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Topics - hasher

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1
Technical Support / bts 0.9.2 -> bts 2.0
« on: October 24, 2015, 01:51:38 pm »
how to migrate 0.9.2 wallet to 2.0 on Win 10 64bit?
i tried to find 0.9.3 but none found for win10 version

2
Random Discussion / RFID medical data going to be centralized ?
« on: December 18, 2013, 08:08:20 pm »
Here is the Idea Summary from Malblar:
http://marblar.com/idea/kvXoq/market

Problem: Around the world, countries are moving towards creating centralised electronic health record (EHR) databases with Singapore and Australia leading the way in recent years. Personalised RFID cards have been suggested as a means of providing patient identification and medical records in a hospital setting, however RFID cards are inherently not secure.

Solution: ETRI have developed an RFID technology that is able to store both publically accessible and private information. Such RFID cards could be held by patients and used as a method of identifying themselves at a doctor’s surgery by containing a secure, encrypted password that would link with records held on a centralised database. The publicly accessible portion of the RFID tag could include information on the carrier's name, blood group and emergency contact details for use in an accident.
Now we need to discuss how best to create a product tailored to currently existing EHR systems.

Found this idea and think its very important from our Crypto perspective, any thoughts?

3
General Discussion / CryptoLeverage as sort of Bitasset
« on: December 11, 2013, 10:55:07 am »
As far as i know modern banking system using credit/leverage/repo/bond instruments as form of money, liquidity aggregates.

I think if cryptonetwork system could avoid, limit excessive debt/rent, i mean to allow personal credits among members of community without calculation of progressive in time debt,  it would help rise liquidity and solve coins scarcity problem in case of cash gap.

Leverage instrument could be useful in some cases to increase turnover rate of goods, if use it without progressive/excessive debt calculation (limit it for 50% of all emission in coins for example).
What do you think?

4
General Discussion / DarkWallet rival arrived?
« on: December 10, 2013, 11:22:59 pm »
what you think about it?
http://www.coindesk.com/kryptokit-launches-dark-wallet-rival/
As secure client-side bitcoin wallet Dark Wallet looks set to reach its funding goal, a competitor has emerged – and is already shipping.

Kryptokit, a wallet designed for secure bitcoin payments and messaging, launched today at the Inside Bitcoins conference in Las Vegas as an extension for the Chrome browser. This, coincidentally, was one of Dark Wallet’s main goals.

The product, which is a reworked version of now-defunct project Rushwallet, features two tabs: a bitcoin wallet and a secure messaging system.

Launched by Anthony Di Iorio, CEO of Canada’s Bitcoin Alliance, the wallet can automatically locate any bitcoin addresses contained within a web page. Thus, users can make payments automatically, without cutting and pasting.

Di Iorio, who aims to replace Instawallet, an online wallet which was known for its ease-of-use, but also for its security flaws. Instawallet closed following a hack back in April.

Kryptokit’s founder wanted to provide similarly simple service, albeit one that avoided storing a user’s private keys centrally. Thus, Kryptokit’s desktop wallet was designed to store bitcoin addresses locally.

GPG protocol

As a Chrome extension, the Kryptokit wallet is an open-source project. Users can create their bitcoin addresses by moving their mouse around the screen. This, along with a random number generator, creates each user’s address.

The system also has another tab, for secure messaging. This uses GPG (the open-source version of the Pretty Good Privacy protocol developed by Phil Zimmerman) to secure messages between its users.

Users generate a GPG key from within their wallet, but they can also import them from elsewhere. The GTG key can be used to encrypt messages that are sent to other Kryptokit users.

One of the disadvantages of this system, for now at least, is that it isn’t possible to email non-users of the software.

However, one of the benefits is that there’s no SMTP (Simple Mail Transfer Protocol) header to worry about. SMTP, used for routing email around the Internet, is a notoriously leaky protocol that divulges lots of information about senders.

Integration with conventional email systems is something that Di Iorio hopes to introduce in time, using an Open PGP encryption system called Mailvelope.

Other future features may also include a social networking service to unite the wallet’s users, and a password management system to store login credentials for other sites. This system would only store them on the user’s local desktop machine, however.

No server-side storage

GPG-encrypted messages reside on Kryptokit’s servers until they are collected by the recipient, says Di Iorio. After that, they are deleted.

