Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-19 Thread jim bell
 Oddly, I just looked at my browser's (Yahoo) spam folder, and I noticed that 
all the messages from grarpam were there.  I did not do that, and certainly not 
intentionally.  At least as far back as Nov 13.  Presumably all messages before 
that got auto-deleted from the spam folder.  
Anyway, thanks for the backup.  
               Jim Bell

On Monday, December 17, 2018, 9:48:55 PM PST, grarpamp  
wrote:  
 
 > creating a tool to murder people

No.

AP is really only invoked as legitimate defensive action
to aggression, as would any other existing and well
calibrated natural response to same.

Most fail to recognize the important early mechanism of AP...
that *well* before such defensive measures need or are ever
applied, before any exact prediction is made, an AP system
properly acts in its native form as a strong and escalating
*discouragement* to those considering or acting out various
levels of aggression, theft, force, murder, etc upon others.

Simply put, any would be aggressor would be crazy
to risk continuing down a course of action that might
attract any number of rational funders and predictors
into the market.

For the vast majority of situations, the very few proof
of functions warranted upon defense aside,
AP could be a rather effective and in fact nonviolent
tool for change for the better

Two other often noted scenarios are...
- Boss equivalents playing game of Mutual Assured Destruction
among themselves... often a generally pointless expense to begin with.
- Random statistical noise of cheap / easy predictions accepted by
nutbags, crack addicts, oppurtunity, fame, etc. That's the game called
life, no different than all of history, AP is agnostic and moot there.
Try funding predictions for mental and physical healthcare, work,
housing, defense, whatever, to lower those rates of occurance.
  

Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-18 Thread grarpamp
> Besides, you already have general prediction markets already
> What are your thoughts on that?

There are a great many games out there,
more and more everyday (as open tech rightly hath no pause itself),
many of which many fail to understand.
Play on, merrily, my friends and fiends.


Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-18 Thread juan
On Mon, 17 Dec 2018 19:58:38 + (UTC)
jim bell  wrote, replying to gmkarl



> And what speech occurs can
> probably be made anonymous.  How would "the rich" target their "enemies" if
> they cannot identify them?
>

Jim, you are taking anonimity for granted it seems, but in reality the 
current system is a surveillance state and it gets worse by the day. 




> 
> I still don't understand how you expect "the rich" to know who their enemies 
> are.  It's hard to target what you can't identify.  


Except we live in a global surveillance state. 


> 
> Rather than the AP server running at one specific, hidden location, under 
> Augur and Ethereum, AP will run 'everywhere', potentially on hundreds of 
> thousands or even millions of computers.   It would be pointless to try to 
> take thousands or even tens of thousands of computers offline. 


That's a good point. After all, the key property of things like bitcoin 
and ethereum is that they are 'permisionless' or 'censorship resistant' 



gmkarl >> AP itself provides a method to exercise power secretly.  People with
   >> more money can put bigger prices on their opponents' heads.


> 
> You keep ignoring the question:  How do people know who "their enemies" 
> actually are?


Or you keep ignoring the fact that we don't have anonimity at all. 

Under the current system, the government and the corporations that 
reason.com love so much have complete control over the communications 
infrastructure. The way to fix that is to overthrow govcorp...but in order to 
attack them using AP we need anonimity. So unless you can destroy govcorp you 
won't get anonimity, but you need anonimity to destroy govcorp. Seems 
problematic. 




> 
> That's a good reason to want to weaken governments.  I think governments, at 
> most, should only be asked to do what must be done collectively, even where 
> they do that.


as a side note, what you said is the standard 'justification' for 
complete communism or any other form of totalitarianism.  Because of course the 
phrase "what must be done collectively" is meanignless and can cover anything 
and everything any particular social engineer likes. 





Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-18 Thread furrier
You fail to understand that society is not comprised
only by rational actors and is more complex than a simple
if-else statement. Adding one more thing to spread fear
and death is redundant. On a massive scale this ends up
being at best a PR disaster for the people backing it up.
Besides, you already have general prediction markets already
out there working like Augur as I mentioned earlier.
What are your thoughts on that?



‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐
On Tuesday, December 18, 2018 6:47 AM, grarpamp  wrote:

> > creating a tool to murder people
>
> No.
>
> AP is really only invoked as legitimate defensive action
> to aggression, as would any other existing and well
> calibrated natural response to same.
>
> Most fail to recognize the important early mechanism of AP...
> that well before such defensive measures need or are ever
> applied, before any exact prediction is made, an AP system
> properly acts in its native form as a strong and escalating
> discouragement to those considering or acting out various
> levels of aggression, theft, force, murder, etc upon others.
>
> Simply put, any would be aggressor would be crazy
> to risk continuing down a course of action that might
> attract any number of rational funders and predictors
> into the market.
>
> For the vast majority of situations, the very few proof
> of functions warranted upon defense aside,
> AP could be a rather effective and in fact nonviolent
> tool for change for the better
>
> Two other often noted scenarios are...
>
> -   Boss equivalents playing game of Mutual Assured Destruction
> among themselves... often a generally pointless expense to begin with.
>
> -   Random statistical noise of cheap / easy predictions accepted by
> nutbags, crack addicts, oppurtunity, fame, etc. That's the game called
> life, no different than all of history, AP is agnostic and moot there.
> Try funding predictions for mental and physical healthcare, work,
> housing, defense, whatever, to lower those rates of occurance.
>




Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-18 Thread furrier
‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐
On Monday, December 17, 2018 8:58 PM, jim bell  wrote:

> Furrier:
>
> You show your biases when you say "creating a tool to murder people".  
> Arguably, the AP as a new tool (as I foresee it) would also allow people to 
> defend themselves from aggression, and I define "aggression" to include being 
> victimized by governments.
> Most weapons can be misused.  A gun can protect, but yes, it also can murder. 
>  Or, you can also accidently drop it, on rare occasions it will fire, and the 
> bullet might go through a flimsy apartment-complex wall and strike somebody 
> next door.   Does that make entirely illegitimate the concept of a gun?  You 
> seem to think so, that merely because a weapon can be used to 'murder', there 
> is something inherently wrong in making and using it for self-defense.

Don't dilute my message. I am not against protecting private property. AP is 
not that kind of a tool.

> And while you go on to concede that 'the government' causes problems, you 
> don't say how to eliminate government.  I, at least, claim a system that 
> seems to have the ability to do so.  At least, plenty of people have had the 
> ability to consider the matter, and nobody that I'm aware of has proposed 
> that an AP-type system couldn't be implemented that could stop current 
> governments.  At least, not since about 2002 when a guy named Bob Murphy made 
> a stab at it.  That's 16 years.  
> http://www.anti-state.com/the-politics-of-destruction/Also, see: 
> https://libertarianinstitute.org/blog/can-libertarian-society-provide-national-defense/
>   ×

"human-respecting tools and systems, that are also voluntary, decentralized, 
censorship-resistant, and provide utility to everyone with as fair access as 
possible."

> You said, "If you want to change the world, create first and foremost 
> human-respecting tools and systems".
>
> Fine words.  Can you be more specific?  You went on to say,

Tools that do not harm others physically or mentally. Tools that have as low 
social cost as possible while providing real utility (not Brave New World-style 
utility).

> "that are also voluntary, decentralized, censorship-resistant, and provide 
> utility to everyone with as fair access as possible."
>
> The version of AP I've long advocated would have those characteristics, I 
> believe.  With the one exception that AP wouldn't be "voluntary" to those it 
> will eventually target, but for a good reason:  They will be the ones who 
> have been aggressing against the rest of us.  It could be said, however, that 
> even AP would be "voluntary" those those people too:  They will have the 
> choice to stop aggressing against the rest of us.  Stop, and live.   Don't 
> stop, and die.

Human-respecting and voluntary are the most basic aspects of the tools I am 
advocating for really.

> Show us a flaw in an AP-type system, one that appears not to be able to be 
> fixed, and you will make a major name for yourself.  Or, design a system to 
> get rid of today's governments, and people will remember your name forever.

I don't need to. AP is flawed by design and it's never going to be implemented 
(at best you get something like Augur).

