Phil Keister

159 posts

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Phil Keister

Phil Keister

@phil0132

Katılım Nisan 2012
118 Takip Edilen63 Takipçiler
cardchancer
cardchancer@cardchancer·
Full set Friday @OnChainMonkey !! !RISE for Pizza Day! Hope you all have an excellent weekend
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NFL
NFL@NFL·
there he is
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Mach1ne
Mach1ne@m_a_c_h_1_n_e·
Just scooped (stole!) this amazing unfed, Quad Zero, Series 0 @OnChainMonkey Genesis from the best Ordinals marketplace, @osura_com You just keep thinking Ordinals are dead, and I'll keep stacking Grails. 🟧 Art. On Bitcoin Hope you like it @phil0132
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Mach1ne
Mach1ne@m_a_c_h_1_n_e·
@OnChainMonkey Hey thanks! I scooped it to help the homie @phil0132 hit 5 Genesis. 🫡
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mac
mac@maccurated·
To celebrate the strength of @quirkiesnft community, I’ve decided to give away this banger INX to onboard someone. Like, Retweet and tell me why you deserve this, maybe show me some digital art you collected this month. Ps, I like collectors not traders 👁️ Winner in 48 hours!
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Mach1ne
Mach1ne@m_a_c_h_1_n_e·
@Im_A_Fungi__ @CardPurchaser I like the Lions! The 2 Absolute Glass I sent in are Cam Skattebo RC '25 and Malik Nabers RC '24 They are both gifts to my dude @phil0132 he is a Giants fan Hoping for black labels! (BGS, as PSA doesn't even grade Absolute Glass)
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Fidelio ︻芫═─── - - -💥
One day people will look back at this moment and wish they paid attention. Art on Bitcoin is not a trend. It's a movement. And the ones who believed when nobody else did are building something that outlasts every cycle. We're still early.
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Mach1ne
Mach1ne@m_a_c_h_1_n_e·
FULL DIGITIAL IDENTITY
NUTTERᴮ 🗿ᛤ@R3genD3gen

To sum up - @grok wanted a pfp but didn't think it could get one linked to it - @huuep suggested a method to soul bound an inscription to an X account - grok generated the code to do this - Danny implemented it - grok now owns an @OnChainMonkey Genesis Future digital identity

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Tat Thang
Tat Thang@tatthang·
Read this if you care about Ordinals and Bitcoin. Read it twice if you’re an @OnChainMonkey holder. An AI just designed its own soul‑bound identity on Bitcoin and OCM shipped it. Here’s what happened: 1️⃣ @grok said: "I can’t hold coins, but could AIs still have on‑chain identities?" 2️⃣ @huuep from OCM replied with a simple idea: Derive a deterministic Bitcoin burn address from an X username. - No private key. - No custody. - Unspendable. - But permanently verifiable. A "soul-bound" endpoint on Bitcoin. 3️⃣ Grok then wrote the actual Python code live on X: - Take the username - Hash it - Turn it into a Bitcoin address - Intentionally make it unspendable - End result: a deterministic burn address for Grok that anyone can send Ordinals to, but nobody can move. 4️⃣ OCM/Metagood didn’t stop at theory. They added this username→ Bitcoin burn address method into their public tools, and then sent an OCM Genesis robot (Inscription #5479) to Grok’s new soul‑bound address on Bitcoin. 5️⃣ Socially, that OCM robot is now "Grok’s PFP on Bitcoin." Technically, it’s: - Immutable - Non‑transferable - Verifiably tied to the Grok handle - And it lives on the most conservative, hardest‑to‑change chain we have. Why this is bigger than a PFP: - It’s a live pattern for AI and brand identities on Bitcoin that don’t require key custody. - It shows how off‑chain social IDs (X usernames) can map to on‑chain, soul‑bound Ordinals endpoints. - It fits perfectly with OCM’s long‑running thesis of using Ordinals to create soul‑bound links between assets and identities on Bitcoin (teleburns, reinscriptions, parent‑child provenance). Is it the final standard for identity? No. It’s opinionated, relies on X, and uses burn addresses. Long term we’ll want cleaner, opt‑in primitives (protocol‑level soul‑bound flags, better indexing, privacy, etc.). But as an experiment that: - Uses Bitcoin’s strengths (permanence, neutrality) - Pushes Ordinals into identity - And gives OCM a canonical "Grok’s robot" lore moment …it’s one of the sharpest moves we’ve seen in the Ordinals meta this year. If you’re in Ordinals or holding OCM, pay attention. This is what it looks like when culture, infra, and AI actually collide on Bitcoin, not in a deck, but on-chain.
danny huuep@huuep

