YieldForceOne 🛡️

4.7K posts

YieldForceOne 🛡️

YieldForceOne 🛡️

@YieldForceOne

Always searching for yield! Crypto fan, lover of sound money, libertarian, technology enthusiast, Dolphins fan, and consumer advocate.

Katılım Nisan 2021
230 Takip Edilen309 Takipçiler
YieldForceOne 🛡️
YieldForceOne 🛡️@YieldForceOne·
@DonalDevine I prefer $XMR over $BTC as actual money, but to the extent $BTC is trying to BE money, BIP-110 has to pass.
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Donal #BIP-110
Donal #BIP-110@DonalDevine·
They don't want you to use Bitcoin as money. They want you to use Bitcoin as arbitrary data storage and at the same time try to sell you "enhanced" Bitcoin fiat scams. Bitcoin is money. Everything else is a scam.
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BoozyTheClown | BIP-110
Now that @saylor has come out against BIP-110, it is more important than ever to upgrade your node(s) and support this BIP! It's time to remind Wall Street who truly runs Bitcoin! github.com/bitcoinknots/b…
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YieldForceOne 🛡️
YieldForceOne 🛡️@YieldForceOne·
@ScottAWolfe I thought that was Peter Schiff at the top. LOL. Appreciate the tone. Disagree with the institutional takeover and will support 110.
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Scott Wolfe
Scott Wolfe@ScottAWolfe·
To all #BIP110 supporters, I’ve listened to a lot of your diverse concerns and I want you to know that I empathize. I disagree with the proposed “solution” (this BIP, at this point in time) but I want you to know that I hear you and I believe that the majority of you are just trying to do what you believe is best for the long term evolution and growth of Bitcoin and $BTC as the world’s best money; the people’s money. Even if we disagree on the BIP, we have far more in common than that which separates us. Let’s keep the lion’s share of our time, energy and righteous rage for the perverse, broken systems and institutions that we are trying to disrupt and dismantle. One love (Bitcoiners)!
Scott Wolfe tweet media
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YieldForceOne 🛡️
YieldForceOne 🛡️@YieldForceOne·
@worshipbitcoin Can we force a $MSTR shareholder vote to support 110 in all public statements and materials? We own that Bitcoin.
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YieldForceOne 🛡️
YieldForceOne 🛡️@YieldForceOne·
@AsyncN8 Yes. I don't trust Coinbase at all. Look what they've done to $BTC. Shitcoins. Memes pumped by $TRUMP personally. Perps. Stocks. Account closures. India support. They don't care about Bitcoin or you. They want more institutional control. 110 gives it back to the people.
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AsyncN8, #BIP110
AsyncN8, #BIP110@AsyncN8·
Anti #BIP110 folks. You’re rooting for 5 KYC government regulated companies. You realize where that is headed if you don’t fight with us?? Swallow your pride and help us reassert the power to the node runners. Or enjoy your KYC whitelisted UTXOs and CBDC stablecoins.
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YieldForceOne 🛡️
YieldForceOne 🛡️@YieldForceOne·
@parman_the You nailed it. I want to think the opposition is well intentioned but they are being misled by Coinbase, Saylor, Wall Street, and the banks. 110 is about getting Bitcoin back to its roots. Money.
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Parman BIP110 🔑 Bitcoin Self-Custody Mentor
BIP110 is a DEFENSIVE soft fork. It is not "hostile", and not a "takeover", and it is not about one person or a leader. It doesn't add FEATURES. You won't notice a thing if you use Bitcoin as money; it's intended purpose. If this is a surprise, you've been fooled and gaslit by the enemy. bip110.org
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Caylon
Caylon@CoSatoshi821·
For the longest time I tried to stay neutral and unbiased on the Core v Knots debate, which ultimately turned into the #BIP110 debate. I genuinely tried to understand both sides. I listened to countless hours of podcasts and interviews from both camps, read the articles, asked questions here on X, and even used paid subs to Grok/Chat/Claude to work through the deeper technical questions. I spun up a Core node, then a Knots node, and built out a whole Bitcoin stack of services on a home-grown server so I could see it all for myself. I really, authentically, genuinely tried to give both sides a fair shake. But I simply could not get past the fact that ALL of the arguments made by the anti-110 side are easily countered by the pro-110 side. And honestly, I lost my patience with the pretentious elitism radiating from the anti-camp; the recycled logical fallacies, the cunning rhetorical devices, the arrogance and disdain for regular users of the network that you'd expect from progressive academia, not from Bitcoiners. Their blatantly obvious conflicts of interest, their connections to highly dubious individuals and organizations... it's just so obvious for anyone paying attention. Oh, and not to mention the overt concerted effort to thwart 110's momentum in recent days, reeking of desperation. The ONLY anti-110 argument I've heard that I agree with came from SuperTestnet, who pointed out that 110 doesn't have the same powerful economic and