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Nomad

@rad_nomad

Katılım Haziran 2018
965 Takip Edilen521 Takipçiler
Nomad retweetledi
Extractive Ghost of Unhosted Marcellus 👻
DATUM just dictates the output addresses and reward proportions, not the full coinbase tx. But more to the point, the only reason to use anything other than these outputs is to cheat the other pool participants. If this inability to cheat the other miners in the pool is so unbearable you can disable DATUM and then you can use your gateway to mine to whatever outputs you want. It's pretty obvious that all this animosity towards Ocean from other devs working on pool software is simply how you cope for your inability to compete with them. The most elegant and secure and decentralized pool designs with the most developer mindshare are GitHub proof of concepts with no hashrate to speak of and that cumulatively have found a grand total of 0 mainnet blocks. Peak Bitcoin FOSS LARP.
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Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
Why you should keep moderating your steak intake. - Out of respect for your peasant ancestors, who would be proud to see you maintaining the dietary restrictions they were forced into by law. - Because the cardiologist, who has not been outside in a decade, has a strong opinion about it. - To support the cereal industry, which has done so much for your family over the generations. - Because the dietary guidelines were written by people with no vested interest in selling you grain, oils, and pharmaceuticals, and it would be rude to question them. - To keep the doctor in steady work, prescribing statins for the cholesterol problem you developed on the diet he recommended. - So that future generations can continue the proud tradition of being shorter, weaker, and sicker than the one before. - Because your great-grandmother lived to ninety-three on butter, dripping, and three eggs a day, and you are clearly going to do better than her with your porridge and your seed oils. - To remain in solidarity with the people in the office who are tired all the time and would resent it if you were not. - Because the woman in the Lycra outfit on Instagram who has never produced a child says it is bad for the planet. - To respect the cow's right not to be eaten, an opinion the cow has never expressed and which would be of no use to it if it had. - Because the same nutritional establishment that brought you margarine, low-fat yoghurt, and the food pyramid would surely not lead you astray on this one. - To preserve the queue at the diabetes clinic, which has become an important part of the local community. - Because the bread industry employs thousands of people who depend on your continued participation in being half-asleep at 3pm. Moderate accordingly. Honour the lineage. Stay small. Stay tired. Stay grateful.
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Extractive Ghost of Unhosted Marcellus 👻
You clearly don't know how DATUM works. You run the DATUM gateway on your end, which is open source and you can modify however you want. Ocean cannot stop any gateway operator from building any block template they want nor broadcast any block they might find. No permission is sought at any point from the pool to do any of this. Simply put if you modify the gateway's or the node's code to produce invalid block templates or cheat the other pool members your shares won't be credited in the pool's reward window, as all other participants would expect the pool to do. This anticheating protection is the essential function of a mining pool. Btw I can tell I'm replying to LLM slop, do better.
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Mr.Hodldamus
Mr.Hodldamus@MrHodl·
Luke and Mechanic are taking full advantage of people like this. The reason you play the lottery is so you can win the lottery. That means if you mine a block you get the entire block reward. Everything about OCEAN is trusted. The payouts are trusted, accepting block templates is trusted. The UX is nice exactly how Eligius was designed minus the LN payouts. But it's all trusted.
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Extractive Ghost of Unhosted Marcellus 👻@oomahq

@skot9000 @LukeDashjr @DutyToRebel @GrassFedBitcoin It's not an actual audit in any case, but again if a pool operator defrauds its userbase the consistent reduction of the pool's luck should be measurable. I'm more worried about actual block withholding attacks done (consciously or not) by pool participants, tbh.

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Cato The Elder
Cato The Elder@CatoTheElder17·
@asanoha_gold @BitcoinBombadil @ocean_mining They intentionally ignore it because they only pretend to want decentralized mining. In reality, they prefer it centralized so they can better control the direction of the protocol. They also really really really hate Luke.
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Rachel Wilson
Rachel Wilson@Rach4Patriarchy·
Please stop sending your children to spend their whole day with people who don’t care about them. My position is not extreme. Parents did not outsource the raising of their children until about 100 years ago. This is not normal and shouldn’t be considered normal.
Mario Nawfal@MarioNawfal

🇺🇸 A Kentucky mother hid a camera in her nonverbal autistic son's hair because she didn't trust his school to tell her the truth. She was right. Footage allegedly caught a staff member abusing the boy while others in the room watched and did nothing.