> On Sunday, December 16, 2018, 1:52:20 PM PST, furrier  
> wrote:
>
> Your idea sucks because creating a tool to murder people is not adding 
> anything new to the picture. We already have it and it's called "the 
> goverment". Like any other violence-provocative tool that fits the status 
> quo, the more powerful people are going to take control of it and use it for 
> their own purposes more effectively that you will.
>
> If you want to change the world, create first and foremost human-respecting 
> tools and systems, that are also voluntary, decentralized, 
> censorship-resistant, and provide utility to everyone with as fair access as 
> possible. You wouldn't know but some cryptocurrencies fit as example. 
> Community initiatives around the world that are based within the community 
> and seek alternative ways to reach consensus about things and live a 
> respecting life are moving along those lines.
>
> ‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐
> On Thursday, December 13, 2018 11:05 PM, jim bell  wrote:
>
>> Any answer from Karl or Furrier?
>>
>> Naturally, I'm genuinely interested to find out if my AP idea has any flaws. 
>>  Many people could say, and no doubt many of them have said, 'I just don't 
>> LIKE your AP idea, Jim!'.   But that doesn't mean it wouldn't work.  Or that 
>> it isn't necessary.
>>
>> A person could really make a name for himself if:
>>
>> 1)  He figured out a distinct flaw in the AP idea, such that it wouldn't 
>> work..
>>
>>  
>>  OR
>>
>> 2)  He figured out a solution that would make AP unnecessary.
>>
>> Has anybody done this?   I haven't seen it.
>>
>>Jim Bell
>>
>> On Tuesday, December 11, 2018, 5:52:45 PM PST, jim bell  
>> wrote:

Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-17 Thread grarpamp
> creating a tool to murder people

No.

AP is really only invoked as legitimate defensive action
to aggression, as would any other existing and well
calibrated natural response to same.

Most fail to recognize the important early mechanism of AP...
that *well* before such defensive measures need or are ever
applied, before any exact prediction is made, an AP system
properly acts in its native form as a strong and escalating
*discouragement* to those considering or acting out various
levels of aggression, theft, force, murder, etc upon others.

Simply put, any would be aggressor would be crazy
to risk continuing down a course of action that might
attract any number of rational funders and predictors
into the market.

For the vast majority of situations, the very few proof
of functions warranted upon defense aside,
AP could be a rather effective and in fact nonviolent
tool for change for the better

Two other often noted scenarios are...
- Boss equivalents playing game of Mutual Assured Destruction
among themselves... often a generally pointless expense to begin with.
- Random statistical noise of cheap / easy predictions accepted by
nutbags, crack addicts, oppurtunity, fame, etc. That's the game called
life, no different than all of history, AP is agnostic and moot there.
Try funding predictions for mental and physical healthcare, work,
housing, defense, whatever, to lower those rates of occurance.


Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-17 Thread juan
On Mon, 17 Dec 2018 06:16:51 + (UTC)
jim bell  wrote:

>  On Friday, December 14, 2018, 2:20:10 PM PST, juan  
> wrote:
>  
>  
>  On Fri, 14 Dec 2018 16:24:10 -0500
> John Newman  wrote:
> 
> 
> >> I'm cynical - about AP, about humanity, about the chances of ever
> >> divesting ourself of what seems to be the plotted destination for
> >> civilization: dystopia for the masses.
> 
> >    Don't worry! There will be no dystopia for the masses because there will 
> >be no masses. Once the ruling class has enough 'artificially inteligent' 
> >robots at their disposal they will get rid of the human robots, who are 
> >clearly a potential threat.
> 
> 
> This sounds like a variant on the Terminator series of movies.


It does - I don't claim any originality =) 

So, in the terminator series people create 'autonomous' machines and 
then the machines decide to get rid of the human race. More or less the same 
scenario is discussed here and not as pure fiction : 

"Why the Future Doesn't Need Us" 
https://www.wired.com/2000/04/joy-2/
by bill joy, (co)founder of sun microsystems. 


I think the stories about out-of-control machines are really dumb. They 
are a transparent piece of diversion and propaganda. People like bill joy, who 
play the 'good' cop,  and the vast majority of technocrats who don't even 
pretend to be good, came up with this silly idea that "the machines are to 
blame" to try to hide the fact  that "the machines" are just the tools they are 
using to serve their own political ends. And tools are not moral agents. The 
people who use the tools are. 


IF you read the bill joy article linked above you will notice that the 
best part of it was NOT written by joy


"On the other hand it is possible that human control over the machines 
may be retained. In that case the average man may have control over certain 
private machines of his own, such as his car or his personal computer, but 
control over large systems of machines will be in the hands of a tiny 
elite—just as it is today, but with two differences. Due to improved techniques 
the elite will have greater control over the masses; and because human work 
will no longer be necessary the masses will be superfluous, a useless burden on 
the system. If the elite is ruthless they may simply decide to exterminate the 
mass of humanity. If they are humane they may use propaganda or other 
psychological or biological techniques to reduce the birth rate until the mass 
of humanity becomes extinct, leaving the world to the elite. Or, if the elite 
consists of soft-hearted liberals, they may decide to play the role of good 
shepherds to the rest of the human race. They will see to it that everyone's 
physical needs are satisfied, that all children are raised under 
psychologically hygienic conditions, that everyone has a wholesome hobby to 
keep him busy, and that anyone who may become dissatisfied undergoes 
"treatment" to cure his "problem." Of course, life will be so purposeless that 
people will have to be biologically or psychologically engineered either to 
remove their need for the power process or make them "sublimate" their drive 
for power into some harmless hobby. These engineered human beings may be happy 
in such a society, but they will most certainly not be free. They will have 
been reduced to the status of domestic animals" 


That's from a guy named Kaczynski.






>                Jim Bell
> 
> 
> 
>   



Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-17 Thread jim bell
 Furrier:
You show your biases when you say "creating a tool to murder people".  
Arguably, the AP as a new tool (as I foresee it) would also allow people to 
defend themselves from aggression, and I define "aggression" to include being 
victimized by governments.  Most weapons can be misused.  A gun can protect, 
but yes, it also can murder.  Or, you can also accidently drop it, on rare 
occasions it will fire, and the bullet might go through a flimsy 
apartment-complex wall and strike somebody next door.   Does that make entirely 
illegitimate the concept of a gun?  You seem to think so, that merely because a 
weapon can be used to 'murder', there is something inherently wrong in making 
and using it for self-defense.
And while you go on to concede that 'the government' causes problems, you don't 
say how to eliminate government.  I, at least, claim a system that seems to 
have the ability to do so.  At least, plenty of people have had the ability to 
consider the matter, and nobody that I'm aware of has proposed that an AP-type 
system couldn't be implemented that could stop current governments.  At least, 
not since about 2002 when a guy named Bob Murphy made a stab at it.  That's 16 
years.  http://www.anti-state.com/the-politics-of-destruction/    Also, see: 
https://libertarianinstitute.org/blog/can-libertarian-society-provide-national-defense/
  ×

 His friend, Bob Vroman, took the opposite position.   
http://www.greenspun.com/bboard/q-and-a-fetch-msg.tcl?msg_id=009ape%C3%82%C2%A0 
  although that link seems to have been deleted.  Try the Wayback Machine, I 
suppose.  This one seems to still work correctly:  
https://www.mail-archive.com/cypherpunks-moderated@minder.net/msg02068.html   
And for what seems to have been the most 'professional' analysis, you could 
see:    
https://idsa.in/strategicanalysis/CryptologyDigitalAssassinationandtheTerrorismFuturesMarket_rsukumaran_0404.html.%C3%82%c2%a0
But it, too, is no longer directly available.  See the Wayback Machine, I 
suppose.
×These are referred to in:  
https://lists.cpunks.org/pipermail/cypherpunks/2015-September/024894.html  
Ironically, on January 2, 2018 Murphy actually argued the case in favor of 
privatized defense systems, against another who claimed that such defense 
should be left in the hands of monopolized, government-like entities. 
https://attackthesystem.com/?s=bob+murphy    Although I don't think Murphy 
mentions the AP system by name.  (perhaps the 'not-invented-here' syndrome at 
work?)
Murphy's 2002 position was long before even Bitcoin was invented, and TOR was 
not nearly as well-known as it is today.  Simple doubts about whether an 
AP-type system could be implemented are not unreasonable, but the passage of 
another 16 years has changed things.  


You said, "If you want to change the world, create first and foremost 
human-respecting tools and systems".


Fine words.  Can you be more specific?  You went on to say, 

"that are also voluntary, decentralized, censorship-resistant, and provide 
utility to everyone with as fair access as possible."

The version of AP I've long advocated would have those characteristics, I 
believe.  With the one exception that AP wouldn't be "voluntary" to those it 
will eventually target, but for a good reason:  They will be the ones who have 
been aggressing against the rest of us.  It could be said, however, that even 
AP would be "voluntary" those those people too:  They will have the choice to 
stop aggressing against the rest of us.  Stop, and live.   Don't stop, and die. 
 You also said:

"You wouldn't know but some cryptocurrencies fit as example."