institutional support that 148 had (at least at the time of this post, 30 days out from mandatory signaling). Fair point. But 110 does have real support among a few miners, one or two pools, and everyday node runners, some of whom are more than willing to spend their own sats on rented hash to move it along. So all this to say: I DO NOT know with 100% certainty that BIP-110 will succeed. I have 100% hope that it does, but I can't predict the future (that siad, I do have a non-insignificant amount of sats wagering on the issue via Predyx). We have almost 30 days left, which feels like an eternity at this point, so anything could happen. Ultimately I have faith that #Bitcoin will survive, and that more and more people will come to their senses and use their connections, their networks, and their influence for the betterment of sound money. Money that doesn't carry the weight of shitcoining, shitscamming, shitstorage spammy garbage.
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YieldForceOne 🛡️
YieldForceOne 🛡️@YieldForceOne·
@dotkrueger There are thousands of other crap chains to spam. If we want $BTC to be money, we need to treat it like money. Yes on 110.
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YieldForceOne 🛡️ retweetledi
ThePatrioticBlonde™🇺🇸
The landmark SCOTUS ruling in Carpenter v. United States (2018) provides a powerful constitutional foundation for the argument that warrantless mass surveillance via Flock Safety automated license plate reader (ALPR) networks violates the Fourth Amendment. While the government has historically relied on the traditional public-roads doctrine to argue that drivers have no expectation of privacy on public streets, Carpenter fundamentally upended this logic by establishing that "individuals have a reasonable expectation of privacy in the whole of their physical movements". A single, isolated snapshot of a vehicle's license plate by a standard street camera is constitutionally unproblematic. However, when thousands of interconnected Flock cameras aggregate location, direction, timestamps, and unique vehicle features into a centralized, searchable database, they create a comprehensive, retroactive, and unconstitutional "mosaic" of an individual’s daily life. Just as Chief Justice John Roberts noted that cellphones act as "faithfully following" trackers that grant the state an encyclopedic record of private life, Flock’s ubiquitous grid builds an equally intrusive, retrospective timeline of a citizen's patterns, routines, and associations. Privacy advocates, including legal teams from the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), argue in cases like Schmidt v. City of Norfolk that Flock's architecture allows law enforcement to effortlessly bypass traditional constitutional safeguards. They do this by logging the movements of millions of completely innocent citizens first, without individualized suspicion, and allowing police to run warrantless, historical searches later. Furthermore, Carpenter explicitly limited the third-party doctrine, meaning the government cannot argue that drivers surrender their privacy rights simply because their location data is automatically collected and managed by a private corporation like Flock Safety acting as a surveillance proxy. Because the Supreme Court’s recent Chatrie decision further restricted broad, automated location-harvesting warrants, Carpenter's core logic dictates that accessing an automated network capable of reconstructing a person's physical history over weeks or months constitutes a Fourth Amendment search that strictly requires a warrant backed by probable cause.
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Thomas USA
Thomas USA@ThomasSickler·
@MorePerfectUS No one in the entire country voted for Flock, not a single person! So yes, your mass surveillance is being forced on everybody. Now go fuck yourself, parasite.
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More Perfect Union
More Perfect Union@MorePerfectUS·
CEO of Flock: "Unfortunately, there’s terrorist organizations like DeFlock whose primary motivation is chaos. They’re closer to Antifa than they are anything else."
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YieldForceOne 🛡️
YieldForceOne 🛡️@YieldForceOne·
@theonevortex @saylor @coinbase You can choose to trust Coinbase, wall street, and all the institutions that now own $BTC. I do not. They will bloat and sully the network to push stablecoins. It's happening in real time. Good luck to you if you think they are on your side.
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Vortex | BIP448
Vortex | BIP448@theonevortex·
@YieldForceOne @saylor @coinbase > They can't shut down the network, of course, but they can reject your deposit. WTF are you talking about? Do you even understand how bitcoin works? Nobody can reject a fee paying transaction and that's the point, you understand that right?
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Michael Saylor
Michael Saylor@saylor·
There are 110 things more dangerous to Bitcoin than spam. BIP 110 turns a spam dispute into a consensus change that would invalidate some currently valid, fee-paying transactions. That precedent is the danger. We should save our energy for threats that really matter. $BTC
Adam Back@adam3us

