But... Multibit is Java. Java's security problems has made it an instant
uninstall item on windows PCs for about a year now. Java exploits are a
dime a dozen.
Yes, you can reduce some of the problems by manually disabling the browser
plugin, but how many users will do that?
Recommending a fast SP
e pullreqs this evening.
Again, any comments very welcome.
The files are available at
https://redports.org/browser/robbak/net-p2p/bitcoin
Thanks,
Robert Backhaus.
--
Try New Relic Now & We'll Send You this Cool Shi
Not at all - ACK from me, fwiw. Any attempt at a double spend should be
shouted from the housetops.
What Miners should do with that is still up for debate, it seems. My
opinion is that they should hold on and attempt to confirm the first,
letting it go only if a conflicting transaction is mined el
The arguments for it
> are based on some quite faulty thinking about economics. Double spend
> notifications have been proposed a long time ago, I believe Matt has
> indicated some interest in implementing them and that is the right way to
> go.
> On 20 May 2013 18:57, "Pieter
Personally, I agree, but a different decision has been made by the main
devs.
The issue is this: consider two transactions in the unconfirmed pool. One
transaction has 2BTC input, 1.5BTC to one address (the payment), .4995 to
another address (change) and .0005 standard fee. Another transaction
app
While I like the idea of a client using a DHT blockchain or UTXO list, I
don't think that the reference client is the place for it. But it would
make for a very interesting experimental project!
On 29 April 2013 13:36, Gregory Maxwell wrote:
> On Sun, Apr 28, 2013 at 7:57 PM, John Dillon
> wro
That sounds workable. I take it that the P2SH address is not stored? I like
it that this denies the possibility of storing data in the block chain, but
does not block interesting uses like creating date stamps - You can still
store the 'fake P2SH' value whose checksum is secured by the blockchain.
The obvious problem is that if you can frame it as a valid address, you can
put what you want there. If you can make it pass the validation, miners
have no way of knowing it's not a valid address.
Of course, there is nothing new about this. I ran strings on the blockchain
and found all sorts of as
I have done test builds on FreeBSD.
Clean builds using gcc and clang, building both the qt gui and the command
line daemon, and the tests run clean as well. The qt gui runs, and cleanly
reindexed and caught up. I have no problems to report.
I am not doing any adjustments apart from applying the n
On 5 December 2012 19:43, Gary Rowe wrote:
> I would like to chime on on the user experience of the SPV client (in
> particular MultiBit).
>
> Without exception, everyone that I have introduced Bitcoin (which is a lot
> of people) have expected an "instant-on" experience. It has to clobber
> PayP
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