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eltito
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July 10, 2014, 11:26:55 PM |
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Also, like I pointed out earlier, this means that Masternodes now have no direct involvement in the actual person to person transaction, so if someone decides to use Darkcoin to so something illegal, there is no reasonable grounds for Masternode owners to be held liable.
Plausible deniability ftw! As someone pointed out above, of course, aways consult your attorney. That said, I'm not sure it's just plausible deniability. Once this is implemented, Masternodes will simply be denominating funds. They will no longer be facilitating the actual transfer of funds for purchases between a buyer and a seller. They are completely bypassed in that regard. Wait, so in this case there isn't any Coinjoin? The pre-denominated funds are directly send from A to B without using a masternode? No Coinjoin mix on the second phase, correct. Non-denominated funds are sent out automatically to a MN for denomination, then sent back to your wallet (this may or may not involve several MN hops, I haven't spoken to Evan about that for a day or two and he comes up with new ideas every 5 minutes). Once back in your wallet, they just sit there, all smug and anonymous until you decide to use them. There's no real need for a need for a 2nd Coinjoin mix to occur after that. When you send funds, your wallet automatically selects pre-anonymized denominations and sends them directly to your intended recipient. I would go so far as to say no Coinjoin at all, right? The denomination step only involves your coins, right? If this is the final solution then I would say that DRK has moved away from Coinjoin to something better which is of Evan's own invention. No, Coinjoin is still there. Coinjoin mixes would happen simultaneously across the network at scheduled intervals. I don't yet have the specifics on how he intends to do that, but broadly speaking: At x time or x block, everyone sends their unmixed coins to whichever MN is elected for mixing (this happens automatically in the background). They're mixed and returned in homogeneous denominations to wherever they came from (at random addresses).
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coins101
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July 10, 2014, 11:33:26 PM |
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However, if levels of adoption increase more significantly, and if it appears that daily financial life can be conducted for long stretches completely within a virtual currency environment, we may need to consider whether to apply a more “cash-like” regulation to the virtual currency space.
This guy isn't the county Sheriff and it's people like him that will set the policy not Jennifer Shasky Calvery.
So, he's saying regulate more like cash. So, you agree, we are creating eCash. You also have to agree, its regulation, not ban. Read the context again. Just in case you missed the meaning of what you were posting. Man, when you get this, I can see you going out and selling everything you own to buy as much DRK as possible.
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stealth923
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July 10, 2014, 11:33:48 PM |
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People make stupid statements to think they dont need privacy and anonymity for bitcoin because the use case for it right now is still quite limited. Those statements made by Shojayxt show how naive and immature his thinking is. "ohh I can purchase stuff now and its all fine"....what you dont realise is that we are still in a very early adoption phase. Would you be OK if someone today could look up your bank account number and see every transaction you have ever made in the past, link that to businesses and how much money you have?  Once btc becomes more mainstream there will be a big opportunity (and its already started) to scrape and data mine addresses for the purpose of marketing & selling that information. - you can bet your left ass cheek that bitcoin is going to have a SERIOUS privacy issue on its hands.
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Icebucket
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July 10, 2014, 11:35:28 PM |
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Also, like I pointed out earlier, this means that Masternodes now have no direct involvement in the actual person to person transaction, so if someone decides to use Darkcoin to so something illegal, there is no reasonable grounds for Masternode owners to be held liable.
Plausible deniability ftw! As someone pointed out above, of course, aways consult your attorney. That said, I'm not sure it's just plausible deniability. Once this is implemented, Masternodes will simply be denominating funds. They will no longer be facilitating the actual transfer of funds for purchases between a buyer and a seller. They are completely bypassed in that regard. If the United States government gets a hint that a one cent of funds was transferred to any terrorist organization using the Darkcoin network it's lights out. Plausible deniability doesn't mean a thing when Amazon and every other provider in the United States complies with a court order and shuts down the masternodes. I'm not promoting cryptonote coins as they have plenty of their own problems. But they offer true P2P anonymity that isn't subject to having a masternode network shut down. I host a couple MNs in Iceland. I'm not sure they care what the US Gov't thinks. Actually Iceland has one of the strongest internet privacy regulations, there is a browser in beta (called Icebrowser) that channels all traffic through Iceland and encrypting everything giving everyone in the world the same rights as Icelanders on the Internet. Kindof cool just saw this today. http://finance.yahoo.com/news/introduction-icebrowser-ushers-era-internet-123000740.htmlQuote: Iceland places an exceptionally strong emphasis on privacy rights, such that what is now commonplace in the U.S. and parts of Europe would be unthinkable there. .. If anyone wants to host a MN in Iceland then I managed to convince a company to accept DRK for VPS rent http://www.flokinet.is/
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“Every morning we are born again. What we do today is what matters most.” ― Gautama Buddha
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splawik21
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DASH is the future of crypto payments!
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July 10, 2014, 11:38:03 PM |
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Isn't this MACD bad news generally ? NB: im terrible at TA. Use 3days http://scr.hu/1ame/xcxqnafter red comes green right ? 
