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User: BitcoinBenny

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Comments · 49

  1. This is China. So you can be sure that once Uber is driven out of the country, the Chinese version of Uber will be sanctioned and completely take over the market share. Its happened in every other sector. US companies go there to divulge technology and operations information, only to be replaced by state sponsored actors as soon as is convenient.

  2. Re:Much Ado About Nothing on Concerns of an Artificial Intelligence Pioneer · · Score: 1

    Unless that basic thought is KILL, then it will be too late. :)

  3. Salary on Attention, Rockstar Developers: Get a Talent Agent · · Score: 1

    What kind of salaries are talking about here? Its not really clear to me what the benefit of the agent is, besides negotiating a slightly higher salary and some vacation days. I have a feeling that rockstar status still doesn't mean getting paid like a rockstar.

  4. Encryption services on Data Encryption On the Rise In the Cloud and Mobile · · Score: 1

    I built an end-to-end cloud encryption service for file transfer. As much as I thought it would gain traction, getting and retaining users was very difficult. The security community is ultra-paranoid (as they should be) and don't want to rely on third parties at all if possible, and normal users don't really understand encryption and largely can't be bothered.

    I found of the two features, inline encryption and big file transfer the latter was the selling point for the people who used it.

    I'll probably open source the code soon, as few as I get a few days to clean it up. Empty landing page at www.senderdefender.com

  5. Blockchain voting on How Bitcoin Could Be Key To Online Voting · · Score: 1

    This is a complicated topic, but one I wrote about six months ago here, http://www.digitalsuffrage.com...

    There are many countries that are trying to adopt digital voting technologies, and there are ways to preserve both anonymity and integrity for digital votes. Since the vote is individually auditable, it would be possible to physically retract misappropriated votes for example, which could guard against identity theft or other computer breach.

    I've said it before with respect to Bitcoin. Don't throw the baby out with the bath water. A universal ledger of fact-in-time information is a powerful tool for building applications such as electronic voting systems.

  6. Re:Where should I hold my Bitcoins? on Bitstamp Bitcoin Exchange Suspended Due To "Compromised Wallet" · · Score: 1

    I think a good android or ios based wallet is the way to go. Its a reasonably locked down environment, you can employ multi-factor security fairly easily, and its not too difficult to use. Nothing is perfect, the security mechanisms to really protect bitcoin in hardware are being actively developed.

    Don't trust your money to strangers is a good one also. Keeping money sitting in exchanges around the world of dubious origin and competence is asking for trouble. Bitcoin is having all of the teething problems that any new unregulated industry has. Its the wild west out there, and will take some time to settle down.

  7. Re:Where should I hold my Bitcoins? on Bitstamp Bitcoin Exchange Suspended Due To "Compromised Wallet" · · Score: 1

    You should hold them on your own computer, or preferably in a hardware or hard wallet. The problem is that people park their bitcoins with third parties who have full control over them so that they can engage in trade for other crypto and fiat currencies. When these places turn out to be less than reliable they walk away with the funds, or their security gets compromised resulting in loss of funds.

    Bitstamp getting hacked didn't affect the bitcoin network, and it didn't affect me. I didn't trust them to hold my bitcoin.

  8. Re:Bitcoin is faulty by nature on Bitstamp Bitcoin Exchange Suspended Due To "Compromised Wallet" · · Score: 1

    1. You don't lose your money.
    Depends entirely on the jurisdiction of the bank. Yes in the US we are FDIC ensured, which protects most people from bank collapse and funds that are stolen.
    This isn't true for commercial banks or trading funds though. Reference, MF Global. What a mess. Its also entirely based on the fact that the government can simply reallocate other people's money in order to cover losses, i.e taxes, and money printing.

    2. Hacker has a hell of a time using the money.
    Seems like credit card fraud, ach fraud, and wire fraud are working great all over the world, I think if it was so difficult to abscond with the money we wouldn't be seeing these crimes occur every single day. Most of the systems to prevent this are after the fact and significantly increase operating costs in the form of insurance and other fees.

    3. The hacker may get arrested. Whereas when people do bad things on the Internet they are never arrested? I think we both know this isn't true, we arrest people who run spam servers, bot nets, and child porn rings all of the time. Many with little off line presence.

    You are right in one thing though, there is a huge difference between state currencies and Bitcoin, and that is unfettered control, and institutionalized devaluation in the form of printing money and buying it back. A properly secured bitcoin balance is more secure than any other system of money storage currently in existence.

