(also in reply to Caleb James Delisle)
Yeah well you create a beautiful sculpture or CG artwork, and you want
to create some digital artifact to prove it was you (beyond reasonable
doubt).
You take your photo, file or whatever, put it into the tool and then
send some BTC to embed the address in the blockchain.
Anyone with access to the same file can generate the same address and
lookup the timestamp on blockchain.info
Unless anyone can provide an earlier timestampped photo of your
sculpture, you are assumed to be the creator.
The really interesting part is when with coloured coins, this asset
(or parts of the asset) are transferrable to other people.
On 08/09/13 16:40, Robert Williamson wrote:
> Sure I'm up for the mailing list. I might not be able to contribute
> that much regularly.
>
> Your embed command is cool. Its better than the current .jar file
> I've seen to generate the addresses. Its just that embedding data
> can be a bit more expensive now that the dust limit is in effect.
> And the funds are then essentially lost as in this recent
> transaction.
>
> https://blockexplorer.com/tx/77822fd6663c665104119cb7635352756dfc50da76a92d417ec1a12c518fad69
>
> I had the thought a while ago that maybe using something similar
> to this transaction puzzle would be better, as it would at least
> allow for the outputs to be spent.
>
> https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Script#Transaction_puzzle
>
> But I'm not sure if it is seen as standard and if it would be
> relayed by the reference client. There are race attack issues with
> it though. And peer can rebroadcast the redeeming tx and send the
> funds somewhere else if it isn't confirmed.
>
> On 8 Sep 2013 15:19, "Amir Taaki" <genjix@???
> <mailto:genjix@riseup.net>> wrote:
>
> Sounds great. I'll take a look now.
>
> Do you want to be on a mailing list with a whole bunch of us?
>
> Just added a command to sx to generate embed addresses so you can
> embed records of data into the blockchain. That way you can put
> some data in, and be the first to make a timestampped record of it
> in the blockchain.
>
> cat my_sculpture.jpg | sx embed-addr
> 1N9v8AKBqst9MNceV3gLmFKsgkKv1bZcBU
>
> then send btc to the address. the record will now be on the
> blockchain.
>
>> Looks good, Interface is good.
>>
>>
>> I'll have some free time on the train later, but right now it
> looks like
>> std::promise and std::future aren't working correctly inside the
>> while loop.
>>
>> I've uploaded a 5MB bootstrap to
>> /home/bob/bootstrap/bootstrap.height17333.dat if you wanted to
> test, I'm
>> not sure there are any orphans up to that height, or if there are
>> any orphans at all saved into any of the bootstraps, but I might
>> be
> able to
>> figure it out.
>>
>> I have some other commits to work through too, mainly I've
> reworked the
>> determ.cpp example to be more like priv.cpp so you can generate
>> a
> seed or
>> addresses or master public key.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> On 8 September 2013 06:45, Amir Taaki <genjix@???
> <mailto:genjix@riseup.net>> wrote:
>>
>>> http://i.imgur.com/bnMJ04N.png
>>>
>>> this is some really crappy prototype experimental code (proof
>>> of concept), but i wanted it working before the 20th.
>>>
>>> https://github.com/spesmilo/sx/blob/master/src/wallet.cpp
>>>
>>> I've just got to get the send command working now.
>>>
>>> i'll design a proper one later. for now this is just a quick
>>> hack.
>>>
>>>> Thanks, I'm downloading an old one to
>>> /home/bob/bootstrap/bootstrap.dat
>>>> its 4.5GB but i cant really remember what height it is to,
>>>> it's
> currently
>>> got
>>>> an ETA of 3hours.
>>>>
>>>> You can grab a copy of it from here if you want
>>>> https://s3.amazonaws.com/robertwilliamson/bootstrap.dat aws
> might be
>>> the
>>>> reason for it being slow though. S3 can sometimes have pretty
>>>> heavy performance issues.