Yes, Zerocoin has good anonymity.But, but don't forget the government may 
intrude.  For example, a few years ago the US Federal government decided that 
'we' should pay tax on the illusory 'gains' of people whose digital cash has 
appreciated in value.  This is inconsistent with their treatment of foreign 
currencies:   If you buy a Euro, a British Pound, a yen, a ruble, etc, if the 
value of those currencies go up, the IRS doesn't claim you have to pay "income 
tax" on the value of that asset.  But if you buy digital cash, and the value 
goes up, they demand that you pay tax on the 'gain'.  

Show us a flaw in an AP-type system, one that appears not to be able to be 
fixed, and you will make a major name for yourself.  Or, design a system to get 
rid of today's governments, and people will remember your name forever.  
                                  Jim Bell





On Sunday, December 16, 2018, 1:52:20 PM PST, furrier 
 wrote:  
 
 Your idea sucks because creating a tool to murder people is not adding 
anything new to the picture. We already have it and it's called "the 
goverment". Like any other violence-provocative tool that fits the status quo, 
the more powerful people are going to take control of it and use it for their 
own purposes more effectively that you will.

If you want to change the world, create first and foremost 

Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-16 Thread jim bell
 On Friday, December 14, 2018, 2:20:10 PM PST, juan  wrote:
 
 
 On Fri, 14 Dec 2018 16:24:10 -0500
John Newman  wrote:


>> I'm cynical - about AP, about humanity, about the chances of ever
>> divesting ourself of what seems to be the plotted destination for
>> civilization: dystopia for the masses.

>    Don't worry! There will be no dystopia for the masses because there will 
>be no masses. Once the ruling class has enough 'artificially inteligent' 
>robots at their disposal they will get rid of the human robots, who are 
>clearly a potential threat.


This sounds like a variant on the Terminator series of movies.
               Jim Bell



  

Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-16 Thread furrier
Your idea sucks because creating a tool to murder people is not adding anything 
new to the picture. We already have it and it's called "the goverment". Like 
any other violence-provocative tool that fits the status quo, the more powerful 
people are going to take control of it and use it for their own purposes more 
effectively that you will.

If you want to change the world, create first and foremost human-respecting 
tools and systems, that are also voluntary, decentralized, 
censorship-resistant, and provide utility to everyone with as fair access as 
possible. You wouldn't know but some cryptocurrencies fit as example. Community 
initiatives around the world that are based within the community and seek 
alternative ways to reach consensus about things and live a respecting life are 
moving along those lines.

‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐
On Thursday, December 13, 2018 11:05 PM, jim bell  wrote:

> Any answer from Karl or Furrier?
>
> Naturally, I'm genuinely interested to find out if my AP idea has any flaws.  
> Many people could say, and no doubt many of them have said, 'I just don't 
> LIKE your AP idea, Jim!'.   But that doesn't mean it wouldn't work.  Or that 
> it isn't necessary.
>
> A person could really make a name for himself if:
>
> 1)  He figured out a distinct flaw in the AP idea, such that it wouldn't 
> work..
>
>   
> OR
>
> 2)  He figured out a solution that would make AP unnecessary.
>
> Has anybody done this?   I haven't seen it.
>
>Jim Bell
>
> On Tuesday, December 11, 2018, 5:52:45 PM PST, jim bell  
> wrote:
>
> On Tuesday, December 11, 2018, 2:18:45 PM PST, Karl  wrote:
>
>>I think I'm beginning to understand some of where you come from.  It
> sounds like you blame our problems on the presence of legal
> government.
>
> I don't know why you added the word "legal" before the word "government".  A 
> redundancy?  Or are you trying to distinguish between "legal government" and 
> some sort of "illegal government"?   I hope you are not using the word 
> "legal" as a stand-in for "legitimate".
>
> But yes, I do blame "government" for much of the problems society has today.
>
> "  I believe government is mostly just expressing the wishes
> of those with the power to influence votes and laws."
>
> The devil is in the details, no doubt.  One major problem is that the total 
> number of such people is much less than even a majority of the population.  
> One commonly-cited statistic is that the top 1% of Federal taxpayers pays 37% 
> of the total Federal income taxes.  Many people don't seem to have a problem 
> with that, but I wonder:   Would they have a problem with those 1% of 
> taxpayers having 37% of the influence over the policies of the Federal 
> Government?
>
> Myself, I think it would have been far better if the 16 Amendment (the Income 
> Tax amendment) had been limited to, for example, a maximum of 5% tax, rather 
> than it being unlimited.  Limit it to 5%, and the Federal government would be 
> far smaller than it is today, maybe one-fifth as large.
>
>>I see money as the biggest source of votes and laws, so I don't see
> things changing too much with the introduction of AP.
>
> Okay, what do you think would happen?
>
>> I believe money
> also provides greater anonymity and ability to surveil than e.g. Tor
> provides for the masses.
>
> How would that work?
>
>  Jim Bell
>
> More responses in-line.
>
> On 12/11/18, jim bell  wrote:
>> I searched, and found a number of messages about "Public Shielded Work
>> Room", but that was all I found in 2018.  What was the date you sent the
>> message?  Was it to the CP list, or to me directly?  You could send it to me
>> again, at my email address.
>
> Sorry, I tried to contact you before I began participating in this
> list.  I submitted a comment to the AP website, but I'm not sure what
> e-mail address I used, so it's nothing to worry about.  I'm happy you
> got this e-mail here.
>
>>>As it offers a market, doesn't AP give life-and-death power to those
>> with the most money?
>>
>> Well, it kinda-sorta gives life-and-death power to just about everyone, in
>> small parts.  And superficially, it looks like people who have more money
>> will have more such influence.  People who are fixated on the issue of
>> "inequality" will initially find this to be either a fatal flaw or at least
>> a major drawback.
>
> Inequality is relevant here, because in a free market, people try to
> make the largest profit, and this will be provided by the highest
> payout.  A relatively small price by many people on a leader will be
> swamped by a price of $40 billion by one wealthy individual on their
> opposition.  The people with exponentially inequal finances can then
> directly control the political presence of the world.
>
>> In the pre-AP world, achieving political change requires speaking out,
>> identifying yourself.  That 

Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-14 Thread juan
On Fri, 14 Dec 2018 16:24:10 -0500
John Newman  wrote:


> 
> I'm cynical - about AP, about humanity, about the chances of ever
> divesting ourself of what seems to be the plotted destination for
> civilization: dystopia for the masses.

Don't worry! There will be no dystopia for the masses because there 
will be no masses. Once the ruling class has enough 'artificially inteligent' 
robots at their disposal they will get rid of the human robots, who are clearly 
a potential threat.

That is exactly the destination that 'society' is 'progressing' to and 
it's quite rich that 'techno optimists' cheer for it on 'libertarian' grounds. 




Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-14 Thread John Newman
On Tue, Dec 11, 2018 at 01:31:38PM +, Karl wrote:
> Came up with a counterargument:
> 
> The rich few already control the many perhaps via lobbying, bribing,
> black markets, but AP makes the process transparent, resulting in an
> environment that is actually safer than before.

I think it largely depends on what percentage of the population, thats
Joe Six-pack, would actually contribute to a directed assassination
program against their beloved gubment.  How would the the money
which that percentage of the population can come up with stack up
against the money that the ruling-class oligarchs can come up with,
should they choose to take advantage of and subvert an AP system
for themselves?  I don't think there are enough people willing to
actively contribute to AP to make it happen, I just get the feeling
that the average American isn't going to chip in $5 to have their
local police station blown up (or whatever).

Of course, this is all presuming that any of the police states we
live in would ever let such a thing get off the ground. The technology
is not there yet. Will it ever be there, when the government is
tapped into central peering points all over the fucking world, and
has top talent hackers working around the clock to track down and
disrupt this kind of shit? 

I'm cynical - about AP, about humanity, about the chances of ever
divesting ourself of what seems to be the plotted destination for
civilization: dystopia for the masses.



