> I consider bitcoin, if this is all the security it has, to be garbage proposed by incompetents.<br><br>A fairly strong reaction to a new idea. If it is truly garbage, it will come to naught. But if not, perhaps there is something to be learned.<br>
<br>Duane<br><br><div class="gmail_quote">On Fri, Jun 17, 2011 at 9:07 PM, Warren Smith <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:warren.wds@gmail.com">warren.wds@gmail.com</a>></span> wrote:<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex;">
<div class="im">>As Satoshi's original Bitcoin paper showed, it becomes exponentially improbable that any attacker controlling less than 50% of the total CPU power could manufacture a verifiable chain that is longer than the longest one that is produced collaboratively by the P2P network.<br>
<br>
</div>--I'm pretty unfamiliar with bitcoin but I consider this "security<br>
guarantee" to be pretty<br>
worthless. If I join an e-money scheme, then dammit I do NOT want to<br>
be cranking<br>
my computer day and night in a a desperate battle to stay secure by<br>
expending more cycles than the bad guys. I want to do some<br>
computation ONCE whenever I get or pay some money, then stop forever,<br>
and I still want permanent security against all the compute power in<br>
the universe for the life of the universe. Many cryptographic<br>
protocols, including multiparty and voting and e-money protocols,<br>
already exist with the level of security I just described (under the<br>
usual assumptions, such as integer factoring is way hard).<br>
<br>
It is quite plausible in a bitcoin scheme with a million participants,<br>
that some "bad guy" team will spend an enormous amount of computing<br>
24/7 in parallel trying to break it, while meanwhile the "good guys"<br>
do nothing with their computers because they are interested in using<br>
their computers for other purposes. Or in turning them off.<br>
<br>
I consider bitcoin, if this is all the security it has, to be garbage proposed<br>
by incompetents.<br>
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<br>
<br>
--<br>
Warren D. Smith<br>
<a href="http://RangeVoting.org" target="_blank">http://RangeVoting.org</a> <-- add your endorsement (by clicking<br>
"endorse" as 1st step)<br>
and<br>
<a href="http://math.temple.edu/%7Ewds/homepage/works.html" target="_blank">math.temple.edu/~wds/homepage/works.html</a><br>
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