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BE SMART, USE DASH ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
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coins101
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July 10, 2014, 11:44:23 PM |
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However, if levels of adoption increase more significantly, and if it appears that daily financial life can be conducted for long stretches completely within a virtual currency environment, we may need to consider whether to apply a more “cash-like” regulation to the virtual currency space.
This guy isn't the county Sheriff and it's people like him that will set the policy not Jennifer Shasky Calvery.
So, he's saying regulate more like cash. So, you agree, we Evan and the team (  ) are creating eCash. You also have to agree, its regulation, not ban. Read the context again. Just in case you missed the meaning of what you were posting. Man, when you get this, I can see you going out and selling everything you own to buy as much DRK as possible. Little edit needed there. Getting a bit carried away with the 'Royal We.' Next, I'll be in the bar telling some hot chick how I'm coding the next big thing since Bitcoin. 
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toknormal
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July 10, 2014, 11:45:21 PM |
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Jennifers boss doesn't necessarily share Jennifers views on cryptocurrency.
Just this morning, David Cohen, the Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence at the U.S. Department of the Treasury – and my boss – delivered remarks on virtual currency at an event in New York City, where he made a compelling case for transparency and regulation in the virtual currency space.
However, if levels of adoption increase more significantly, and if it appears that daily financial life can be conducted for long stretches completely within a virtual currency environment, we may need to consider whether to apply a more “cash-like” regulation to the virtual currency space.
This guy isn't the county Sheriff and it's people like him that will set the policy not Jennifer Shasky Calvery.
You don't seem to have fully grasped the implications of cryptocurrency on the "regulatory environment". There are no counterparties in crypto = so no regulation possible. END. OF. STORY. Sure they can stop retailers from quoting prices in one cryptocurrency over another, but that's regulating retailing not crypto. Also, one you've allowed one in the door thats the thin end of the wedge because as we all know, all cryptos are readily interchangeable once your holdings are on a blockchain of any flavour. Regulators do not understand this (understandibly). They live in a world where everything works by counterparties - everything you "own" is registered somewhere. But you do not "own" bitcoin so you cannot possibly be regulated based on that ownership. All you have is a bunch of letters that lets you control an address - that isn't ownership in any classic sense because anybody could theoretically control that address. Put another way, a bitcoin address hasn't got your name on it as would be required to establish ownership. You've got its name on a piece of paper which means that theoretically, 7.046 Billion other people could have as well with equivalent entitlement as fas as the term "ownership" goes. Another this regarding your quote: if it appears that daily financial life can be conducted for long stretches completely within a virtual currency environment, we may need to consider whether to apply a more “cash-like” regulation to the virtual currency space. Cash can only be regulated because it ultimately ends up in a bank - hence counterparties again. At least, it needs to end up in a bank for it to be of much use for anything other than buying chewing gum or paying off hitmen. Cryptocurrencies on the other hand do not end up in a bank and, again, lack any counterparty involvement, so no regulation possible. The idea that opaque blockchains and transparent blockchains are any different in this respect doesn't get you very far because both are as much of a threat to the mainstream banking system. You know what the threat is ? It's nothing to do with "dark currencies". It's the fact that crypto is unlevered base money whereas fiat is highly levered credit money. Thats the real reason authorities are petrified, not laundering. Economics not criminality.
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thelonecrouton
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July 10, 2014, 11:47:00 PM |
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People make stupid statements to think they dont need privacy and anonymity for bitcoin because the use case for it right now is still quite limited. Those statements made by Shojayxt show how naive and immature his thinking is. "ohh I can purchase stuff now and its all fine"....what you dont realise is that we are still in a very early adoption phase. Would you be OK if someone today could look up your bank account number and see every transaction you have ever made in the past, link that to businesses and how much money you have?  Once btc becomes more mainstream there will be a big opportunity (and its already started) to scrape and data mine addresses for the purpose of marketing & selling that information. - you can bet your left ass cheek that bitcoin is going to have a SERIOUS privacy issue on its hands. Shojayxt likes nothing more than a big truncheon up his arse, he has a thing for men in uniforms. And there's nothing wrong with that, it's his combination of innate subservience with truly baffling stupidity that inspires mirth and pity... 
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tifozi
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July 10, 2014, 11:47:29 PM |
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These regulatory discussions are always showing up in DRK thread. It is never found in any other so-called anonymous coins. Hmmm  And FUD is getting old and weary folks. Please move on.
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coins101
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July 10, 2014, 11:49:12 PM |
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You know what the threat is ? It's nothing to do with "dark currencies". It's the fact that crypto is unlevered base money whereas fiat is highly levered credit money.
Thats the real reason authorities are petrified, not laundering. Economics not criminality.
I'm so glad we promoted you to Chief Investment Officer. Didn't we? Come on chaps, make it so.
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coins101
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July 10, 2014, 11:51:17 PM |
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These regulatory discussions are always showing up in DRK thread. It is never found in any other so-called anonymous coins. Hmmm  And FUD is getting old and weary folks. Please move on. ok. To the moon, then infinity and beyond. 
