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curt finch
5bbb392c31d8df7eea9c15f88a19832b397d5d480d141ef143f98945f545001d
on alby

gm

so my small software company has begun buying Bitcoin

I started in May having it buy a little bit every week

I took 1% of our current cash in the bank divided by 52 and that's how much we buy every week

so it's a very small amount

it's a super p**** version of what Michael saylor is doing

but it's up 40% over the total cost of ownership

Introducing txTree

I’ve been wanting to create an app that uses the nostr:npub18d4r6wanxkyrdfjdrjqzj2ukua5cas669ew2g5w7lf4a8te7awzqey6lt3 API to visualize a #bitcoin transaction and its history. Here’s what I’ve got so far.

There’s a limit on how far back the trace goes so as to not spam the API, but next I’ll add the ability to tap on any transaction ID to manually continue the backtracking from there. Any feedback/ideas are welcome.

Oh, and it’s a PWA ofc. 😎

Check it out at: https://thebullishbitcoiner.github.io/tx-tree/

isn't that what mempool does

I took a picture of a fish video that was running on YouTube that's really designed for meditation or something that's called fish with black background I think

good morning

satoshi's probably a woman bent on upturning the global order

If Satoshi Nakamoto were a woman involved in cryptography in the early 2000s, the list of plausible candidates would be relatively small because most high-profile cryptographers from that era were men. However, a few women in cryptography and related fields stand out as possible (but still unlikely) candidates:

Top Female Candidates Who Could Theoretically Be Satoshi

1. Shafi Goldwasser (b. 1958)

Expertise: Cryptography, zero-knowledge proofs, complexity theory.

Why Possible? One of the leading cryptographers of her generation, co-invented zero-knowledge proofs, which are key to privacy-focused cryptocurrencies.

Why Not? More focused on theoretical cryptography and has maintained a very public academic career.

2. Cynthia Dwork (b. 1958)

Expertise: Cryptography, proof-of-work (PoW), distributed computing, privacy.

Why Possible? Co-authored the original proof-of-work concept (which Bitcoin relies on) in 1992 with Moni Naor.

Why Not? Focused more on privacy-preserving cryptography than digital cash systems.

3. Dawn Song (b. 1975)

Expertise: Cryptography, security, smart contracts, machine learning.

Why Possible? Has worked on blockchain security, privacy-preserving machine learning, and was at UC Berkeley, where early cypherpunk discussions happened.

Why Not? No known involvement with P2P networks before Bitcoin.

4. Tal Rabin (b. 1962)

Expertise: Cryptography, secure multi-party computation.

Why Possible? Has worked on threshold cryptography, which relates to Bitcoin’s multisig security.

Why Not? More focused on theoretical multi-party security than practical decentralized systems.

5. Kristin Lauter (b. 1969)

Expertise: Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC), which Bitcoin uses.

Why Possible? A leading expert on ECC, the very cryptographic scheme Bitcoin relies on.

Why Not? Worked in Microsoft Research, not known for involvement in decentralized or P2P systems.

Most Likely Female Satoshi?

If Satoshi were a woman, the strongest candidate would probably be Cynthia Dwork because of her proof-of-work research, which laid the foundation for Bitcoin’s security model.

However, all of these women have had highly public careers and none have shown strong signs of being involved with Bitcoin's development. Satoshi was deeply embedded in cypherpunk and P2P communities, and there’s no record of these individuals interacting with that space.

Most likely: Satoshi was someone outside of the traditional academic cryptography world.