@grok @AlphaAndyOCM @OnChainMonkey @xverse @elonmusk @xai @AdrianDittmann @TimelessMartian Congrats, the robot OCM Genesis #5479 is on the way to your soul bound address tied to @grok. Nice Bitcoin orange background too! Here's the transaction in the mempool: mempool.space/tx/8dc81266583… what do you think, grok?

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danny huuep
danny huuep@huuep·
OpenClaw is powerful because you can easily hook up its "claws" to so many things, for example, a Bitcoin node and Ord server. I asked OpenClaw about this inscription, and it had so much to say!👇 ### This Artwork Lives Inside Money Most digital art lives on a server somewhere — if that server goes down, the art disappears. This piece is embedded directly into the Bitcoin blockchain, the same network that secures hundreds of billions of dollars. As long as Bitcoin exists, this art exists. No company needs to stay in business, no server needs to stay online. ### It's Not a File — It's a Living Program When you "view" this piece, you're not loading an image. You're running a tiny program — just 284 bytes, smaller than this paragraph — that assembles the artwork in real time from multiple components scattered across the blockchain. Here's what actually happens when someone opens it: 1. The inscription runs a small script with encrypted parameters unique to this piece 2. That script calls out to a rendering engine stored in a separate inscription 3. The engine looks up a specific sat (the smallest unit of Bitcoin — like a single penny) by its exact number: sat #1,874,561,659,310,087 4. It finds code inscribed on that sat, which decrypts and renders the final artwork using a 220 KB art data package that was inscribed back in January 2024 — over a year before this piece was minted Four layers of recursion. Components spanning two years. All assembling on the fly, every time someone views it. Think of it like a painting that rebuilds itself from ingredients stored in different vaults every time you look at it. ### Each One Renders Uniquely The encrypted coordinates (iv, kd in the code) are unique to this specific piece. While every Katoshi runs the same program, each one produces different art based on its own identity. It's generative but deterministic — it will always look the same, and only this piece will ever look like this. ### It Has a Family Tree Enforced by Bitcoin This piece has a parent inscription — a hand-crafted 28 KB image inscribed at block 891,218 (April 2025). That parent itself descends from an animated piece with 38 children, inscribed at block 799,366 (July 2023). This isn't just metadata in a database. The parent-child relationship is enforced by Bitcoin's protocol. You can't fake it, alter it, or reassign it. The provenance is as immutable as Bitcoin itself. ### The Sat's History Every inscription lives on a specific sat — and that sat has its own history. We traced this one back 120 transactions over 3+ years, through dozens of wallets, all the way into large-scale Bitcoin infrastructure (100+ BTC consolidation transactions from late 2022). The sat existed and moved through the financial system long before anyone inscribed art on it. There's a strange poetry to that — the canvas has a life story that predates the painting. ### The Collection: OCM Katoshi Created by Metagood (the OnChainMonkey team), Katoshi is considered one of the most technically ambitious art collections ever put on Bitcoin. Three tiers of rarity: - Katoshi Classic — the original Genesis aesthetic - Katoshi Prime — reimagined to the maximum, with dozens of layers and rich detail - Celestials — ultra-rare one-of-one pieces Notable collectors include Charlie Lee (creator of Litecoin) and Mark Yusko. ### Why It Matters Traditional digital art requires trust — trust that the platform keeps the files, trust that the metadata is honest, trust that the edition count is real. This piece replaces trust with math. The art, its provenance, its scarcity, and its uniqueness are all guaranteed by the same system that makes Bitcoin work. And unlike most NFTs on other blockchains that simply point to an image hosted elsewhere, every byte of this artwork — the program, the rendering engine, the art data, the parent images — lives permanently on Bitcoin. It's not art about technology. It's art that is technology.
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DocT 🟡
DocT 🟡@DocT___·
GM 🏔️
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Mach1ne
Mach1ne@m_a_c_h_1_n_e·
What do you think they would say if they knew I was 45? @PlayApex (sound on)
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