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Kai Proctor
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July 10, 2014, 11:51:50 PM |
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You spend a lot of time on the thread of a coin you don't like. 
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stealth923
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July 10, 2014, 11:52:05 PM |
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These regulatory discussions are always showing up in DRK thread. It is never found in any other so-called anonymous coins. Hmmm  And FUD is getting old and weary folks. Please move on. Thats because Dark is the only one with a chance to make mainstream. So we talk about real world issues. All the other coins = ZOMMGGG look at this feature list, we are going to develop it in 2 weeks and blow everything out of the water etc...pump dump rinse repeat.
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Kokk
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July 10, 2014, 11:55:09 PM |
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Thx toknormal for your clarity.
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shojayxt
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July 10, 2014, 11:55:17 PM |
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However, if levels of adoption increase more significantly, and if it appears that daily financial life can be conducted for long stretches completely within a virtual currency environment, we may need to consider whether to apply a more “cash-like” regulation to the virtual currency space.
This guy isn't the county Sheriff and it's people like him that will set the policy not Jennifer Shasky Calvery.
So, he's saying regulate more like cash. So, you agree, we are creating eCash. You also have to agree, its regulation, not ban. Read the context again. Just in case you missed the meaning of what you were posting. Man, when you get this, I can see you going out and selling everything you own to buy as much DRK as possible. I don't know what so hard to understand. They shut down Silk Road. Seized the guys bitcoin, auctioned it off, and the guy is sitting in jail looking at spending the next couple decades in a Federal prison. The only reason they didn't go after Bitcoin was because they needed it to build their case due to the fact that they could track the transactions on the blockchain. If you take that ability away you are putting yourself in a position to be deemed as a threat. An anonymous cryptocurrency can never be regulated like cash due to it's main purpose. Bank records can be opened by subpoena. How do you subpoena something that doesn't exist like anonymous transactions? If anyone thinks that the United States government isn't capable of shutting down a cryptocurrency they are mistaken. Feds Use Patriot Act To Crack Down On Virtual Currency Exchange http://americasfuture.org/feds-use-patriot-act-to-crack-down-on-virtual-currency-exchange/http://www.wmitchell.edu/lawreview/Volume40/documents/Middlebrook.pdfFinCEN acknowledges that the third-party exchange might appear to be conducting a bona fide purchase and thus entitled to an exemption, but notes that the safe harbor does not apply when the only service being provided is money transmissionWhat does a masternode do other than transmit Darkcoin? An administrator or an exchange that transmits convertible virtual currency to another person or location would be required to register as an MSB.“An administrator or exchanger that (1) accepts and transmits a convertible virtual currency or (2) buys or sells convertible virtual currency,” however, is a money transmitter unless an exemption applies.102 It appears that FinCEN is fine with masternode operation as long as the administrator registers as an MSB. How many masternode operators are registered as an MSB?
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toknormal
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July 10, 2014, 11:55:19 PM |
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I'm so glad we promoted you to Chief Investment Officer.
Didn't we? Come on chaps, make it so.
As long as it doesn't mean I have to serve the drinks at promotions rather than consume them 
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illodin
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July 11, 2014, 12:01:13 AM |
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What does a masternode do other than transmit Darkcoin?
An administrator or an exchange that transmits convertible virtual currency to another person or location would be required to register as an MSB.
“An administrator or exchanger that (1) accepts and transmits a convertible virtual currency or (2) buys or sells convertible virtual currency,” however, is a money transmitter unless an exemption applies.102
It appears that FinCEN is fine with masternode operation as long as the administrator registers as an MSB.
How many masternode operators are registered as an MSB?
Masternode does not transmit (= receive and send) coins.
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shojayxt
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July 11, 2014, 12:02:27 AM |
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People make stupid statements to think they dont need privacy and anonymity for bitcoin because the use case for it right now is still quite limited. Those statements made by Shojayxt show how naive and immature his thinking is. "ohh I can purchase stuff now and its all fine"....what you dont realise is that we are still in a very early adoption phase. Would you be OK if someone today could look up your bank account number and see every transaction you have ever made in the past, link that to businesses and how much money you have?  Once btc becomes more mainstream there will be a big opportunity (and its already started) to scrape and data mine addresses for the purpose of marketing & selling that information. - you can bet your left ass cheek that bitcoin is going to have a SERIOUS privacy issue on its hands. So I'm naive and immature because I am not paranoid or feel the need to hide in the shadows? You're naive for thinking that the United States government wouldn't and couldn't shut down some altcoin called Darkcoin if they thought it was being used to facilitate financial transfers to those deemed as enemies. Please continue with the insults and name calling instead of actually addressing some of the valid points I have made regarding government and it's capabilities to shut down an anonymous cryptocurrency if it is deemed to be used for purposes not in the best interests of the United States.
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slapper
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July 11, 2014, 12:03:08 AM |
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Any Chinese friends in here ? Can you please request ltc1btc to update stratum and wallet? QQ 2830577073 E-mail: [email protected]
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