On the filter fork topic. I don't usually have time, but this morning listened to one of the twitter spaces from earlier in the week, with some well meaning relative bitcoin newcomers, that humanized them, and their concerns and thoughts for why they thought that made it logical to support 110. My feeling after listening, is if these are the people with #110 in their handles, I'm sad to see them about to fork off and get disillusioned without understanding why bitcoin rejected 110 robustly. So here's a more empathetic, constructive higher level version of explaining why not. I hope it's high-level and first-principles enough that everyone can follow. They seem to want to understand what makes people tick, and are suspicious of intent. So, if someone asked me why is Bitcoin important and what is it, I'd say my (personal) mission and hope for bitcoin is to build the cypherpunk future, that "Snow Crash" was a blueprint, and work backwards from there. Bitcoin I hope leads to fully free markets via bearer unseizable, hard mathematically dependable money. Not everyone is comfortable with that level of freedom, but that's my view. And at this point, I believe that surprisingly, even now many governments have come to understand and value bitcoin's gold-like mathematical assurance, a positive development. Others may have milder views than myself, but still like hard censorship resistant money. Because of motive suspicion, if it's not obvious: I hate spam with a passion, that's how I came to design hashcash while researching decentralized bearer money with others, and running nodes in privacy related cypherpunk p2p networks nearly three decades ago. People seem upset about the default op return policy change in bitcoin. I will just assert, there are extremely robust and simple reasons for bitcoin changing default relay policy, and most just didn't do their research, so don't know what those are, or maybe not technical enough to fully understand though there have been 1000s of posts trying to explain in various simplified ways. So that lack of understanding lends itself to shared build-up of false narratives. So here's my back-to-basics higher level explanation. The decentralization needed to create cypherpunk money has implications a: side effect of decentralization is that you can't impose your views on others. The very decentralization mechanism that helps that, is working against what BIP 110 wants, which at it's most basic is a quest to police other people. I understand supporters don't see their intent like that, but introspect deeper. You can modify your software, but not anyone else's. Another critical and incredibly robust technical bitcoin immune system is bitcoin can't have people who don't understand technology basics insist on eroding security, decentralization robustness and core properties. That would end badly, fast, and so people will fight you on that. So the message is Bitcoin respectfully says "no" to what you want. Sorry, and bitcoiners do genuinely understand and empathize that you mean well, have high level thoughts that make emotional sense, and articulate sensible bitcoin-defensive high level ideas, but they are not grounded and without you seeing it, the way you propose to achieve your ideas, hard-conflict with free cypherpunk permissionless money. My advice is to listen to more experienced people who understand the system and why it works the way it does, to whatever detail you want to understand the grounded reasons for why this is the implication of decentralization and cypherpunk money. I guarantee you the developer and protocol ecosystem shares and exceeds your views on bearer hard money (and dislike of spam). You may not agree with individual developers choices, views, way of expressing themselves etc, BUT you also need to understand the IETF-like decentralized technical consensus process creates a protective change resistance, that is highly effective at protecting bitcoin mission. The implication of which is no developer can change anything without technical consensus from hundreds of other developers and protocol observers who are pedantic and extremely knowledgeable clever people who won't let any unaddressed technical question past. The protective change resistance is robust and decentralized in an amplifying way because of this technical consensus. And the many highly technical mainline developers' cypherpunk mission mindsets are probably far more determined than you can even handle on clarity of understanding and views about freedoms on permissionless networks, as many of you are probably still subconsciously inured by the matrix, where they have transcended that, and grew up immersed in it decades ago. They think natively in this space, while you are just grappling with the surface. Many wont have internalized or have the experience to know how this internet physics works, where there is no policeman, no policy authority, just mathematics, free market and hard money. That has implications for your views also, unfortunately. Now the tough pill, which is unfortunately true: If you won't listen to reason, educate yourself, learn, the same radical freedom applies to you: your permissionless recourse is to club together and create a fork. But bitcoin won't be joining it. (With respect and no sleight intended.) Please rejoin bitcoin now, or later if you're not convinced and need to experience 110 forking off and fizzling for yourself to start that journey of introspecting and learning. It would be sad if bitcoin lost people disillusioned due to simple lack of understanding of what's going on there, we're all trying to defend bitcoin and keep it on mission. Including btw the 110 technical promoters, just they wandered off plot somehow. Join the cypherpunks on bitcoin, come cypherpunk summer🌞 in a few weeks.

