• magic_smoke@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    4 days ago

    Yeah but without anonymous payments (xmr) there’s no good way to easily pay for diy estrogen or hosting for piracy services, or to anonymously pay my mullvad account.

    Granted if society wherent setup as a giant fucking fascist capitalistic panopticon we wouldn’t really need any of that.

    Any who, I mostly agree with the sentiment though. “Career” investors and venture capitalists belong against a fucking wall IMO.

      • clb92@feddit.dk
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        4 days ago

        The ledger being public doesn’t necessarily mean anyone knows who “13LPtD4GG1XX7fgrze6xMR5V284rRQg9jv” is. But yeah, you can of course track the movement of funds, and make educated guesses on which addresses belong to who.

        • Bonsoir@lemmy.ca
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          4 days ago

          Which is pseudonymous, and not anonymous. Unless we are talking about monero of course.

      • Jack Riddle[Any/All]@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        4 days ago

        xmr is a cryptocurrency which aims to make reading transactions from the chain impossible. Iirc the main mechanism of this is that they bundle a lot of transactions together and send out coins from that pool only once it is large enough, without preserving each specific coin. This repeats for a few proxies. You could trace a coin from origin to endpoint, but this would be pretty much useless as you cannot know whether the endpoint was the intended one or not.

      • ImgurRefugee114@reddthat.com
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        4 days ago

        If you bought crypto, same way money laundering works. Otherwise you can earn crypto while remaining anonymous (but in the case of a VPN, connecting to it from your home IP after anonymously buying it kind of defeats the purpose [partially])

        • ViatorOmnium@piefed.social
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          4 days ago

          If you are buying online it will track back to you through the payment method. If you buy in a physical location, you give an important clue to where you live. If a state actor wants to deanonymize you, it’s only a matter of how many resources they are willing to spend on it.

          • Bytemeister@lemmy.world
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            4 days ago

            If a state actor wants to deanonymize you…

            Then there ain’t fucking shit you can do about it. The only thing you can do to keep big brother off your back is to be too small of a fish for them to spend their time on.

      • magic_smoke@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        4 days ago

        Okay, politely, fuck off. Its 2026 and I absolutely refuse to believe anyone educated on crypto enough to know what a blockchain is and how it works, even if just a basic understanding, doesn’t know about encrypted blockchains or XMR.

        You get to post this comment like once in your life, and after that we both know its in bad faith. I really doubt its the first time.

    • stoy@lemmy.zip
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      4 days ago

      You do know that you can pay for mullvad in cash?

      You can send cash in an envelope to them with your mullvad ID and they will credit your account.

      • magic_smoke@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        4 days ago

        Admittedly I’m not a hardcore crytography nerd, but I know they’ve been improving things for years, and that message on that mailing list looked like it was 10 years old.

        Not saying your wrong, but Id take it with a grain of salt. Anytime I see a newer encrypted block chain I see it and think whatever improvements have been done here, will eventually bleed into monero because of that. And that unlike the other encrypted blockchain, people will still actively be using xmr for real transactions.

        • Jack Riddle[Any/All]@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          4 days ago

          You might be right, I have not followed xmr closely. You might also notice that this vulnerability is unlikely to deanonimise you, but the point was more that it is a mistake they shouldn’t have made. Their last audit looks fine, though it was made by a blockchain auditing company which I don’t know. I don’t think there is much harm in using xmr for this, groups who would be capable of exploiting vulnerabilities in this kind of project are unlikely to do so, unless an issue of national security becomes associated somehow

      • Skankhunt420@sh.itjust.works
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        4 days ago

        Zcash has opt in anonymization. So it really doesn’t work because any offramp can just not accept any zcash that has been obfuscated. With monero, its all obfuscated by default.

      • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        4 days ago

        I’m not sure I’d trust whatever that link is as a source that XMR isn’t secure… I mean, what even is that link?

    • chaitae3@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      I really don’t care about the legal form the oligarchs give themselves, but at least the state can impose statutory requirements on banks, even if they’ve always been too lax.

  • Cris@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    Does anyone know I’d proof of stake ended up being better than proof of work? I dont follow crypto but kept hearing that was supposed to improve things

    Crypto is a big deal because it enables grifting and crime, but with how shit payment processors are and their tendency to use their position for censorship, crypto actually would be a potential way of solving that problem IF it werent ludicrously volatile and wasteful. But I have no idea if those problems could really ever be solved, or any progress has been made on those fronts

    • red_tomato@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      Proof of Stake and Proof of Work are two different ways of electing who should append the blockchain with new transactions.

      Proof of Work: the one who can waste most energy fastest is most likely to be elected.

      Proof of Stake: the one with most money is most likely to be elected.

      It’s a bit oversimplified, but that’s the general idea.

      • Knock_Knock_Lemmy_In@lemmy.world
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        4 days ago

        Proof of Stake: the one with most money is most likely to be elected.

        This is misleading. Winning the validation election doesn’t give you more power.

        The one who is most dishonest gets their stake burned.

    • ThrowawayPermanente@sh.itjust.works
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      4 days ago

      Yes, Ethereum has been using PoS successfully for over three years and they’re not the only major blockchain to do so. PoS works great these days, still using PoW in 2026 is a deliberate choice.

    • magic_smoke@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      4 days ago

      IMO xmr kinda saved proof of work by optimising their algo for consumer grade CPUs.

      CPU mining is much less econimcal than GPU because you can’t fit as many CPUs on a single system. Plus server grade CPUs with lots of smol cores instead of a few big ones hurts it too.

      Makes it hard for anyone other than nerds with am extra PC to make money mining, and most of those guys won’t be purposely picking a geographic location with the cheapest/most environmentally harmful electricity source. (More nerds live off of nuclear/solar than datacenters full of miners do)

    • Sir. Haxalot@nord.red
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      4 days ago

      Don’t think crypto is the solution to replacing payment processors. The distributed networks is going to have enormous difficulty scaling to even a fraction of the number of card payments processed each day.

  • neatchee@piefed.social
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    4 days ago

    sigh

    Once again:

    Blockchain is not synonymous with cryptomining

    Blockchain does not require proof of work

    Cryptocurrency and NFT grifting does not devalue blockchain as an immutable distributed ledger

    I swear to god people just copy paste whatever makes them feel good without any effort at understanding

  • NoxAstrum@lemmy.ca
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    4 days ago

    I’m not sure how much of this is accurate, but I have to agree it’s been a bane to humankind. Maybe, just maybe, we should learn to stop, pull our heads out of our asses and think very carefully about potential consequences before we do things.

  • AItoothbrush@lemmy.zip
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    4 days ago

    I really really really doubt those claims. I would need sources to believe that and also the blockchain itself is not a bad idea. Theres also like a thousand different implementations of it. Its like saying every form of currencies are bad.

  • iByteABit@lemmy.ml
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    4 days ago

    I think the technology itself has great potential, though capitalism using it for the worst reasons imaginable and making it as inefficient as physically possible will never show us the true potential of this technology.

    Under different social structures, it could possibly be a pretty great foundation for new kinds of monetary systems

    • rafoix@lemmy.zip
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      4 days ago

      It is inherently less useful than cash and basic electronic monetary transactions.

      Progress is measured by what something does rather than why it could do.

      • iByteABit@lemmy.ml
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        4 days ago

        Much of historical research was seemingly useless for a very long time until some progress in unrelated fields enabled them to suddenly become very useful. I prefer to be open minded about technology, not tying it to the way its used by the current time and political system we are living in