>>>>
>>>> Checksums are
>>>>
>>>> Adler32: FA0EEF4C CRC32: DDF59E6B MD5:
>>>> 1B437D44213B7D98C974546B55834D10 SHA-1:
>>>> 985380032B618281EC5B9B49AFDCC99A4BCD69EB SHA-256:
>>> BF658C7055B733BFC15EA167F298C5599B89D220B14DBE7C8EF20B18E468C451
>
>>>
>>>
>>>> I'll download the newest one eventually. I can also trim one
> out and
>>> just
>>>> have the first 1,000 or so blocks ~260 KB for testing.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On 7 September 2013 19:49, Amir Taaki <genjix@???
> <mailto:genjix@riseup.net>> wrote:
>>>>
> Yes, treat it like it's ours.
>
> If you go to Berlin, then definitely introduce yourself to
>> Joerg and
> say hi from me.
>
> I'll have a look. Well, first I need a bootstrap.dat so tell
>> me once
> it's downloaded to your server.
>
> On 07/09/13 17:47, Robert Williamson wrote:
>> Thanks, I've logged on, am I ok to download a bootstrap.dat onto
>> it, it will be ~ 10GB?
>
>> Sorry, I'm pretty tied up at the moment and I don't have any
>> spare holiday time I can take from work until the new year. But
>> I'd like to meet up and attend something then.
>
>> I'm staying in Kreuzberg in Berlin for a long weekend in
>> November apparently Bitcoin is becoming big over there, but
>> that's all the holiday time I can get. I'd be good to see how
>> they accept payments, for the most part it looks like many shops
>> just have android wallet, which leaves them liable if the phone
>> is lost/stolen/damaged, seems they'd be a good target audience
>> for using master public keys and a deterministic point of sale
>> device to limit the amount of Bitcoins that could be lost.
>
>> Turns out the implementation I was writing to send the blocks to
>> a node was a bit over the top and I'm not sure if the protocol
>> would allow it without making it much more complicated.
>
>> I've so far come up with this, but I keep ending up with a
>> segmentation fault. The actual reading of the file works fine
>> all the way to the full height, I can get the block_type blk and
>> hash the header which match those on blockexplorer.
>
>> Any chance you could have a look? handle_store is the same as
>> the one from poller.cpp, except I've had to comment out
>> fetch_block_locator
>> https://gist.github.com/Bobalot/93617a8f2d5ac8a5cf12
>
>> Perhaps it would be better to create a poller object and then
>> feed the blocks into it rather than directly using chain.store.
>
>> Thanks again,
>
>> Bob
>
>
>
>
>
>
>> On 6 September 2013 18:46, Amir Taaki <genjix@???
>> <mailto:genjix@riseup.net> <mailto:genjix@riseup.net
>> <mailto:genjix@riseup.net>>> wrote:
>
>> done. password is hello11
>
>> ssh bob@46.4.92.107 <mailto:bob@46.4.92.107>
>> <mailto:bob@46.4.92.107 <mailto:bob@46.4.92.107>>
>
>> see what I added to the end of your .bashrc, you have
>> libbitcoin/obelisk/sx installed (it's in your ~/usr). you can do
>> this using the --prefix configure switch (see the history).
>
>> this way different users can all develop alongside each other on
>> the same system. i'm happy to give you root if you ever need it.
>
>> btw do you think you'd be able to make this event?
>
>> https://wiki.unsystem.net/index.php/Calafou/Electrum_Meeting
>
>>> bob will do. On 6 Sep 2013 17:05, "Amir Taaki"
>>> <genjix@??? <mailto:genjix@riseup.net>
>> <mailto:genjix@riseup.net <mailto:genjix@riseup.net>>> wrote:
>>>
>> That's the end goal, but first we need the tools for that.
>
>> On 06/09/13 16:14, Robert Williamson wrote:
>>> I see you meant creating a wallet lib, I was thinking you
>>> meant something more like the full electrum frontend. I look
>>> forward to seeing it.
>>>>
>>>
>
>
>
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>
>