> 
> Karl
> 
> On 12/11/18, Karl  wrote:
> > Hi Jim Bell,
> >
> > I sent you a message some time ago when I heard about this idea, but I
> > didn't get a reply.
> >
> > If you receive this e-mail, this is my misunderstanding:
> >
> > As it offers a market, doesn't AP give life-and-death power to those
> > with the most money?
> >
> > Wouldn't this provide for the set of people with the most money to
> > bend power more and more towards themselves, eventually producing a
> > situation where a few select people control the many?
> >
> > Personally, I support cryptocurrency, but I foremost support power to
> > be given to those with good _reasons_, rather than strong _financial_
> > resources, and systems to be put into place allowing these reasons to
> > be discussed without censorship.
> >
> > Thanks,
> > Karl
> >
> > On 12/11/18, jim bell  wrote:
> >>  furrier 
> >> Furrier:
> >> I notice that you haven't responded to my comment.  Do you not have any
> >> answer?  You claim to not "agree" with me.   If that were the case, you
> >> should be able to explain why.
> >> Why don't you think AP could work?  What do you believe wouldn't work
> >> about
> >> it?
> >>  Jim Bell
> >>
> >> On Sunday, December 9, 2018, 11:22:37 PM PST, jim bell
> >>  wrote:
> >>
> >>   [apparently the address for the CP list wasn't the one I normally use]
> >>   My comments inline:
> >>
> >> On Sunday, December 9, 2018, 3:23:09 PM PST, furrier
> >>  wrote:
> >>
> >>  >I watched you live both in Acapulco and Prague. I don't agree with you
> >> and I don't understand how can people be so naive to think that AP
> >> can actually work.
> >>
> >> Prior to the invention of the RSA encryption system (public-key) the vast
> >> majority of the population would not have understood how such a thing
> >> could
> >> work.Prior to the invention of the TOR system, the vast majority of the
> >> population would not have understood how such a thing could work.Prior to
> >> the invention of Bitcoin, the vast majority of the population would not
> >> have
> >> understood how such a thing could work.Prior to the invention of
> >> Ethereum,
> >> the vast majority of the population would not have understood how such a
> >> thing could work.
> >> But does the opinion of the public determine whether a given invention
> >> can
> >> work?   Your statement implies that the opinion of the masses is somehow
> >> determinative of whether a technical advance should work.
> >> Can you explain why you think that AP shouldn't work?  Today?   Your
> >> position would have sounded plausible in 1995-96.  Then, your technical
> >> ignorance approximated virtually everyone else's.  But a lot has happened
> >> since then.
> >>
> >>
> >>  >I am against the whole idea
> >>
> >> I am fond of pointing out that governments killed about 250 million
> >> people
> >> in the 20th century.   See "Democide".
> >>  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Democide   (although, the definition
> >> varies;
> >> some people don't consider people killed in war to be victims of
> >> Democide.
> >> I consider that position to be insanely foolish.)  Were you against that?
> >> If you were, how important do (or did) you think it was that this murder
> >> be
> >> stopped?
> >> If you agree that it was wrong that governments murdered 250 million
> >> people
> >> in the 20th century, then it is inaccurate to say you are against the
> >> WHOLE
> >> idea of AP.  Because most people seem to agree that if AP was
> >> implemented,
> >> 

Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-13 Thread jim bell
 Any answer from Karl or Furrier?
Naturally, I'm genuinely interested to find out if my AP idea has any flaws.  
Many people could say, and no doubt many of them have said, 'I just don't LIKE 
your AP idea, Jim!'.   But that doesn't mean it wouldn't work.  Or that it 
isn't necessary.  
A person could really make a name for himself if:
1)  He figured out a distinct flaw in the AP idea, such that it wouldn't work.. 
                                                                               
OR
2)  He figured out a solution that would make AP unnecessary.
Has anybody done this?   I haven't seen it.
                       Jim Bell


On Tuesday, December 11, 2018, 5:52:45 PM PST, jim bell  
wrote:
 
 
  On Tuesday, December 11, 2018, 2:18:45 PM PST, Karl  wrote:
 

>I think I'm beginning to understand some of where you come from.  It
sounds like you blame our problems on the presence of legal
government.

I don't know why you added the word "legal" before the word "government".  A 
redundancy?  Or are you trying to distinguish between "legal government" and 
some sort of "illegal government"?   I hope you are not using the word "legal" 
as a stand-in for "legitimate".  
But yes, I do blame "government" for much of the problems society has today.  

"  I believe government is mostly just expressing the wishesof those with the 
power to influence votes and laws."

The devil is in the details, no doubt.  One major problem is that the total 
number of such people is much less than even a majority of the population.  One 
commonly-cited statistic is that the top 1% of Federal taxpayers pays 37% of 
the total Federal income taxes.  Many people don't seem to have a problem with 
that, but I wonder:   Would they have a problem with those 1% of taxpayers 
having 37% of the influence over the policies of the Federal Government?

Myself, I think it would have been far better if the 16 Amendment (the Income 
Tax amendment) had been limited to, for example, a maximum of 5% tax, rather 
than it being unlimited.  Limit it to 5%, and the Federal government would be 
far smaller than it is today, maybe one-fifth as large.  

>I see money as the biggest source of votes and laws, so I don't seethings 
>changing too much with the introduction of AP. 

Okay, what do you think would happen?

> I believe money
also provides greater anonymity and ability to surveil than e.g. Tor
provides for the masses.

How would that work?  

             Jim Bell

More responses in-line.

On 12/11/18, jim bell  wrote:
> I searched, and found a number of messages about "Public Shielded Work
> Room", but that was all I found in 2018.  What was the date you sent the
> message?  Was it to the CP list, or to me directly?  You could send it to me
> again, at my email address.

Sorry, I tried to contact you before I began participating in this
list.  I submitted a comment to the AP website, but I'm not sure what
e-mail address I used, so it's nothing to worry about.  I'm happy you
got this e-mail here.

>>As it offers a market, doesn't AP give life-and-death power to those
> with the most money?
>
> Well, it kinda-sorta gives life-and-death power to just about everyone, in
> small parts.  And superficially, it looks like people who have more money
> will have more such influence.  People who are fixated on the issue of
> "inequality" will initially find this to be either a fatal flaw or at least
> a major drawback.

Inequality is relevant here, because in a free market, people try to
make the largest profit, and this will be provided by the highest
payout.  A relatively small price by many people on a leader will be
swamped by a price of $40 billion by one wealthy individual on their
opposition.  The people with exponentially inequal finances can then
directly control the political presence of the world.

> In the pre-AP world, achieving political change requires speaking out,
> identifying yourself.  That potentially makes such people targets.  In the
> post-AP world, nobody has to speak out publicly.  And what speech occurs can
> probably be made anonymous.  How would "the rich" target their "enemies" if
> they cannot identify them?

>I agree that providing for more anonymous dissent is greatly helpful.
I worry that focusing on it so strongly here can be misleading,
though: "the rich" can hide and hunt exponentially better than the
masses can, who are surveilled daily by e.g. spyware controlled by
groups more powerful than them, and can't hire people or push legal
systems to do things for them.

>"The rich" could target enemies by (A) targeting the systems that
facilitate their discourse, (B) outbidding them, and (C) using their
immense resources to hunt them down.  Additionally, there are likely
tricks to put a ton of pressure on something, like informing to the
FBI that an offer was made by a terrorist.

I still don't understand how you expect "the rich" to know who their enemies 
are.  It's hard to target what you can't identify.  


>What's to 

Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-11 Thread jim bell
 On Tuesday, December 11, 2018, 2:18:45 PM PST, Karl  wrote:
 

>I think I'm beginning to understand some of where you come from.  It
sounds like you blame our problems on the presence of legal
government.

I don't know why you added the word "legal" before the word "government".  A 
redundancy?  Or are you trying to distinguish between "legal government" and 
some sort of "illegal government"?   I hope you are not using the word "legal" 
as a stand-in for "legitimate".  
But yes, I do blame "government" for much of the problems society has today.  

"  I believe government is mostly just expressing the wishesof those with the 
power to influence votes and laws."

The devil is in the details, no doubt.  One major problem is that the total 
number of such people is much less than even a majority of the population.  One 
commonly-cited statistic is that the top 1% of Federal taxpayers pays 37% of 
the total Federal income taxes.  Many people don't seem to have a problem with 
that, but I wonder:   Would they have a problem with those 1% of taxpayers 
having 37% of the influence over the policies of the Federal Government?

Myself, I think it would have been far better if the 16 Amendment (the Income 
Tax amendment) had been limited to, for example, a maximum of 5% tax, rather 
than it being unlimited.  Limit it to 5%, and the Federal government would be 
far smaller than it is today, maybe one-fifth as large.  

>I see money as the biggest source of votes and laws, so I don't seethings 
>changing too much with the introduction of AP. 

Okay, what do you think would happen?

> I believe money
also provides greater anonymity and ability to surveil than e.g. Tor
provides for the masses.

How would that work?  

             Jim Bell

More responses in-line.

On 12/11/18, jim bell  wrote:
> I searched, and found a number of messages about "Public Shielded Work
> Room", but that was all I found in 2018.  What was the date you sent the
> message?  Was it to the CP list, or to me directly?  You could send it to me
> again, at my email address.