“Let’s say the government wants to take down our server. They can take it. It’s all encrypted and they wouldn’t be able to see anything. This is why I say it’s all NSA-proof,” Di Iorio said, adding that GPG keys and bitcoin private keys are never stored on his central computers.

But where does this leave the Dark Wallet service?

There are some key differences between Kryptokit and Dark Wallet. One feature that the Dark Wallet team is reportedly discussing is a trust-less mixing service.

Dark Wallet project representative Amir Taaki did not respond to a request for comment from CoinDesk yesterday. However, at the time of writing, the company’s crowdfunding project had almost reached its $50,000 goal and looked likely to succeed, with a week to go.

But Di Iorio pointed out that the project was far behind Kryptokit, in terms of development, he said:

“They haven’t even started yet. They were getting together in Milan in the last couple of weeks to decide what they want to do. They are getting a wallet extension and they’re investigating GPG encryption now, but we’ve already done that.”

Curiously, however, there is some overlap between the two projects.

Like Di Iorio, Vitalek Buterin, a key participant in Dark Wallet, is based near Toronto. Buterin has also conducted a code review for Di Iorio, to help ready Kryptokit’s project for its release.

In the world of non-profit bitcoin wallets, it appears many teams are united by a common goal: making bitcoin simple to use, so that its users can help take it into the mainstream.

http://www.kryptokit.com

5
http://letstalkbitcoin.com/jpmorgan-chase-building-bitcoin-killer/#.UqegtCg8w7z

Chase-ing Bitcoin: Is JPM Preparing To Unveil Its Own Electronic Currency?

If you can't beat 'em, join 'em, copy 'em, and then beat 'em. While everyone's attention has been glued to Bitcoin (and its various smaller and less viable for now alternative digital currencies), JPMorgan has submitted a patent which appears to set the scene for a competing centralized network to Bitcoin. As LetsTalkBitcoin noted first, the "Method and system for processing internet payments using the electronic funds transfer network," states that Chase's technology is a "new paradigm." Moreover that it permits the creation of "virtual cash" (also referred to as "web cash") with a "real-time digital exchange of value."

Via eCreditDaily,

Imagine paying for some product in a transaction directly with the seller that doesn’t include a costly third-party fee or the revelation of a personal account number — the current components that comprise credit card and debit card purchases. Imagine this system with a “real-time digital exchange of value.” And imagine that you can archive all the transactions in a personal digital wallet, with its own “Internet Pay Anyone (IPA)” account and inherent safeguards built-in, something that you could call “Virtual Private Lockbox (VPL),” according to JPMorgan’s patent.
 
If this “web cash” system — as JPMorgan Chase calls it — seems familiar, it should. It smacks of the peer-to-peer transactions of bitcoins and other cryptocurrencies that increasingly are making the world’s biggest banks uneasy about the future of e-commerce.
 
The patent, first revealed by LetsTalkBitcoin.com, is a fascinating look into JPMorgan’s veiled outlook on the evolving but growing bitcoin universe, and other more widely-accepted payment systems.
 
JPMorgan’s proposed system offers another eerily familiar component, which seemingly mimics “blockchain,” a publicly available, permanent ledger of bitcoin transactions.
 
...
 
Without naming the virtual currency or any competing payments system by name, the bank takes a swipe at the crytocurrency model.
 
“None of the emerging efforts to date have gotten more than a toehold in the market place and momentum continues to build in favor of credit cards,” according to Chase’s patent application published by The United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO). It was filed August 5th, 2013.
 
...
 
JPMorgan Chase sees “a new marketplace” emerging for “low dollar, high volume, real-time payments with payment surety for both consumers and producers.”
 
As LetsTalkBitcoin.com points out, “Bitcoin has also been ballyhooed for it use with micro-payments and payments under ten dollars due to its zero to negligible fee structure.”
 
JPMorgan Chase: “The present invention further enables small dollar financial transactions, allows for the creation of ‘web cash’ as well as provides facilities for customer service and record-keeping.”
While naming protocols for these vitual currencies is uncertain, we can't help but think "Dimons" would be appropriate as the web cash becomes increasingly more trusted.