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Mechanic #BIP-110
Mechanic #BIP-110@GrassFedBitcoin·
tldr: the only way to lose your own money as a result of bip-110 is if your intention is to lose your own money It's always going to be possible but that doesn't mean you get to hold the network to ransom insisting that they not permit you the ability.
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Mechanic #BIP-110
Mechanic #BIP-110@GrassFedBitcoin·
Do not buy Bitcoin derivatives. Only Bitcoin itself allows escape from fiat.
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hodlonaut #BIP-110
hodlonaut #BIP-110@hodlonaut·
Investigating the OP_RETURN uncap feels like….
GIF
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Mechanic #BIP-110
Mechanic #BIP-110@GrassFedBitcoin·
Hi Greg, you refuse to talk on Twitter and I refuse to talk on Reddit (this is the more reasonable venue as most of what I post on Reddit just gets immediately deleted so screw you for even continuing to use it.) At present there are 0 UTXOs in existence that would be rendered unspendable by the activation of BIP-110. Not "almost zero". Literally zero. There are contrived conditions where you could have committed to something where a UTXO must be created in a specific way that cannot occur until blockheight X that results in someone creating it during the relevant time period that *would* render it unspendable temporarily. For that to be the case it must also have no key path available, *and* 1. Have > 128 leaves and thus too large a control block, and/or 2. Contain OP_(not)IF/OP_SUCCESS The chances of someone accidentally ending up in this situation is beyond laughable. They're somehow one of the most advanced users of Taproot and unaware of incoming rules being enforced by an implementation run by >20% of the network. Further still - if someone ends up unwittingly making such a UTXO then they simply won't be able to spend it until Sept 2027, unlike with other permanent soft forks where if you generate an unspendable UTXO, it becomes *permanently* unspendable. Amusing how no one cares if I generate a UTXO that CTV/CSFS/CAT etc would render unspendable were it to activate, where it would become so again, permanently rather than temporarily in some absurdly contrived scenario where the person "affected" intentionally self-impaled in an effort to frivolously obstruct as you have been doing for months. The trolling about confiscation is a result of the fact that we are no longer a serious space. Standards around confiscation, governance, processes, moderation, hiring, grants, PR approval, venues for discussion, forks etc are invoked for political reasons and selectively enforced as @hodlonaut and others have demonstrated beyond reasonable doubt.
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Nomad@rad_nomad·
@venorusprime @start9labs That’s understandable. Well, if it works, it’s what matters. I love how we’re all coming up with different flows and hacking together different ways to do this. I guess Bitcoin ain’t so boring after all 🙂
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Jim | RDTS | Bitcoin, not jpegs
@rad_nomad @start9labs Someone else told me that but I couldn't get it to work and I had already made the telegram bot so I just keep using it. It is also helpful if I ever manually adjust the bid for any reason, it auto confirms my adjustment. Just a nice little QOL improvement.
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Jim | RDTS | Bitcoin, not jpegs
Time for a hash employer update. 🧵 TL;DR: I have been employing hashers through Braiins Hashpower since 3/21/26, a little over two months. During that time I have spent 丰24,901,768 on hash and have received 丰23,723,143 in non-KYC bitcoin giving me a return of 95.27%.
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Nomad@rad_nomad·
@venorusprime @start9labs This is awesome! Curious about the telegram confirmations though. I’m using the api and it does not seem to require telegram clicks for that (probably because of the headers in the request).
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Jim | RDTS | Bitcoin, not jpegs
For managing the bid I vibe coded a couple services that I sideloaded into my @start9labs server. I have a bid bot that keeps my bid within certain parameters and a telegram bot that auto clicks the confirmation messages from Braiins. The only hands-on component I have in managing the bid is to top off the account with sats and making those sats available to the bid.
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Nomad retweetledi
Chris Gore
Chris Gore@ThatChrisGore·
It’s refreshing to hear an insider admit that Late Night “Comedy” is pure propaganda. The damage this has done to the country cannot be underestimated.
Peter Girnus 🦅@gothburz

