post by Renegade on December 12, 2013, 07:32 AM »
Bitcoin = world reserve crypto currency

Alt coins = other currencies

No reason why that can't work at all. We'll just see a lot of currencies fail, and that's ok.

I trade crypto-crypto pairs. I do not trade fiat-crypto pairs. Why would I? I use the world reserve crypto currency (bitcoin) as my primary currency and I trade others.

As fiat currencies continue to be debased by governments and central banks, more people will flock to crypto currencies. It's happening now. People don't want their money to be worth less tomorrow. A bit of upwards volatility is preferable to certain demise.
2141
DC Gamer Club / Re: DOGE coins buying steam games
« Last post by Renegade on December 12, 2013, 06:35 AM »
And now there's a Doge Jump game:

http://doges.org/index.php?topic=469.0

You can win DOGE coins with your high score!

I have a good feeling about this coin. It's just too much fun.


            so crypto           much rich
      many coin                                       rlly amaze
                            wow
2142
Living Room / Re: Does anyone here use Bitcoins?
« Last post by Renegade on December 11, 2013, 10:49 PM »
Why would I want to use a bit coin?

Payment processors charge 2~5% on every transaction. Crypto currency fees are optional, and much lower if you choose to pay the fee.

Payments are instant. Bank transfers can take several days.

You don't get payments blocked by a bank that wants to tell you what you can and cannot do with your own money.

You can pay anonymously.

Your money cannot be stolen from you through a bank bail-in as was done in Cyprus and as is now law in places like Canada.

Bitcoins are limited in supply so they are deflationary (increase in value - gain purchasing power) whereas fiat is unlimited and inflationary (you lose purchasing power over time).

You can send money to anyone, anywhere in the world with no restrictions on how much you send.

If you send more than $10,000 to anyone or to yourself across "borders", you don't have a bank tattling on you to a government that will label you a terrorist or drug dealer or put you on a watch list.

You can take your bitcoins with you when you fly and have as much as you want and there's nothing that airport security can do about it.

Bitcoins put YOU in charge of your money. Banks and governments can't force you to do anything you don't want to. e.g. You can buy anything you want or take your money anywhere you want or send it to whoever you want and they can't stop you.

You'd want to use bitcoins because they give you some freedom.

There are more reasons.

The real question is, "When you have the option to use bitcoins (or any decentralised, open source crypto currency), why would you ever want to use fiat?"

There is no good argument for using fiat over bitcoins. All the problems/objections have been solved. I've not read 1 single good or valid objection yet. And I've read a truckload on this.
2143
Living Room / Re: When did the world of the NSA and technology get so surreal?
« Last post by Renegade on December 11, 2013, 10:35 PM »
The only problem is when they're watching something that we believe should be entirely private, or held in confidence between myself and whomever I'm interacting with. Surely if I'm in a virtual public spot in, say, WoW, I can't object to someone observing what I do.

The problem with it in this case isn't privacy; it's use, waste, and idiocy.

Yep. If anything, an understatement.

Why not deploy the army to patrol children's playgrounds and see if there are any budding little terrorists?

And you pay for that idiocy with the money the kleptocrats steal from you.
2144
DC Gamer Club / DOGE coins buying steam games
« Last post by Renegade on December 11, 2013, 05:03 AM »
DOGE coin is a new crypto currency. At the moment people are buying games with it, with a lot of that being on Steam.

http://doges.org/index.php?board=18.0

If you're a gamer and have a good gaming machine with ATI graphics cards, you can put them to work mining (digging) DOGE coins and then effectively get games for free (the cost of electricity).

You can find out more about DOGE at the forum above or on /r/dogecoin.

Also, you can beg for DOGE coins in various thread on Reddit, in the Doges forums above, or in some threads in the Bitcointalk forums. Play it up - keep in character - and you'll likely find yourself with a few DOGE coins that you can spend on a new game. :)

If nothing else, this is really an extremely fun crypto currency, and the first meme-based one.

(I should also add that this is brand new - only about 2 days old or so. NOW is the time to start mining and begging.)
2145
Living Room / Re: Elitists of the World - UNITE!
« Last post by Renegade on December 09, 2013, 11:10 AM »
I'll skip the rant. It's not even fit for the Basement.

Read Immanuel Kant. That should explain a bit.

I'm sickened.
2146
Living Room / Re: Does anyone here use Bitcoins?
« Last post by Renegade on December 09, 2013, 10:05 AM »
2147
Living Room / Re: Does anyone here use Bitcoins?
« Last post by Renegade on December 09, 2013, 06:30 AM »
it's still a definite win for Renegade's "One should tryout Bitcoins" side of the fence.

Yup. And I sincerely hope he'll get the chance to say "Told ya so 40hz!"  ;D

If you saw my finances, you'd know that I'm already thinking that. ;)

In other news...

A song for bitcoin:



;D

Bitcoin-it-crashes-up.png

;)
2148
Living Room / Re: Does anyone here use Bitcoins?
« Last post by Renegade on December 03, 2013, 01:47 AM »
But even then, when you download free software from somewhere, especially if it's not been broadly vetted, you do need to read the license. Now, the wording in some is rather terse or obtuse, but it's still "fair warning".

Legalese is never to be construed as fair anything, and I'll be damned if I'll ever waste an entire second of my life reading that level of convoluted bullshit. I simply don't care what someone's vampiric lawyers thinks is a clever way of phrasing their excuses for trying to rape me. I shred any piece of software I use to be sure it actually does do precisely what I feel it is to be doing.

