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⛩oizen
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Nostr npub for desktop devices of npub1m0yz3tvsa8cwheqhkqj96zr9kget8j8yda0vfmrah5c0dafj6xcq4l4az6

and I said bieeeeetchat

Talking to frens and neighbors. Listening local radio stations, preferably those of universities or cultural associations. Walking the neighborhood too, flyers and notices all around the urban landscape; sometimes over actual physical boards, wooden or metal made, coffee shops and libraries often have them. Newspaper stands would never leave but nowadays I think magazines are having a comeback after some cool down due the internet boom.

I also ranted and got counter with silly memes 🐸🫂 ; later I figure maybe for them is just about the leisure and not so much about how is machinated. Probably due Meta being for them their first "internet-domesticated", whereas for us Meta is not without previous quotidian usages of the internet such as Myspace, Tumblr, and so on... Still I insist to at least avoid the Marketplace like plague 🚫

la sognare del catálogo de la amiga de la vecina fue un chido upgrade a la almohada de relleno de calcetines viejos

not only not reading the book nor waiting for the film but up to seeing it adapted to real life 🐸

city orchid to country orchid comparison... they both seem to do well as long as the substrate is crusty in age, even better if mossy

happy summer, nostr!

been using poweramp; 1 time purchase. it's pretty decent, library and audio wise. the equalizer rocks and the optional visuals are slick.

Replying to Avatar Bitman

In 2015, an eccentric millionaire placed bitcoins in weak addresses.

For years, the prize has been contested by bots, GPUs, and in the future, it is expected to be the first target of quantum attacks.

The individual's goal was to monitor the advancement of computational power capable of breaking Bitcoin keys.

These keys have up to 256 bits of entropy, which can be understood as the difficulty of discovering them. They are simply large numbers, on the order of 2²⁵⁶.

He then created 160 addresses, each with fewer bits of difficulty, from 1 to 160, and placed a few satoshis in each one, doubling the amount in the next.

The total prize reached nearly 1,000 BTC. There are still 916 BTC left to be claimed.

https://mempool.space/tx/08389f34c98c606322740c0be6a7125d9860bb8d5cb182c02f98461e5fa6cd15

The first few dozen addresses were quickly looted. There are bots monitoring the blockchain and stealing UTXOs that have some vulnerability — such as low entropy in the generation of the private key.

https://mempool.space/tx/0eb5b5c103e68eb0931430e7786cf1b6962f9eed5a2cb5271d4dd1699b77e86f

It was only at the end of 2015 that one of the owners of these bots noticed that the source of the bitcoins all came from a single transaction. He decided to share the discovery on the Bitcointalk forum, and that’s when more people began competing for the remaining prizes.

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1306983.0

In 2019, the creator exposed the public keys of some addresses (those with indexes ending in 0 or 5). This is done simply by moving the coins—the key appears in the transaction. With it, other methods can be used, making it easier to crack.

https://mempool.space/tx/17e4e323cfbc68d7f0071cad09364e8193eedf8fefbcbd8a21b4b65717a4b3d3

One of these methods is a very old algorithm from 1978:

Pollard's Kangaroo Algorithm — a clever trick used to find private keys when part of the keyspace is known. Imagine two kangaroos jumping across a number line, one tame and one wild, eventually landing on the same spot. It’s a classic in cryptography, and now it's being used to chase Bitcoin prizes.

Since then, several programs and even participant "pools" have emerged, all trying to crack the next address. "kowala24731" secured an investment in the hundreds of thousands of dollars to rent GPUs and managed to break addresses #67 and #68 in early April.

Yesterday, someone, probably a beginner, cracked address #69 but didn’t secure the spending properly and exposed the public key.

In a few seconds, some bots cracked the key and replaced the transaction, battling for the balance. The last one paid a total fee of 1.2M sats.

https://mempool.space/tx/a52c5046f3097a8c2bd3b9889df2fb47b104d47a16cc679d3357feec003db753

The time to crack these addresses — discovering the private key from the public key — is quite short. A GPU can do it in less than a minute.

That’s why those who crack the keys can't publish it to the network; they must send it directly to a miner to include it in a block (like Mara).

Among the addresses with exposed public keys, the record was 130 bits of entropy, set by "RetiredCoder," who also cracked other keys.

These addresses are likely serving as "canaries in the coal mine" for the attacks Bitcoin may face. As long as there are still hundreds of BTCs sitting in them, yours should be safe.

The ecstasy of corn

watched pi the other day. dazed and confused might be next 🤙

when you a nostr user but also sticks to inner and outsider social circles' media

moved it next to a window facing north (north hemi; no direct sun intake); flipped the piscina so it goes along the long axis of the chipboard. better be hashing procrastination.

nostr:nevent1qvzqqqqqqypzpk7g9zkep60sa0jp0vpyt5yxtv3jk0ywgm67cnk8m0fs7m6n95dsqyf8wumn8ghj7mn0wd68yv339e3k7mf0qyghwumn8ghj7mn0wd68ytnhd9hx2tcqyp5074rgqnwdlxfryu4knvlvpfhfkut2k2yag0h6jswhg0pa43n4yrt30h9

¿Cómo justificar el GM en ámbitos fuera del idioma Inglés?

It's not about languages. Saludar en las mañanas apuntala el sentido de vigilia

El GM está ahí, donde lo dejé ayer

nostr:npub1e4qg56wvd3ehegd8dm7rlgj8cm998myq0ah8e9t5zeqkg7t7s93q750p76 's illustration the main pitches revolving around the use of keys, —ie portability and authenticity of content—, and the relevance of relays, —they even the field of action of social media in as much as anyone can run its own 'platform'—

GM new best share, 8.85G prev. 5.86G ☕🐸

I'm really positive about the tariffs. I know they're not good for our economy. Obviously. But they're still good for **_us_**.

On my first trip overseas, in college and literally just because college is too boring, I discovered a thriving black market in.... Blue jeans. People were risking state theft and imprisonment for blue jeans.

Their government had/has a tariff on blue jeans. Because of this, jeans were super expensive, and wearing jeans was kinda like driving a lambo.

So naturally, there was a huge black market for blue jeans. Any time anyone took a trip overseas, especially to America, they loaded up an extra suitcase with blue jeans that they could turn around for something like 1000% profit. Of course, airports checked for it and people got arrested pretty regularly... But they did it anyways.

The **_HORROR!!_**

Bad policy encouraged **_criminality!!_**

Well... People shouldn't abide by bad policy. That black market in blue jeans raised the standard of living, while teaching people a valuable lesson. Without that bad policy, people wouldn't run into a serious question about their character : in recognizing the stupidity of the policy, they must choose - will they be cowards and obey they tyrants, or will they make some small, secretive act of defiance?

All things work to the greater good.

What a harvest we will reap!! A harvest of good people - good by proof of work, confrontation, adversity, and testing ; not by some weak and untested belief.

no longer than a week a policy of "erasing junk food out of schools" made appear kids smuggling cheetos and sodas to the classroom for sell. indeed there could be many angles result of public policies...

GM dear urbanite nostriche; how's commuting going?