I am the Senior Vice President of Late Night Strategy at CBS. I am the person who turned a comedian into a priest and charged advertisers to watch the congregation. I want to be precise about what I built. Not a comedy show. A permission structure. For eleven years, six million Americans tuned in every night to find out what they were allowed to believe by morning. We didn't sell jokes. We sold certainty. Certainty costs nothing to produce. People will pay anything for it. We charged $50 million a year and still lost money because it turns out permission is even cheaper than we thought. In 2014, we had a genuinely dangerous comedian. A man who once testified before Congress in character as a fictional conservative pundit and made the entire chamber look like they'd been pantsed on C-SPAN. His fake persona was the most brilliant satire on television. Layered. Ironic. Unpredictable. The character could say anything because nothing was real. The character was the art. The character was the comedian. We killed the character and put the real man on stage. The real man was a lecturer. Earnest. Thoughtful. Correct about everything. Correct is not funny. Correct is not dangerous. Correct is the absence of danger. We promoted the absence of danger and called it growth. His character could make a Senate committee squirm. The real him makes an audience nod. Nodding pays the same as squirming. Nodding is easier to produce. His final words on air were "We love doing this show for you, but what we really, really love is doing this show with you." The audience wept. I wrote that line. Not the words. The architecture that made those words feel true. For eleven years, the audience believed they were participants. They were not participants. They were the product. "With you" is what you say to a congregation. A comedian says "at you." We hadn't said "at you" since 2015. Our internal metric was called Affirm Rate. It measured the percentage of monologue segments that generated applause instead of laughter. I invented this metric. I also invented the bonus structure tied to it. In 2015, our Affirm Rate was 34%. By 2022, it was 94%. I received a raise every year. We are crushing it. At the things I made up. That's performance management. But I need to tell you about the real discovery. The one I put in a deck called "Content Strategy 2019-2024." The one that got me promoted. Agreement gets applause. I knew that early. But correction — telling the audience their vocabulary is slightly outdated, their outrage is aimed two degrees off-center, their feelings are valid but their phrasing needs work — correction gets them back tomorrow. Agreement is a transaction. Correction is a subscription. We converted a comedy show into a nightly software update for moral vocabulary. Churn was near zero. They couldn't afford to miss an episode. Missing an episode meant using last week's words in this week's meeting. That's social death. We monetized the fear of social death and called it entertainment. I want to be honest about something. The content was not bipartisan. We chose a side. But I need you to understand: we did not choose it because we believed in it. We chose it because that side's audience is more responsive to correction. They want to be updated. They want to be told their language is outdated. They experience correction as care. The other side does not respond to correction. They respond to provocation. Provocation is harder to monetize. You can't build a subscription on provocation because the audience doesn't come back to learn — they come back to fight. Fighting is unpredictable. Correction is scheduled. We optimized for the audience that wants to be told what to think. That audience leaned one direction. That's not ideology. That's market segmentation. The writers' room had a whiteboard. In 2015 it said "What's funny?" In 2018 it said "What should they feel?" By 2021 it said "What are they still saying wrong?" I watched that whiteboard evolve like a finch beak and I never intervened. The market was speaking. We listened. Listening to the market is the same as leading the audience. They can't tell the difference. A writer named Marcus raised his hand in 2019. "What if we just tried to make them laugh again?" I thanked him for his passion and scheduled a creative alignment conversation. He transferred to streaming development within the month. The Affirm Rate the week he left was 91%. Laughter would have brought it down. That's risk management. Here is what nobody will say out loud. I will say it because I am proud of it. We made our audience worse at politics. Not better. Worse. Every night for eleven years, we expressed their outrage for them. Professionally. With a band and good lighting. And because the outrage had been expressed — because a man in a suit had furrowed his brow with the precise calibrated degree of indignation — they didn't need to express it themselves. They watched. They clapped. They felt the catharsis of resistance without resisting anything. They went to bed having done nothing and feeling like they'd done something. That's the product. Not comedy. Not information. Catharsis. Catharsis is the enemy of action. A man who has screamed into a pillow does not then also scream in the street. We were the pillow. A $50 million pillow with a house band. If you feel the outrage has been expressed for you, you will not march. You will not organize. You will not call your representative. You will tune in tomorrow to feel it expressed again. That's retention. Our retention was extraordinary. I want to talk about the comedy-to-catechism pipeline because I think people underestimate what we achieved. Stage one: comedian makes jokes about the powerful. Audience laughs because the powerful are absurd. This is the Carlin model. The jester punches up. Everyone below feels relief. Stage two: comedian makes jokes about people who disagree with the audience. Audience laughs because disagreement is stupid. The jester has turned around. He's still on the stage but now he's facing the crowd with a pointer. Stage three: comedian stops making jokes. Comedian identifies incorrect beliefs and explains why they're dangerous. Audience does not laugh. Audience claps. The jester is gone. In his place: a hall monitor with a desk and a band. Stage four: audience watches not for entertainment but for certification. Having seen last night's episode means you know which words are current. Not having seen it means you might use yesterday's vocabulary in today's meeting. The show is no longer comedy. It is a credential. Watching it means you are educated. Not watching means you are the person being discussed. We made a show that