Legalese is total douchebaggery. No argument there.

I just have little sympathy for people that install everything and anything then whine about it.

 :D Me either ... I just have a unique way of enforcing what's allowed on my computer. ;)

My solution is to just not install anything unless I'm pretty damn sure about it.

I don't see this as much different than the whole toolbar thing. It comes with extra crap. I suppose that's one of the reasons that I like OpenCandy - they're very open and up front about what they do. It's hard to be more open than they are.
2149
Living Room / Re: Does anyone here use Bitcoins?
« Last post by Renegade on December 02, 2013, 03:56 PM »
^ Oh, I wasn't implying that it *was* malware in and of itself; just like a lot of other programs that get labeled as such, it's in the use.  And on that point, when someone does install a miner on your machine using your CPU to make money, that use of it becomes malware.  And it's interesting in this fact.  Just like the other forms of malware which are ways to get money (by taking your credit card and bank numbers, or encrypting your files so you can be held for ransom), this is worthy of reporting/being informed of for that very reason.  It's just we're keeping bitcoin confined to one thread, so I did that with this.  Perhaps I shouldn't have so it will get a wider audience, but ...

I didn't think that you were implying that. The article was.

But even then, when you download free software from somewhere, especially if it's not been broadly vetted, you do need to read the license. Now, the wording in some is rather terse or obtuse, but it's still "fair warning". If you're not paying for the product... you are the product. Or your CPU/GPU... It's not malware - it's just pretty stupid to install software that's going to max out your machine, especially when you've been warned. Sure it's a crappy deal for the person installing it, but that doesn't make it malware. These terms get thrown around too easily sometimes.

I just have little sympathy for people that install everything and anything then whine about it.
2150
Living Room / Re: Does anyone here use Bitcoins?
« Last post by Renegade on December 02, 2013, 01:50 PM »
(see attachment in previous post)
In Bitcoin's Orbit Rival Virtual Currencies Vie for Acceptance

For the skeptical out there, keep your eye on the alt coins. If you have spare CPU or much better GPU power to spare, you can mine alt coins yourself. This is the big alt coin market:

https://www.cryptsy.com

Some others have much more limited offerings. BTC-e is the big Litecoin market. OKcoin.com is influential in the LTC market as well though.

Wonder how much longer until...
 (see attachment in previous post)

That ain't gonna happen.

What everyone is missing is that Bitcoin is a PROTOCOL. Very much like HTTP. You can build entirely new services and ecosystems on top of it.

http://www.coindesk....-future-for-bitcoin/

Bitcoin is a useful way to exchange money, but what if you could do other things with it? If bitcoiners could use it to issue shares, bonds and IOUs, or even to create alternative currencies atop bitcoins, they could add even more value to this innovative cryptocurrency. Bitcoinx, a community wanting to “democratize finance,” is hoping to facilitate just that, with a concept called “colored coins”.

Colored coins is a concept designed to be layered on top of Bitcoin, creating a new set of information about coins being exchanged. Using colored coins, bitcoins could be “colored” with specific attributes. This effectively turns them into tokens, which can be used to represent anything.

More at the link.

What is important to understand is that Bitcoin, and crypto currencies in general, offer a frictionless transaction where you can transfer $150,000,000 (as was done a week or so ago) for about $0.06 where it would cost you hundreds of thousands of dollars to transfer that through a traditional, antiquated system like Western Union or PayPal, etc.

But not only are these systems frictionless, they are faster and far more secure. You do not run the risk of your bank freezing your accounts or stealing your money because of some idiotic regulations or whatever.

And on top of that, you can have distributed stock exchanges and the like.

This is the democratisation of the value of currency. It flips the entire fiat paradigm on its head.

Technologically, this is a revolution in human history that can only be compared to Gutenberg's printing press and the advent of the Internet. And it dwarfs both of those. This revolutionizes commerce and finance. Fiat is dead. It's just a walking zombie now, waiting for someone to shoot it in the head.

If anyone has been paying attention, we are in the midst of a full-on currency war. China has lobbed another salvo against the USD announcing that it will no longer be buying USD or US bonds. That little story, oddly enough, didn't really make much of a wave in the MSM, despite it being some of the biggest and most important news I've heard all year. There are many other stories in the currency war that the MSM is conveniently ignoring. Even the alternative media hasn't really picked up on it yet.

So when the currency battlefield is soaked in the blood of fiat, what will be left standing?

Centralized currency?
Decentralized currency?

Napster died because it was centralized.
Bittorrent is impossible to kill because it is decentralized.

Crypto currency is here to stay. It's just going to take a bit longer for some people to realise that. :D ;)

Hopefully it won't burst before Renegade cashes out and retires as a millionaire! :Thmbsup:

The retirement part *IS* gonna happen~! ;D

Bitcoin mining malware could be hidden in app, security researchers warn

This stuff is really annoying as the AV companies label minerd.exe as malware, which it isn't. So, I have to whitelist it and turn off my AV when I download cpuminer. It is NOT malware.

But this is no different than other programs that people run the exact same way. Some programs out there do distributed computing and companies sell that power to different customers. The SETI stuff is one example. A lot of it is done under the banner of "for charity" or "for science". Thankfully I've not seen them try to sell that "for the children", though I'm sure that's coming.

The EXACT same type of software has been around for years and years and not labeled malware. The consistency is, well... whatever. Pfft.
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