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YieldForceOne 🛡️
YieldForceOne 🛡️@YieldForceOne·
@theonevortex @saylor @coinbase And BTW - calling $XMR a shitcoin is fairly hilarious. It's the only coin on the planet that every government is fighting against. It is digital cash. Anonymous every time..
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Vortex | BIP448
Vortex | BIP448@theonevortex·
@YieldForceOne @saylor @coinbase > If the block contains data some government or institution doesn't like, they will start to reject it and the whole thing crumbles. What? Do you even understand that no single government can shut bitcoin down because it's decentralized? And no I don't shitcoin.
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YieldForceOne 🛡️
YieldForceOne 🛡️@YieldForceOne·
@theonevortex @saylor @coinbase Don't know what you mean by that. If the block contains data some government or institution doesn't like, they will start to reject it and the whole thing crumbles. If you want the kind of money you are describing, I hope you are in $XMR.
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Vortex | BIP448
Vortex | BIP448@theonevortex·
@YieldForceOne @saylor @coinbase It's not bloated with data now, it's a censorship resistant network, not paypal, it's fuck you money, not amazon, therefore you can't prevent people from adding arbitrary data to transactions, this is why we have a fee, you understand what the fee does right?
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YieldForceOne 🛡️
YieldForceOne 🛡️@YieldForceOne·
@theonevortex @saylor @coinbase If $BTC is money, we don't want it bloated with data. If someone marks up a $USD too much, the treasury destroys it and prints a new one. I don't trust @coinbase to accept $BTC that Brian Armstrong deems inappropriate.
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Being Libertarian
Being Libertarian@beinlibertarian·
CEO of Flock says organizations like De-Flock are terrorist organizations like ANTIFA.
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Crypto Tea
Crypto Tea@Cryptotea·
What if we all use bitcoin as a currency instead of just holding it
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unusual_whales
unusual_whales@unusual_whales·
BREAKING: New York City has adopted a new rule that bans companies from using deceptive subscriptions to trap customers into paying for gym memberships, streaming services and other recurring charges, per the Guardian
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CoinGecko
CoinGecko@coingecko·
JUST IN: $CASHCAT crosses $200M market cap amid DEX listings and Whale buys.
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