  9. Re:Bitcoin is faulty by nature on Bitstamp Bitcoin Exchange Suspended Due To "Compromised Wallet" · · Score: 1

    Well, lets take the same statement and apply it to everything then.
    Since online banking would be unpractical without any IT infrastructure, new vulnerabilities are discovered every day that might have an impact on online banking.
    Since credit cards would be unpractical without any IT infrastructure, new vulnerabilities are discovered every day that might have an impact on how you use credit cards.
    Since the international space station would be unpractical without any IT infrastructure, new vulnerabilities are discovered every day that might have an impact on the international space station.

    You have made statement and applied it to Bitcoin in a way that makes Bitcoin look impractical when that statement covers everything on the planet. The reality is that the attack surface of Bitcoin is much smaller than any other payment system in existence. If we have a shot at securing any of them I would bet on Bitcoin.

  10. Re:Bitcoin is faulty by nature on Bitstamp Bitcoin Exchange Suspended Due To "Compromised Wallet" · · Score: 1

    Actually new vulnerabilities aren't discovered every day.

    A few guys in slovenia with an exchange get hacked, has little to do with the integrity or utility of the Bitcoin system.

  11. Re:Utterly predictable on Bitstamp Bitcoin Exchange Suspended Due To "Compromised Wallet" · · Score: 1

    Ever heard of throwing the baby out with the bathwater?

    Seriously bitcoin exchange run by a few guys in slovenia != Bitcoin.

  12. Re:Bitcoin != Coins on Fraud, Not Hackers, Took Most of Mt. Gox's Missing Bitcoins · · Score: 1

    Yeah. Please explain how in fact you can do this. The reality is that any scheme that uses a different security algorithm has different characteristics. Proof-of-work wasn't chosen at a whim, but as a technically sound basis on which to build a crypto-currency. There are other work schemes, but none of them have the proven track record of plain old Bitcoin.

    Also, shitloads of electricity is very relative. How much should we spend on a global payment network that no one entity controls? In my view of the world its probably worth more than another boat load of fighter jets, or a few more nuclear warheads.

  13. Re:What's in it for consumers? on Bitcoin Gets Its First TV Ads · · Score: 1

    Why do you say that? You make a statement of fact, and then don't even try to back it up.

    Riddle me this. If the Bitcoin market cap is 4 billion dollars, i.e there is a 4 billion dollar market incentive to hack the network, why hasn't it happened in the last five years? That seems like enough money to be a legitimate target for a lot of very smart people, certainly major corporations have been hacked for less. For a network with such poor security it seems to be doing a pretty good job...

  14. Re:Bitcoin != Coins on Fraud, Not Hackers, Took Most of Mt. Gox's Missing Bitcoins · · Score: 0

    And the fact that the "shitload of electricity" secures a peer-to-peer trust network with a 4 billion dollar market cap capable of doing trusted transfer between parties on the Internet in a provably verifiable way that can't be counterfeited, intercepted, or modified. When did the Luddites completely take over Slashdot, news for nerds indeed.

  15. Re:What's in it for consumers? on Bitcoin Gets Its First TV Ads · · Score: 1

    I don't think its terribly biased to imagine a future where consumers aren't paying a 3% spread to some mega corp for the right to spend their own money online, especially when the security and other guarantees by those corporations are fairly weak. Who hasn't had their credit card stolen? Risk and fraud analysis only get you so far, they are after-the-crime measures. Bitcoin has built security from the ground up.

  16. Re:What's in it for consumers? on Bitcoin Gets Its First TV Ads · · Score: 1

    Then you aren't doing it fast enough. Remember its programmable money, if you can pay a tight spread in both directions and almost no network fee you can do it cheaper and faster. I'm not speculating, I've done international wire multiple times it sucks. Businesses such as Xoom and Transferwise that have float on both ends, and / or get group rates for transfer do it well enough for most people, but their reach is limited to the markets they operate in. Bitcoin is a decentralized alternative to money exchange monopolies, and ultimately money exchange is just scratching the surface of its underlying utility.

    Why does a bot net have value, but a massively secured trusted transfer network and ledger for digital information doesn't? A 4 billion market cap, a hundred million a year in network security via hashing power, its the beginning of something big.

  17. What's in it for consumers? on Bitcoin Gets Its First TV Ads · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Perhaps you are the wrong type of consumer at this point the development curve of Bitcoin?