 

LetsTalkBitcoin discusses how JPMorgan's proposed system works:

Under The Hood: Internet Pay Anyone
 
“…The structural components to the system of the present invention include:
 
    a Payment Portal Processor; a digital Wallet;
    an Internet Pay Anyone (IPA) Account;
    a Virtual Private Lockbox (VPL);
    an Account Reporter;
    the existing EFT networks;
    and a cash card.
 
“…The Payment Portal Processor (PPP) is a software application that augments any Internet browser with e-commerce capability. The PPP software sits in front of and provides a secure portal for accessing (finking to) the user’s. Demand Deposit Accounts (DDA) and IPA accounts. The PPP enables the user to push electronic credits from its DDA and IPA accounts to any other accounts through the EFT network…”
 
“…The {technology} …includes freely publishing the payment address and making it available to users of an internet portal or search engine…”
 
“…Currently, all Internet transactions use “pull” technology in which a merchant must receive the consumer’s account number (and in some cases PIN number) in order to complete a payment. The payment methods of the present invention conversely use “push” technology in which users (consumers or businesses) push an EFT credit from their IPA or DDA accounts to a merchant’s account, without having to provide their own sensitive account information…”
 
A New Paradigm
 
“…The present invention represents a new paradigm for effectuating electronic payments that leverages existing platforms, conventional payment infrastructures and currently available web-based technology to enable e-commerce in both the virtual and physical marketplace. The concept provides a safe, sound, and secure method that allows users (consumers) to shop on the Internet, pay bills, and pay anyone virtually anywhere, all without the consumer having to share account number information with the payee. Merchants receive immediate payment confirmation through the Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT) network so they can ship their product with confidence that the payment has already been received. The present invention further enables small dollar financial transactions, allows for the creation of “web cash” as well as provides facilities for customer service and record-keeping…”
and the implications:

I view this technology and patent application as an overwhelming good thing.  Bitcoin is driving Innovation.  It has been said that credit cards and the legacy banking system in use today was never meant for use over the internet.  Chase’s updated Internet Pay Anyone technology appears to come head to head with Bitcoin.
 
...
 
While it remains to be seen if this technology is a “Bitcoin Killer,” other players such as eBay/PayPal (which have been riding under Bitcoin’s coattails through marketing gimmicks) ought to pay close attention to this emerging technology.  If Bitcoin does get a “toehold” in the marketplace, we just might see this technology activated.  The Chase is on.
Finally, the patent application itself (source USPTO):

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2013-12-10/chasing-bitcoin-jpm-preparing-unveil-its-own-electronic-currency

6
I think that cornerstone basis for fiat inviolableness in global monetary circulation is its acceptance by resources producers of oil, gaz, gazoline, mineral, electricity etc.
Is it possible to make world first cryptocommodity market/exchange, so real sector (not virtual) of economy start to do business with anonymous money?
This could change rules, because those who make real goods, could dictate demand on cryptocurrency instead of banksters debts. :)

So we have 2 options:
1) Revolution, quick. Industrial corporations and real producers join simple people and corruption circle with baksters mafia will come to end.
2) Long lasting evolutionary process, which could take decades of bankers stagnation, until cryptosector destroys old regime.

7
 :)

8
Marketplace / Want to change my lost passcode wallet with 4.5 BTC
« on: November 25, 2013, 07:14:36 am »
This is the sequel of old topic https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=243946.0
Short story:
i encrypted my wallet on 11.2012 and forgot about that, then in april of 2013 i decided to buy BTC (on high 200+ USD of course  ::)),
so i bought it on MtGox and send to wallet, and several weeks later i tried to move bitcoins and found that i forgot passcode.
i tried to crack it, but without luck.
So im selling my lost passcode wallet with 4.5+ BTC again...
Here is the address https://blockchain.info/address/14qSdw6gg9UyzaVbbgKJtPuFbNHVjQ7sFM
you can ensure that bitcoins not moved anywhere from there.
If i were computer guy, i would recover passcode bruteforce, but i cant, i dont know how to do that, so i decided to sell this wallet to anyone for 30% of value stored in it,
1.25 BTC or 110 PTS or equivalent in any of altcurrencies,
i will tell you all i CAN remember about passcode, so i hope you will be able to crack it in reasonable period of time if you have access to GPU power farm.

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