Sorry, I tried to contact you before I began participating in this
list.  I submitted a comment to the AP website, but I'm not sure what
e-mail address I used, so it's nothing to worry about.  I'm happy you
got this e-mail here.

>>As it offers a market, doesn't AP give life-and-death power to those
> with the most money?
>
> Well, it kinda-sorta gives life-and-death power to just about everyone, in
> small parts.  And superficially, it looks like people who have more money
> will have more such influence.  People who are fixated on the issue of
> "inequality" will initially find this to be either a fatal flaw or at least
> a major drawback.

Inequality is relevant here, because in a free market, people try to
make the largest profit, and this will be provided by the highest
payout.  A relatively small price by many people on a leader will be
swamped by a price of $40 billion by one wealthy individual on their
opposition.  The people with exponentially inequal finances can then
directly control the political presence of the world.

> In the pre-AP world, achieving political change requires speaking out,
> identifying yourself.  That potentially makes such people targets.  In the
> post-AP world, nobody has to speak out publicly.  And what speech occurs can
> probably be made anonymous.  How would "the rich" target their "enemies" if
> they cannot identify them?

>I agree that providing for more anonymous dissent is greatly helpful.
I worry that focusing on it so strongly here can be misleading,
though: "the rich" can hide and hunt exponentially better than the
masses can, who are surveilled daily by e.g. spyware controlled by
groups more powerful than them, and can't hire people or push legal
systems to do things for them.

>"The rich" could target enemies by (A) targeting the systems that
facilitate their discourse, (B) outbidding them, and (C) using their
immense resources to hunt them down.  Additionally, there are likely
tricks to put a ton of pressure on something, like informing to the
FBI that an offer was made by a terrorist.

I still don't understand how you expect "the rich" to know who their enemies 
are.  It's hard to target what you can't identify.  


>What's to stop a major investor in a military weapons corporation
putting their profits into AP offers for assassinations of the
operators of servers allowing access, until nobody can access it?
This would be a profitable move for them, if AP would make their
military weapons obsolete.

Ethereum has been implemented in the last few years.  It's a distributed 
computer system that, I suppose, anyone can 'join'.  A great idea. When I 
thought of my AP idea, in 1995, I imagined a hidden server protected by some 
sort of anonymization.  Vaguely like a TOR-protected Dark Market.   Plausible, 
but Ethereum seems to have the power to supplant it.  Rather than the AP server 
running at one specific, hidden location, 

Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-11 Thread Karl
Jim,

Thanks for your reply.

I think I'm beginning to understand some of where you come from.  It
sounds like you blame our problems on the presence of legal
government.  I believe government is mostly just expressing the wishes
of those with the power to influence votes and laws.

I see money as the biggest source of votes and laws, so I don't see
things changing too much with the introduction of AP.  I believe money
also provides greater anonymity and ability to surveil than e.g. Tor
provides for the masses.

More responses in-line.

On 12/11/18, jim bell  wrote:
> I searched, and found a number of messages about "Public Shielded Work
> Room", but that was all I found in 2018.  What was the date you sent the
> message?  Was it to the CP list, or to me directly?  You could send it to me
> again, at my email address.

Sorry, I tried to contact you before I began participating in this
list.  I submitted a comment to the AP website, but I'm not sure what
e-mail address I used, so it's nothing to worry about.  I'm happy you
got this e-mail here.

>>As it offers a market, doesn't AP give life-and-death power to those
> with the most money?
>
> Well, it kinda-sorta gives life-and-death power to just about everyone, in
> small parts.  And superficially, it looks like people who have more money
> will have more such influence.  People who are fixated on the issue of
> "inequality" will initially find this to be either a fatal flaw or at least
> a major drawback.

Inequality is relevant here, because in a free market, people try to
make the largest profit, and this will be provided by the highest
payout.  A relatively small price by many people on a leader will be
swamped by a price of $40 billion by one wealthy individual on their
opposition.  The people with exponentially inequal finances can then
directly control the political presence of the world.

> In the pre-AP world, achieving political change requires speaking out,
> identifying yourself.  That potentially makes such people targets.  In the
> post-AP world, nobody has to speak out publicly.  And what speech occurs can
> probably be made anonymous.  How would "the rich" target their "enemies" if
> they cannot identify them?

I agree that providing for more anonymous dissent is greatly helpful.
I worry that focusing on it so strongly here can be misleading,
though: "the rich" can hide and hunt exponentially better than the
masses can, who are surveilled daily by e.g. spyware controlled by
groups more powerful than them, and can't hire people or push legal
systems to do things for them.

"The rich" could target enemies by (A) targeting the systems that
facilitate their discourse, (B) outbidding them, and (C) using their
immense resources to hunt them down.  Additionally, there are likely
tricks to put a ton of pressure on something, like informing to the
FBI that an offer was made by a terrorist.

> Further, I think it can accurately be said that government is used to
> maintain inequality, although the means of doing so is normally hidden from
> public view and awareness.  Government provides favors to those who "play"
> the game.   Get rid of government, at least the massive bloated one America
> (for example) currently has, and how would anybody make money off of it?
> The current U.S. military budget of over $700 billion is an excellent
> example of this.   Using an AP-type system, why can't the region formerly
> known as "America" defend itself on a figure 100x smaller than this, or
> maybe $7 billion dollars?  After all, if it costs,say, $10 million to kill a
> threatening leader, you could kill 700 such threatening leaders with $7
> billion dollars.  No need to buy tanks, bombers, jet fighters, or any of
> that expensive military hardware.

What's to stop a major investor in a military weapons corporation
putting their profits into AP offers for assassinations of the
operators of servers allowing access, until nobody can access it?
This would be a profitable move for them, if AP would make their
military weapons obsolete.

>>Wouldn't this provide for the set of people with the most money to
> bend power more and more towards themselves, eventually producing a
> situation where a few select people control the many?
>
> If AP can be said to be "biased" in any way, that "bias" is in the direction
> of tearing down involuntary heirarchical power structures.  It isn't clear
> how AP can be used to build up such power structures, instead.  Anybody who
> exercises power openly will tend to make others his enemies, and they would
> be able to use AP to counter such a person.  That doesn't exclude the
> possibility of exercising power secretly, but it is a reasonable question
> how that trick might be accomplished.

AP itself provides a method to exercise power secretly.  People with
more money can put bigger prices on their opponents' heads.  If people
start putting a price on them in return, they can look at the media
sources resulting in those opinions, 

AP was Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-11 Thread juan
On Tue, 11 Dec 2018 13:31:38 +
Karl  wrote:

> Came up with a counterargument:
> 
> The rich few already control the many perhaps via lobbying, bribing,
> black markets, 

the rich and the government akready have vast powers. The thieving 
oligarchy also know as 'the rich' don't really operate on black markets, black 
markets being somewhat more honest that the 'free', completely rigged, 
mainstream market. 


> but AP makes the process transparent, resulting in an
> environment that is actually safer than before.


AP only makes sense if it allows ordinary people to kill 
government-corporate criminals.

However if AP can be used against innocent people, then it obviously 
becomes more problematic...




> 
> Karl
> 




Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-11 Thread jim bell
 My comments inline.
               Jim Bell

On Tuesday, December 11, 2018, 3:29:14 AM PST, Karl  
wrote:  
 
 >Hi Jim Bell,>I sent you a message some time ago when I heard about this idea, 
 >but I
didn't get a reply.

I searched, and found a number of messages about "Public Shielded Work Room", 
but that was all I found in 2018.  What was the date you sent the message?  Was 
it to the CP list, or to me directly?  You could send it to me again, at my 
email address.

>If you receive this e-mail, this is my misunderstanding:

>As it offers a market, doesn't AP give life-and-death power to those
with the most money?

Well, it kinda-sorta gives life-and-death power to just about everyone, in 
small parts.  And superficially, it looks like people who have more money will 
have more such influence.  People who are fixated on the issue of "inequality" 
will initially find this to be either a fatal flaw or at least a major drawback.
In the pre-AP world, achieving political change requires speaking out, 
identifying yourself.  That potentially makes such people targets.  In the 
post-AP world, nobody has to speak out publicly.  And what speech occurs can 
probably be made anonymous.  How would "the rich" target their "enemies" if 
they cannot identify them?
Further, I think it can accurately be said that government is used to maintain 
inequality, although the means of doing so is normally hidden from public view 
and awareness.  Government provides favors to those who "play" the game.   Get 
rid of government, at least the massive bloated one America (for example) 
currently has, and how would anybody make money off of it?
The current U.S. military budget of over $700 billion is an excellent example 
of this.   Using an AP-type system, why can't the region formerly known as 
"America" defend itself on a figure 100x smaller than this, or maybe $7 billion 
dollars?  After all, if it costs,say, $10 million to kill a threatening leader, 
you could kill 700 such threatening leaders with $7 billion dollars.  No need 
to buy tanks, bombers, jet fighters, or any of that expensive military 
hardware.  