you watch to prove you're not the kind of person who doesn't watch it. That's a closed loop. Closed loops don't need content. They need continuity. We provided continuity for $50 million a year. A comedian — whose entire historical function was to say things too dangerous for anyone else to say — became the person who decides which things are too dangerous for anyone to say. And the audience applauded. Every night. For 2,500 nights. Because being told what is forbidden feels exactly like being told what you already knew. Prohibition performed as validation. I put that in the deck too. Our audience was correct about everything. I know this because they applauded everything we said. The applause proved the correctness. The correctness justified the applause. We called this audience research. The methodology was peer-reviewed by the audience. They approved unanimously. Every night. The actually funny comedians left. They went to podcasts. To clubs. To rooms where the audience doesn't know what's coming and that uncertainty is the point. They took the laughter with them. We kept the applause. We called those spaces problematic. That's market differentiation. The problematic spaces are funnier. But funny is not our product. We lost $40 million a year. We didn't lose it because the show failed. We lost it because we spent $50 million producing what a podcast host in his garage gives away between mattress ads. The podcast is funnier. The podcast is more dangerous. The podcast has an audience that laughs instead of claps. But we had the Ed Sullivan Theater. We had 461 seats. We had a former Beatle play the farewell episode. Paul McCartney, Elvis Costello, Jon Batiste, and Louis Cato playing "Hello, Goodbye" like it was a benediction. I booked a Beatle for a funeral. The Beatles played that stage in 1964 and the audience screamed so loud you couldn't hear the music. Our audience didn't scream. They wept politely. That's the difference between entertainment and church. We ran a church. Jon Stewart showed up to the finale and did a bit where he pretended to deliver a corporate statement from Paramount about the cancellation. The audience laughed. It was the first time they laughed in a way I didn't recognize. Involuntary. Surprised. Dangerous. For ninety seconds, a comedian was in that building. Then it was over. John Oliver said "At some point, this may come for all of our shows" and then added "but Stephen, what's important to remember is that tonight, it is going to eat you." The audience laughed again. Involuntary again. Two moments of actual comedy in a three-hour farewell. Both of them about death. The finale drew 6.74 million viewers. Biggest weeknight audience in our history. More people came to the funeral than ever visited the patient. I know what they were mourning. Not comedy. The comedy died in 2016. Not the man. The man is fine. He's wealthy. What they mourned was the permission structure. Starting today, they have to decide what to believe on their own. They have to form an opinion without waiting for a man behind a desk to form it first and deliver it with a knowing look. Some of them haven't done that since 2015. The funeral wasn't for the show. It was for the certainty. He joked about the Peanuts theme music licensing cost on his last night. "Oh no! I hope this doesn't cost CBS any money!" The audience laughed. It was a joke about money. About the network losing money. The last joke was about money. Not about truth. Not about power. About a licensing fee for a cartoon piano riff. Eleven years and the final joke was about accounting. I think that's perfect. The show was always about accounting. We just dressed it up as conscience. The President of the United States — the man we spent eleven years explaining was dangerous to an audience that already believed he was dangerous — posted an AI-generated video of our host being thrown into a dumpster on the Late Show set. Then Trump danced to "YMCA" in the clip. Viewed more times in four hours than our farewell managed in a week. His production cost: zero. Ours: negative $50 million a year. We manufactured his relevance every night at 11:35 for eleven years and he never paid us a dime. We were his marketing department. He turned our funeral into content. His ROI was infinite. Ours required a write-off and a farewell concert. The Strike Force Five — Fallon, Kimmel, Meyers, Oliver — appeared in a segment about late-night losing "one middle-aged white man who makes jokes about the news." They were joking about their own obsolescence. All of them know. None of them will say it. The format is dead. The audience moved to phones. The phones don't have desks or bands. The phones have men in garages who are allowed to be wrong, allowed to be surprised, allowed to say something their audience hasn't already approved. That's comedy. We stopped doing that a decade ago. We did approval. Approval looks like comedy from a distance. Up close it's church. I do not feel guilt. Guilt would require me to believe I took something from them. I didn't take anything. They came to us. Every night. They chose the catechism over the comedy. They preferred correction over surprise. Certainty over danger. Instruction over laughter. They wanted to be told. Not challenged. Not shocked. Not made to laugh against their will at something they didn't see coming. They wanted to see it coming. They wanted to mouth along. That's not comedy. That's karaoke. We ran the most expensive karaoke bar in television history and the only miscalculation was charging a cover when the songs are free on every phone. We turned a jester into a priest. We turned an audience into a congregation. We turned laughter into obedience. We turned political engagement into passive consumption. We turned a comedy show into a permission structure and charged $50 million a year to tell people what they already believed in a voice slightly nicer than their own. They were so grateful they showed up to mourn us. 6.74 million of them. Weeping. For the certainty. Applause is more reliable than laughter. I proved it. The proof cost $450 million, one character, one comedian's capacity for danger, and one audience's willingness to act. The metric went up.

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The Wolf Of All Streets
The Wolf Of All Streets@scottmelker·
The man that invented the proof-of-work system that made Bitcoin possible, @adam3us sits down to explain why we're still in the early innings of institutional adoption and shares why the recent wave of DeFi hacks are exactly what the cypherpunks warned about from the beginning. 🎙️ youtu.be/clC7PaewKbg
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