    If you wanted to send money back home to the Philippines, or engage in any type of remittances you may find value in being able to do it at a substantially lower rate than existing commercial offerings. I'm obviously biased, but to discount everything about Bitcoin because you don't see a use case for YOU right now is incredibly short sighted. Remember the early internet? The exact same kinds of arguments, why would you ever want to watch video online, whats the point of taking a class remotely, etc, etc etc. The reality is that Bitcoin redefined how we do trusted transfer of information on the Internet, and the first use case for this technology is in almost friction-less payments. From experience I can say paying engineers abroad in 5 seconds for 4 cents beats the hell out of an international wire transfer.

    Before people start screaming volatility, there are ways to combat that, like not holding bitcoin when you don't want it to fluctuate. I know its novel, but since its digital currency you can acquire it, transfer it, and sell it very quickly, and that entire process is being automated such that Bitcoin becomes the conduit rather than the value store. Programmable money.

    Slashdot surprises me because in general the people here have a very uninformed opinion when it comes to digital currency, despite the fact that it is the most exciting technical innovation in the last ten years by far. The value is in the network.

  18. Re:In defense of Javascript on JavaScript and the Netflix User Interface · · Score: 1

    I know you can write good software in Javascript. I wrote my file transfer plugin for gmail SenderDefender for the curious, entirely in Javascript, but it seems to me that going forward well defined interfaces and something like NaCl / PNaCl could really change the landscape. I'm hoping that happens not because I'm afraid javascript will take my job, but that there won't be any other options for the web. I think the points you make are good, but don't you think the javascript software quality is generally lower than the other languages? Its entirely subjective, but with few exceptions I find many Node projects to be very rough.

  19. Re:Javascript on JavaScript and the Netflix User Interface · · Score: 1

    Oh this is already happening. The node.js stuff is bridging javascript to every ORM, DB, and NoSql technology that exists. It is just an unfortunate reality but I fully expect it to eclipse every other language in terms of popularity over the next ten years, for exactly the reasons you state. Driving down the cost of labor, and unifying skill sets so that people are even more interchangeable.

  20. Javascript on JavaScript and the Netflix User Interface · · Score: 2

    Ah Javascript. The language we all love to hate, but isn't going anywhere. It seems like a good portion of all development will be Javascript in the not-too-distant future as legions of low paid programmers take up code writing and maintenance.

  21. It is like boiling a frog. Intrusive ads might drive users away onto a competing platform, and since there isn't anything much to the technology they need to preserve their user base. At the same time they have to monetize. This intermediate solution is to slowly ramp up revenue, we'll get to the creepy targeted ads sooner rather than later...

  22. Not secure on Tiny Wireless Device Offers Tor Anonymity · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Its a cool idea. There are things that are problematic about it though, like the fact that the browser itself hasn't been properly anonymized. The Tor browser package tries to disable plugins and third party software that might inadvertently reveal your identity or cause other information leakage. There is no such guarantee in this instance, which is a bit of a false sense of security. Tor isn't a panacea for all anonymity issues, and you wouldn't want to route most of your traffic over it.

    I'm personally more interested in the hardware, any specifics on that? I think it would be a nice platform for a lot of interesting projects, hardware based firewalling etc.

  23. Model M on The Greatest Keyboard Ever Made · · Score: 1

    I love the model M and all of it's variants. It just doesn't feel like work unless I'm using it.

  24. Re:It would be less of an issue on IT Job Hiring Slumps · · Score: 1

    I don't think this would help.

    You are using service jobs as an example which by definition are location-specific. Programming, IT, Networking can be done from almost anywhere. At least the H1B system is increasing dollars circulating in the US. I don't think the choice is between American workers at American wages and H1B workers. The competition is entirely foreign firms that can just offer more competitive pricing and American workers. If we force that equation to be evaluated the American worker loses until we get labor cost equalization.

  25. Re:Why buy American? on IT Job Hiring Slumps · · Score: 2

    I think in the business context cheaper is almost always "better". I've dealt with reams of horrible code also, but at the end of the day most people just want a product that looks like it works. They don't have the technical experience to determine whether it was well built or not, just how it behaves on the surface under ideal conditions.

    Programming as a profession is getting priced out. First they came for Support, then IT, etc. DevOps will eventually fall to the wayside of automation which is the whole purpose of the job. Programming will get eaten away. There will be high level consulting and architectural jobs for a while, but anything else is a losing proposition.