>Wouldn't this provide for the set of people with the most money to
bend power more and more towards themselves, eventually producing a
situation where a few select people control the many?

If AP can be said to be "biased" in any way, that "bias" is in the direction of 
tearing down involuntary heirarchical power structures.  It isn't clear how AP 
can be used to build up such power structures, instead.  Anybody who exercises 
power openly will tend to make others his enemies, and they would be able to 
use AP to counter such a person.  That doesn't exclude the possibility of 
exercising power secretly, but it is a reasonable question how that trick might 
be accomplished.  
You said,  "a few select people control the many?".   How would that come 
about?  Who would be "the select few"?   (We might suspect that at least 
initially, they would be "the rich", at least those people who are currently 
rich.)
But how would they "control" the large masses?   They would no longer be able 
to use the structures of government to maintain their positions, I think.  They 
wouldn't be able to identify those in "the many", at least not the relative few 
that those "in control" would consider their enemies.
Taxing them would be a problem.  Passing onerous and discriminatory laws 
shouldn't even be possible, since the governments that would do so, and enforce 
them, will be dismantled.   There should be a free market, ideally a truly free 
market,, and not the 'crony-capitalism', and 'crony-socialism' we now have in 
America and Europe.  Am I being too optimistic?  I won't claim to be unbiased, 
as I am the person who thought up the AP concept initially.  But large numbers 
of people have been exposed to the AP idea, and I continually do 
Google-searches for such appearances.   (Such as Google "jim bell" 
"assassination".)   Myself, I would greatly welcome further discussion.  
Yes, these issues ought to be debated.  Although, I think that relatively few 
people who are familiar with AP doubt that there is going to be an actual 
problem.  At least, I haven't seen that.  


>Personally, I support cryptocurrency, but I foremost support power to
be given to those with good _reasons_, rather than strong _financial_
resources, and systems to be put into place allowing these reasons to
be discussed without censorship.


Keep in mind that I think I discovered AP, rather than INVENTING it.  (See the 
question of whether mathematics was discovered or invented.   Example 
commentary:   https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/article/great-math-mystery/     
https://www.huffingtonpost.com/derek-abbott/is-mathematics-invented-o_b_3895622.html
  )

I can describe how I think AP ought to be implemented, but I've always pointed 
out that nothing would stop a different person or organization from starting an 
AP-type system that works with different 

Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-11 Thread Karl
Came up with a counterargument:

The rich few already control the many perhaps via lobbying, bribing,
black markets, but AP makes the process transparent, resulting in an
environment that is actually safer than before.

Karl

On 12/11/18, Karl  wrote:
> Hi Jim Bell,
>
> I sent you a message some time ago when I heard about this idea, but I
> didn't get a reply.
>
> If you receive this e-mail, this is my misunderstanding:
>
> As it offers a market, doesn't AP give life-and-death power to those
> with the most money?
>
> Wouldn't this provide for the set of people with the most money to
> bend power more and more towards themselves, eventually producing a
> situation where a few select people control the many?
>
> Personally, I support cryptocurrency, but I foremost support power to
> be given to those with good _reasons_, rather than strong _financial_
> resources, and systems to be put into place allowing these reasons to
> be discussed without censorship.
>
> Thanks,
> Karl
>
> On 12/11/18, jim bell  wrote:
>>  furrier 
>> Furrier:
>> I notice that you haven't responded to my comment.  Do you not have any
>> answer?  You claim to not "agree" with me.   If that were the case, you
>> should be able to explain why.
>> Why don't you think AP could work?  What do you believe wouldn't work
>> about
>> it?
>>  Jim Bell
>>
>> On Sunday, December 9, 2018, 11:22:37 PM PST, jim bell
>>  wrote:
>>
>>   [apparently the address for the CP list wasn't the one I normally use]
>>   My comments inline:
>>
>> On Sunday, December 9, 2018, 3:23:09 PM PST, furrier
>>  wrote:
>>
>>  >I watched you live both in Acapulco and Prague. I don't agree with you
>> and I don't understand how can people be so naive to think that AP
>> can actually work.
>>
>> Prior to the invention of the RSA encryption system (public-key) the vast
>> majority of the population would not have understood how such a thing
>> could
>> work.Prior to the invention of the TOR system, the vast majority of the
>> population would not have understood how such a thing could work.Prior to
>> the invention of Bitcoin, the vast majority of the population would not
>> have
>> understood how such a thing could work.Prior to the invention of
>> Ethereum,
>> the vast majority of the population would not have understood how such a
>> thing could work.
>> But does the opinion of the public determine whether a given invention
>> can
>> work?   Your statement implies that the opinion of the masses is somehow
>> determinative of whether a technical advance should work.
>> Can you explain why you think that AP shouldn't work?  Today?   Your
>> position would have sounded plausible in 1995-96.  Then, your technical
>> ignorance approximated virtually everyone else's.  But a lot has happened
>> since then.
>>
>>
>>  >I am against the whole idea
>>
>> I am fond of pointing out that governments killed about 250 million
>> people
>> in the 20th century.   See "Democide".
>>  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Democide   (although, the definition
>> varies;
>> some people don't consider people killed in war to be victims of
>> Democide.
>> I consider that position to be insanely foolish.)  Were you against that?
>> If you were, how important do (or did) you think it was that this murder
>> be
>> stopped?
>> If you agree that it was wrong that governments murdered 250 million
>> people
>> in the 20th century, then it is inaccurate to say you are against the
>> WHOLE
>> idea of AP.  Because most people seem to agree that if AP was
>> implemented,
>> governments would no longer be able to kill people in such vast numbers,
>> ever again.  Maybe your (confused) position is that you don't want
>> governments to kill people, but you cannot figure out how to stop that
>> from
>> occurring.  Well, you can't, but I can.  Am I really wrong?
>>
>>>, it's the same thing as
>> cracking down on cryptocurrency
>>
>> You do not explain that connection.
>>
>>  >or dark markets to fight terrorism.
>>
>>
>> You do not explain that connection.
>>
>>>If you want to fight terrorism
>>
>> That depends on the definition of "terrorism".  The U.S government
>> doesn't
>> define "terrorism" as mere random violence against innocents, but adds
>> the
>> condition that the motivation of the terrorist is to change laws or
>> government, or both.  But to the extent that terrorism attacks innocents,
>> I
>> agree it is wrong.  And must be stopped.
>>
>>> build a society where terrorism is mute.
>>
>>
>> How about building a tool that makes "terrorism" completely unnecessary.
>> Tim McVeigh didn't have a "magic bomb" which, when detonated, killed only
>> the top 30 government employees responsible for the Waco massacre, even
>> though they might have been hundreds of miles away from each other.  Do
>> you
>> think that if McVeigh HAD access to such a "magic bomb", he would have
>> preferred instead to destroy an entire building in Oklahoma city filled
>> with
>> innocents and 

Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-11 Thread Karl
Hi Jim Bell,

I sent you a message some time ago when I heard about this idea, but I
didn't get a reply.

If you receive this e-mail, this is my misunderstanding:

As it offers a market, doesn't AP give life-and-death power to those
with the most money?

Wouldn't this provide for the set of people with the most money to
bend power more and more towards themselves, eventually producing a
situation where a few select people control the many?

Personally, I support cryptocurrency, but I foremost support power to
be given to those with good _reasons_, rather than strong _financial_
resources, and systems to be put into place allowing these reasons to
be discussed without censorship.

