Riecoin: A Cryptocurrency With a Scientific Proof of Work
An anonymous reader writes "Enter decentralized, open source mining with the first scientific proof of work. Riecoin is a decentralized (p2p), open source digital currency. Proof of work is about finding Hardy-Littlewood k-tuples. Ultimately miners are verifying the Riemann hypothesis. Unlike for Primecoin the probability of accepting a false positive goes to zero as the network grows. Primecoin uses Fermat Test which runs the risk of accepting so called Carmichael numbers. Riecoin uses a stronger test to ensure correctness."
In real money
What we're really going to need, and soon, is a program to know what all these *coin currencies are, and maybe some exchanges to change your Xcoins to Ycoins to dollars. Maybe even a consumer report on the issue: "We recommend avoiding FraudCoin as a poor value."
much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
The inability to intelligently regulate the value of the currency in accordance with the economic needs of the society is a bug, not a feature.
currency only works as well are all those making use of it agree on its value. And as there are always those looking for a free lunch and control that will figure out a way to cheat.
Can we please have a cryptocurrency that doesn't very rapidly involve burning vast amounts of electricity to perform calculations that have no other purpose than creating the currency? This just seems like a grotesque waste of resources. If there's no way to make a viable cryptocurrency other than performing long calculations, at least find a way to make the calculations have actual utility - incorporate foldingathome into it or something so at least you're curing cancer while generating the currency.
I couldn't figure out how to get Dogecoin working either.
Why does every new cryptocurrency assume that you're already familiar with how they work? I don't want to go start mining bitcoins in order to figure out how the software works. Whatever happened to quick start guides?
I'm sure I could figure this stuff out, but I'm already in the middle of three other research projects
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
grid coin
Every innovation in crypto is step forward. I'm curious to see if this will be adopted by other currencies.
This signature has Super Cow Powers
This is great. Selling my bitcoins now. (Even if I make a loss, it will be worth it in peace of mind). Any chance we can use this for seti@home, folding@home and stuff like that?
Liberty - Security - Laziness - Pick any two.
This is a perfect example of faux-openness. They talk about how the currency is created using numerous mathematical concepts that I don't understand and don't care to understand.
One gets the distinct impression that the only reason for all this high powered mathematics is to roll out the currency in a sort-of controlled way that cannot be circumvented.
Oh wait, wrong Rie.
www.ripple.com
Everything new has an 99% chance of being a Ponzi scheme. I heat my home with the waste heat that is produced by mining rigs. I live in a cold climate and the price of propane is skyrocketing. Bitcoin and the altcoins will merge with the banking industry and make it more sustainable. If you mine at night you can use off peak electricity that costs 50% less. Its a win win situation.
Most of the proof-of-work systems out there are really demanding that you waste some amount of money, time, or both, to prevent people from just generating arbitrarily high numbers of coins (as opposed to the Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy use of leaves as coins.) Bitcoin number-crunching is purely wasteful potlatching. Dogecoin is such wow, so calculation!
At least this one is doing a kind of work that's potentially valuable to the world, assuming the system collects all of it in a way that can be used to contribute to mathematical knowledge. (Yeah, yeah, this is /., and I'm commenting on the article without reading it :-) There may be other kinds of calculations that are both useful and verifiable out there. Unfortunately, protein folding and most other non-mathematical real-world applications probably aren't easily verifiable except by having N people redo the same calculation, which is a problem for currencies that need to prevent double-spending. (I ran Folding@Home for a while, as well as the GIMPS Mersenne Prime Search. For SETI@Home, which for some years was a far larger supercomputer than anything on the Top-500 list, sure, you can contend that there really aren't aliens in the chunk of sky your system was testing, but that's not the kind of verification we're looking for...)
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
This is NOT a security feature I would rely on in the coming year or two. There have been unpublished advances on the reimann hypothesis.
Can't tell from the webpage. This is the sort of information that should be prominent! Amateurs...
If an economy goes bad enough (e.g.hyperinflation) black markets spring up, and only at the end are the cognac/cigarettes exchanged for the currency to pay the taxes. So being accepted for tax isn't a sufficient condition for a currency to have value.
In a normal economy, currency has value because it's accepted everywhere for local transactions because of certain safeguards*. That is, if I hand over money to a store to buy something, and the storekeeper never hands me my item, I can go and ask Plod for help. And the converse situation holds as well. In a black market, you have to rely on word of mouth (or force) to put the unscrupulous out of business.
(* The flip side is, as Libertarians are fond of pointing out, is the currency can be manipulated. That's the price you pay for having the state involved in maintaining the Rule of Law.)
Plan My Week for iPhone
I dled the binary for the win64 miner from their website and it comes up as "TR/BitcoinMiner.Gen" - falsoe positive or somenoe trying to spread a btc mining botnet?