Is there a book, article etc recommendation for the ‘… bitcoin will go to zero’ thesis? Thanks.
Classic is a good story look it up, explains why Ethereum is a shitcoin basically (Ethereum classic is too obviously)
Hmm finding my tribe here I think - like here here, not greater nostr - this is fire.
Will it help if all of run a solominer? (And use nostr:nprofile1qqsq9k04vahllseell55m74n3047y88pzlr0z5yany32st29fapqmgstcvu4w pool?)
👀 🙋
You’re other* question you posted in this thread mean.
Will it help if all of run a solominer? (And use nostr:nprofile1qqsq9k04vahllseell55m74n3047y88pzlr0z5yany32st29fapqmgstcvu4w pool?)
👀 🙋
Yup, look at Start9 with the ocean gateway, which will allow you to connect the solominer with a bitcoin full node (you’re question). Be sure to install Bitcoin Knots full node if you’re going that path, bitcoin core doesn’t work with ocean gateway.
This is not AI, they s is dance...and what a beautiful one !
Enjoy
https://video.nostr.build/84bf142cb1d24215c8742b34a19d6ca033b46cc715aa82b1b0bbbd866ca0624c.mp4
#PerformancesIAdore
#Bullishbounty
What’s the story here, who’s this?
That sounds fantastic, hit me up when you’re doing it on the Emerald Isle 😉
The base layer of the human person is unalterable stillness.
Ai (could be wrong)
That line—“RULE FOUR: Consider everything an experiment”—comes from a famous list often called the “Immaculate Heart College Art Department Rules,” originally created by Sister Corita Kent (an artist and educator) in the late 1960s or early 1970s. It’s not from a single “book” in the usual sense but rather from a poster/handout used in the art department at Immaculate Heart College in Los Angeles.
These “10 Rules” are frequently reprinted and discussed in various art and design books. One place you’ll find them in print is Learning by Heart: Teachings to Free the Creative Spirit (by Corita Kent and Jan Steward). That’s probably the closest thing to an “official” book source for this particular quote.
From ChatBTC hope this helps.
While CoinJoin significantly enhances privacy, it is not completely anonymous due to several factors:
Detectability: CoinJoin transactions can often be identified on the blockchain because they typically involve equal-sized outputs or other recognizable patterns. This detectability can signal to observers that a privacy-enhancing technique was used, which might draw unwanted attention.
Anonymity Set: The privacy provided by CoinJoin relies on the size of its anonymity set—the number of participants in a given CoinJoin round. A larger group provides better privacy, but if the pool of participants is small, it may still be possible for an observer to make educated guesses about input-output correlations.
Heuristic Limitations: While CoinJoin disrupts common blockchain analysis heuristics, it does not completely eliminate all potential linking methods. Analysts might employ advanced techniques to infer information about transaction participants, especially if post-mix spending behaviors are careless.
Initial and Subsequent Transactions: CoinJoin primarily obscures the link between inputs and outputs within the same transaction. However, subsequent transactions that do not use privacy-enhancing techniques could potentially expose user identities or reestablish links between addresses.
Network-Level Observations: The privacy focus of CoinJoin is on-chain. Network-level observers could potentially gather metadata during the transaction process, such as IP addresses, which CoinJoin alone does not address.
Although CoinJoin improves privacy, users need to remain vigilant about their overall privacy practices, including how they handle coins before and after using CoinJoin, to maintain a higher level of anonymity [6][7].
Sources
[1]: https://bitcoin.stackexchange.com/questions/107984#107987
[2]: https://bitcoin.stackexchange.com/questions/103252#103255
[3]: https://gnusha.org/url/https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2020-June/017976.html
[4]: https://gnusha.org/url/https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2020-June/017957.html
[5]: https://gnusha.org/url/https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2020-June/017958.html
[6]: https://gnusha.org/url/https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2020-June/017960.html
[7]: https://gnusha.org/url/https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2020-June/017961.html