Thanks,
Karl

On 12/11/18, jim bell  wrote:
>  furrier 
> Furrier:
> I notice that you haven't responded to my comment.  Do you not have any
> answer?  You claim to not "agree" with me.   If that were the case, you
> should be able to explain why.
> Why don't you think AP could work?  What do you believe wouldn't work about
> it?
>  Jim Bell
>
> On Sunday, December 9, 2018, 11:22:37 PM PST, jim bell
>  wrote:
>
>   [apparently the address for the CP list wasn't the one I normally use]
>   My comments inline:
>
> On Sunday, December 9, 2018, 3:23:09 PM PST, furrier
>  wrote:
>
>  >I watched you live both in Acapulco and Prague. I don't agree with you
> and I don't understand how can people be so naive to think that AP
> can actually work.
>
> Prior to the invention of the RSA encryption system (public-key) the vast
> majority of the population would not have understood how such a thing could
> work.Prior to the invention of the TOR system, the vast majority of the
> population would not have understood how such a thing could work.Prior to
> the invention of Bitcoin, the vast majority of the population would not have
> understood how such a thing could work.Prior to the invention of Ethereum,
> the vast majority of the population would not have understood how such a
> thing could work.
> But does the opinion of the public determine whether a given invention can
> work?   Your statement implies that the opinion of the masses is somehow
> determinative of whether a technical advance should work.
> Can you explain why you think that AP shouldn't work?  Today?   Your
> position would have sounded plausible in 1995-96.  Then, your technical
> ignorance approximated virtually everyone else's.  But a lot has happened
> since then.
>
>
>  >I am against the whole idea
>
> I am fond of pointing out that governments killed about 250 million people
> in the 20th century.   See "Democide".
>  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Democide   (although, the definition varies;
> some people don't consider people killed in war to be victims of Democide.
> I consider that position to be insanely foolish.)  Were you against that?
> If you were, how important do (or did) you think it was that this murder be
> stopped?
> If you agree that it was wrong that governments murdered 250 million people
> in the 20th century, then it is inaccurate to say you are against the WHOLE
> idea of AP.  Because most people seem to agree that if AP was implemented,
> governments would no longer be able to kill people in such vast numbers,
> ever again.  Maybe your (confused) position is that you don't want
> governments to kill people, but you cannot figure out how to stop that from
> occurring.  Well, you can't, but I can.  Am I really wrong?
>
>>, it's the same thing as
> cracking down on cryptocurrency
>
> You do not explain that connection.
>
>  >or dark markets to fight terrorism.
>
>
> You do not explain that connection.
>
>>If you want to fight terrorism
>
> That depends on the definition of "terrorism".  The U.S government doesn't
> define "terrorism" as mere random violence against innocents, but adds the
> condition that the motivation of the terrorist is to change laws or
> government, or both.  But to the extent that terrorism attacks innocents, I
> agree it is wrong.  And must be stopped.
>
>> build a society where terrorism is mute.
>
>
> How about building a tool that makes "terrorism" completely unnecessary.
> Tim McVeigh didn't have a "magic bomb" which, when detonated, killed only
> the top 30 government employees responsible for the Waco massacre, even
> though they might have been hundreds of miles away from each other.  Do you
> think that if McVeigh HAD access to such a "magic bomb", he would have
> preferred instead to destroy an entire building in Oklahoma city filled with
> innocents and relative-innocents?  I consider such a position preposterous,
> and probably you'd agree as well.  AP can be described as a "magic weapon"
> that can be used to target precisely the actual problem-causers, with little
> and probably no collateral damage.  Please explain your precise objection to
> implementing it as I advocate.
>
>>Similar, if you want to fight politicians, build a society where politics
>> are
> either mute or they don't 

Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-10 Thread jim bell
 furrier 
Furrier:
I notice that you haven't responded to my comment.  Do you not have any answer? 
 You claim to not "agree" with me.   If that were the case, you should be able 
to explain why.
Why don't you think AP could work?  What do you believe wouldn't work about it?
                     Jim Bell

On Sunday, December 9, 2018, 11:22:37 PM PST, jim bell  
wrote:  
 
  [apparently the address for the CP list wasn't the one I normally use]
  My comments inline:

On Sunday, December 9, 2018, 3:23:09 PM PST, furrier 
 wrote:  
 
 >I watched you live both in Acapulco and Prague. I don't agree with you
and I don't understand how can people be so naive to think that AP
can actually work.

Prior to the invention of the RSA encryption system (public-key) the vast 
majority of the population would not have understood how such a thing could 
work.Prior to the invention of the TOR system, the vast majority of the 
population would not have understood how such a thing could work.Prior to the 
invention of Bitcoin, the vast majority of the population would not have 
understood how such a thing could work.Prior to the invention of Ethereum, the 
vast majority of the population would not have understood how such a thing 
could work.  
But does the opinion of the public determine whether a given invention can 
work?   Your statement implies that the opinion of the masses is somehow 
determinative of whether a technical advance should work.  
Can you explain why you think that AP shouldn't work?  Today?   Your position 
would have sounded plausible in 1995-96.  Then, your technical ignorance 
approximated virtually everyone else's.  But a lot has happened since then.  


 >I am against the whole idea

I am fond of pointing out that governments killed about 250 million people in 
the 20th century.   See "Democide".   https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Democide   
(although, the definition varies; some people don't consider people killed in 
war to be victims of Democide.  I consider that position to be insanely 
foolish.)  Were you against that?  If you were, how important do (or did) you 
think it was that this murder be stopped?  
If you agree that it was wrong that governments murdered 250 million people in 
the 20th century, then it is inaccurate to say you are against the WHOLE idea 
of AP.  Because most people seem to agree that if AP was implemented, 
governments would no longer be able to kill people in such vast numbers, ever 
again.  Maybe your (confused) position is that you don't want governments to 
kill people, but you cannot figure out how to stop that from occurring.  Well, 
you can't, but I can.  Am I really wrong?  

>, it's the same thing as
cracking down on cryptocurrency

You do not explain that connection.

 >or dark markets to fight terrorism.


You do not explain that connection.

>If you want to fight terrorism

That depends on the definition of "terrorism".  The U.S government doesn't 
define "terrorism" as mere random violence against innocents, but adds the 
condition that the motivation of the terrorist is to change laws or government, 
or both.  But to the extent that terrorism attacks innocents, I agree it is 
wrong.  And must be stopped.  

> build a society where terrorism is mute.


How about building a tool that makes "terrorism" completely unnecessary.  Tim 
McVeigh didn't have a "magic bomb" which, when detonated, killed only the top 
30 government employees responsible for the Waco massacre, even though they 
might have been hundreds of miles away from each other.  Do you think that if 
McVeigh HAD access to such a "magic bomb", he would have preferred instead to 
destroy an entire building in Oklahoma city filled with innocents and 
relative-innocents?  I consider such a position preposterous, and probably 
you'd agree as well.  AP can be described as a "magic weapon" that can be used 
to target precisely the actual problem-causers, with little and probably no 
collateral damage.  Please explain your precise objection to implementing it as 
I advocate.  

>Similar, if you want to fight politicians, build a society where politics are
either mute or they don't affect our lives so much. Wake up people!


If you can explain how to do that, speak up.  
I am reminded of a joke, where a comedian says he bought a book titled "How to 
be a successful millionaire!".   The first page of the book simply contained 
the words, "First get a million dollars".  
But how?

  

AP was Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-10 Thread juan
On Sun, 09 Dec 2018 23:23:05 +
furrier  wrote:

> I watched you live both in Acapulco and Prague. I don't agree with you
> and I don't understand how can people be so naive to think that AP
> can actually work. I am against the whole idea, it's the same thing as
> cracking down on cryptocurrency or dark markets to fight terrorism.


I think killing trump, the 'ceos'/owners of amazon, apple, google, 
facebook, goldman sachs, military 'leaders' and other politicians would have a 
very healthy effect on 'society'. Besides, killing those animals is simply an 
act of justice. 

The problem with AP is of course how to implement it. 

Given the fast progress towards a complete, global, police-surveillance 
state where every person is tracked in realtime (see radar satelites for 
instance) the chances of ever implementing AP seem minimal though.



> If you want to fight terrorism, build a society where terrorism is mute.
> Similar, if you want to fight politicians, build a society where politics are
> either mute or they don't affect our lives so much. 


Well, killing them is one way to reduce their influence =)



Wake up people!
> 
> Anyway, to stay on-topic, FUCK BCH
> 
> ‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐
> On Saturday, December 8, 2018 7:37 PM, jim bell  wrote:
> 
> > On Saturday, December 8, 2018, 7:37:50 AM PST, John Newman 
> >  wrote:
> >
> >> On Dec 7, 2018, at 12:37 PM, furrier  wrote:
> >>
> >>> I will disagree with you here. Craig may be an idiot and
> >>> the fact that he holds patents makes him dangerous but he
> >>> does not have the network effect that the BCH "community" has.
> >>> They are all over the place when it comes to fake
> >>> libertarianism. I attended Anarchapulco last February, these
> >
> >>Did you get to watch Jim Bell speak ?  :P
> >
> > My speech at Anarchapulco 2018 was punctuated by two memorable things:  
> > One, an audio artifact "gunshot", which they informed me that had occurred 
> > with at least one previous speaker as well.  The second, about 5 minutes 
> > before my speech was intended to end, was an earthquake, maybe it was 
> > magnitude 7, but the epicenter was a hundred or so miles south of Acapulco, 
> > so it was only a mild shaking locally.
> >
> > Still, it was quite memorable.
> >
> >   Jim Bell


Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-09 Thread furrier
I watched you live both in Acapulco and Prague. I don't agree with you
and I don't understand how can people be so naive to think that AP
can actually work. I am against the whole idea, it's the same thing as
cracking down on cryptocurrency or dark markets to fight terrorism.
If you want to fight terrorism, build a society where terrorism is mute.
Similar, if you want to fight politicians, build a society where politics are
either mute or they don't affect our lives so much. Wake up people!

