There are quite some papers on making BTC quantum resistent (and some already are). Here a good podcast on it https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g-Y4PT8va94
The difference is that the US can back one by printing more money, and they can't print more bitcoin.
How exactly would it become un-ressellable. Agreed, you would have to remain in the black market, but you cannot censor a transaction.
It doesn't bypass the rule. It just creates an alternative american market for it. You can still buy bitcoin following the rules of bitcoin if you chose so.
The article doesn't provide someone that understands crypto when their focus is solely on the bad. Check one of the biggest projects, Polkadot and their Substrate framework. It's an amazing work just from a technical…
There are legit projects. There are many bad projects. HN people generalize and the ones that know the legit projects understand discussing is a waste of time.
You just join IPFS with things like https://crust.network/ and that's 'sufficiently decentralized'. People confuse decentralized with sufficiently decentralized which is what most Dapps are focusing.
> This describes every place on Earth except -- arguably -- Venezuela and Somalia. That's just ignorance. Argentina, a G20 member, has had banks not allow it's citizens access their accounts in 2002. Currently they…
If it helps you understand, there's blockchains being built with close to none tokenomic concept to it. Meaning, there's no value on investing on their token but on using the platform. In some cases it's posible, in…
OpenSea is a DAO, so if they: a) voted an NFT out: well, people against it would move to an other platform and still have access to their NFT. b) somoeone on the front-end deleted access to an NFT: they would probably…
I don't get this, it's a work being done by multiple teams.
I provided a link to a very thoughtful critique and pointed out how it's lazy. I commented on that, I wasn't expecting on having to give a lecture on the specifics. As for the quoted part on specific, for instance a…
This article is realy lazy. If you want an actually valid argument against web3, here is Tim O'Reilly's take. He is the creator of the term web2.0 and created much of what we know as open source:…
Measuring the current levels of interest and potential adoption rates of leading data lake table formats using commonly available metrics (github, slack, websites, content, communities)
There are quite some papers on making BTC quantum resistent (and some already are). Here a good podcast on it https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g-Y4PT8va94
The difference is that the US can back one by printing more money, and they can't print more bitcoin.
How exactly would it become un-ressellable. Agreed, you would have to remain in the black market, but you cannot censor a transaction.
It doesn't bypass the rule. It just creates an alternative american market for it. You can still buy bitcoin following the rules of bitcoin if you chose so.
The article doesn't provide someone that understands crypto when their focus is solely on the bad. Check one of the biggest projects, Polkadot and their Substrate framework. It's an amazing work just from a technical…
There are legit projects. There are many bad projects. HN people generalize and the ones that know the legit projects understand discussing is a waste of time.
You just join IPFS with things like https://crust.network/ and that's 'sufficiently decentralized'. People confuse decentralized with sufficiently decentralized which is what most Dapps are focusing.
> This describes every place on Earth except -- arguably -- Venezuela and Somalia. That's just ignorance. Argentina, a G20 member, has had banks not allow it's citizens access their accounts in 2002. Currently they…
If it helps you understand, there's blockchains being built with close to none tokenomic concept to it. Meaning, there's no value on investing on their token but on using the platform. In some cases it's posible, in…
OpenSea is a DAO, so if they: a) voted an NFT out: well, people against it would move to an other platform and still have access to their NFT. b) somoeone on the front-end deleted access to an NFT: they would probably…
I don't get this, it's a work being done by multiple teams.
I provided a link to a very thoughtful critique and pointed out how it's lazy. I commented on that, I wasn't expecting on having to give a lecture on the specifics. As for the quoted part on specific, for instance a…
This article is realy lazy. If you want an actually valid argument against web3, here is Tim O'Reilly's take. He is the creator of the term web2.0 and created much of what we know as open source:…
Measuring the current levels of interest and potential adoption rates of leading data lake table formats using commonly available metrics (github, slack, websites, content, communities)