Anyway, to stay on-topic, FUCK BCH

‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐
On Saturday, December 8, 2018 7:37 PM, jim bell  wrote:

> On Saturday, December 8, 2018, 7:37:50 AM PST, John Newman  
> wrote:
>
>> On Dec 7, 2018, at 12:37 PM, furrier  wrote:
>>
>>> I will disagree with you here. Craig may be an idiot and
>>> the fact that he holds patents makes him dangerous but he
>>> does not have the network effect that the BCH "community" has.
>>> They are all over the place when it comes to fake
>>> libertarianism. I attended Anarchapulco last February, these
>
>>Did you get to watch Jim Bell speak ?  :P
>
> My speech at Anarchapulco 2018 was punctuated by two memorable things:  One, 
> an audio artifact "gunshot", which they informed me that had occurred with at 
> least one previous speaker as well.  The second, about 5 minutes before my 
> speech was intended to end, was an earthquake, maybe it was magnitude 7, but 
> the epicenter was a hundred or so miles south of Acapulco, so it was only a 
> mild shaking locally.
>
> Still, it was quite memorable.
>
>   Jim Bell

Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-08 Thread jim bell
 On Saturday, December 8, 2018, 7:37:50 AM PST, John Newman  
wrote:
 

> On Dec 7, 2018, at 12:37 PM, furrier  wrote:
> 
>> I will disagree with you here. Craig may be an idiot and
>> the fact that he holds patents makes him dangerous but he
>> does not have the network effect that the BCH "community" has.
>> They are all over the place when it comes to fake
>> libertarianism. I attended Anarchapulco last February, these


>Did you get to watch Jim Bell speak ?  :P

My speech at Anarchapulco 2018 was punctuated by two memorable things:  One, an 
audio artifact "gunshot", which they informed me that had occurred with at 
least one previous speaker as well.  The second, about 5 minutes before my 
speech was intended to end, was an earthquake, maybe it was magnitude 7, but 
the epicenter was a hundred or so miles south of Acapulco, so it was only a 
mild shaking locally.  
Still, it was quite memorable.  
                      Jim Bell  

Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-08 Thread John Newman



> On Dec 7, 2018, at 12:37 PM, furrier  wrote:
> 
> I will disagree with you here. Craig may be an idiot and
> the fact that he holds patents makes him dangerous but he
> does not have the network effect that the BCH "community" has.
> They are all over the place when it comes to fake
> libertarianism. I attended Anarchapulco last February, these


Did you get to watch Jim Bell speak ?  :P


> guys are FAR MORE DANGEROUS than Faketoshi. Both of these
> shitcoins are meant to go down.
> 
> 
> Sent with ProtonMail Secure Email.
> 
> ‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐
> On Monday, December 3, 2018 12:49 AM, juan  wrote:
> 
>> On Sun, 02 Dec 2018 23:25:52 +
>> furrier furr...@protonmail.ch wrote:
>> 
>>> FYI I don't give a flying fuck about BSV and I consider
>>> Faketoshi an idiot and dangerous scammer but I really
>>> enjoyed this guy's breakdown of the BCH problems that
>>> were made apparent after the split. Instead of making
>>> assumptions, you could just ask.
>> 
>>My mistake, I apologize then.
>> 
>> 
>> However, the article is unimpressive because the author tries to present 
>> himself as "politically unbiased" while in reality he's a partisan for the 
>> worst bitcoin faction, that of wright. All 3 bitcoin factions are less than 
>> ideal but wright's is by far the worst.
> 
> 



Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-07 Thread furrier
I will disagree with you here. Craig may be an idiot and
the fact that he holds patents makes him dangerous but he
does not have the network effect that the BCH "community" has.
They are all over the place when it comes to fake
libertarianism. I attended Anarchapulco last February, these
guys are FAR MORE DANGEROUS than Faketoshi. Both of these
shitcoins are meant to go down.


Sent with ProtonMail Secure Email.

‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐
On Monday, December 3, 2018 12:49 AM, juan  wrote:

> On Sun, 02 Dec 2018 23:25:52 +
> furrier furr...@protonmail.ch wrote:
>
> > FYI I don't give a flying fuck about BSV and I consider
> > Faketoshi an idiot and dangerous scammer but I really
> > enjoyed this guy's breakdown of the BCH problems that
> > were made apparent after the split. Instead of making
> > assumptions, you could just ask.
>
> My mistake, I apologize then.
>
>
> However, the article is unimpressive because the author tries to present 
> himself as "politically unbiased" while in reality he's a partisan for the 
> worst bitcoin faction, that of wright. All 3 bitcoin factions are less than 
> ideal but wright's is by far the worst.




Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-02 Thread juan
On Sun, 02 Dec 2018 23:25:52 +
furrier  wrote:

> FYI I don't give a flying fuck about BSV and I consider
> Faketoshi an idiot and dangerous scammer but I really
> enjoyed this guy's breakdown of the BCH problems that
> were made apparent after the split. Instead of making
> assumptions, you could just ask.
> 
> 
My mistake, I apologize then. 

However, the article is unimpressive because the author tries to 
present himself as "politically unbiased" while in reality he's a partisan for 
the worst bitcoin faction, that of wright. All 3 bitcoin factions are less than 
ideal but wright's is by far the worst. 




Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-02 Thread furrier
FYI I don't give a flying fuck about BSV and I consider
Faketoshi an idiot and dangerous scammer but I really
enjoyed this guy's breakdown of the BCH problems that
were made apparent after the split. Instead of making
assumptions, you could just ask.


‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐
On Sunday, December 2, 2018 11:54 PM, juan  wrote:

> On Sun, 02 Dec 2018 20:05:44 +
> furrier furr...@protonmail.ch wrote:
>
> > https://medium.com/@_unwriter/the-resolution-of-the-bitcoin-cash-experiment-52b86d8cd187
> > Libertardians enjoying their scammy experiment
>
> LMAO! The guy who wrote that article is an 'ex' bcrash supporter who is 
> crying because bcrash is 'now' centralized. Except, bcrash was centralized 
> from day zero so the author is a lying asshole.
>
> Unsurprisingly the author is a typical fake libertarian, true fascist 
> babbling about 'economics' and showing his true colors here
>
> 'Google didn’t need to be friends with Tim Berners Lee, neither did Facebook. 
> They just built something valuable. And people came"
>
> What kind of anti libertarian asshole would say that sort of thing?
>
> And there's more :
>
> "The United States of America demonstrated how a new economic superpower can 
> be born from an implementation of capitalism"
>
> But wait, here's the bottom line
>
> "Bitcoin SV is the Real Bitcoin"
>
> YES that retarded scam from the scamming fucktard craig wright who is the 
> REAL SATOSHI, except, he doesn't know how to sign a message with his 
> 'private' 'bitcoin' keys hi hi hi.
>
> furrier furr...@protonmail.ch is some faketoshi bot. Hi there!




Re: BCH finally hit the fan

2018-12-02 Thread juan
On Sun, 02 Dec 2018 20:05:44 +
furrier  wrote:

> https://medium.com/@_unwriter/the-resolution-of-the-bitcoin-cash-experiment-52b86d8cd187
> 
> Libertardians enjoying their scammy experiment


LMAO! The guy who wrote that article is an 'ex' bcrash supporter who is 
crying because bcrash is 'now' centralized. Except, bcrash was centralized from 
day zero so the author is a lying asshole. 

Unsurprisingly the author is a typical fake libertarian, true fascist 
babbling about 'economics' and showing his true colors here 

'Google didn’t need to be friends with Tim Berners Lee, neither did 
Facebook. They just built something valuable. And people came" 

What kind of anti libertarian asshole would say that sort of thing? 

And there's more : 

"The United States of America demonstrated how a new economic 
superpower can be born from an implementation of capitalism" 

But wait, here's the bottom line 

"Bitcoin SV is the Real Bitcoin" 

YES that retarded scam from the scamming fucktard craig wright who 
is the REAL SATOSHI, except, he doesn't know how to sign a message with his 
'private' 'bitcoin' keys hi hi hi.



furrier   is some faketoshi bot. Hi there!