For a quick look at Dark Market, try this:
https://github.com/jacksingleton/darkmarket.
John
On Sun, Apr 27, 2014 at 12:04 PM, Julian Smith
<julian.smith@???>wrote:
> How do I install the GitHub Darkmarket code on my localhost?
>
> I get the following:
>
> MacBook-Air-13:darkmarket webdeli$ ./run.sh
> Traceback (most recent call last):
> File "node/tornadoloop.py", line 4, in <module>
> import tornado.ioloop
> ImportError: No module named tornado.ioloop
> ./run.sh: line 12: [: =: unary operator expected
> ./run.sh: line 13: xdg-open: command not found
> ./run.sh: line 14: xdg-open: command not found
> MacBook-Air-13:darkmarket webdeli$ Traceback (most recent call last):
> File "node/tornadoloop.py", line 4, in <module>
> import tornado.ioloop
> ImportError: No module named tornado.ioloop
>
> I am probably committing a rookie mistake here - but most web app
> development I
> have done is PHP/Ruby/Java so the Python requirements are not inherently
> familiar to me.
>
> Thanks.
> Julian Smith
>
>
> On Sun, Apr 27, 2014 at 4:55 PM, Washington Sanchez <
> washington.sanchez@???> wrote:
>
>> Spot on Kristov.
>>
>> On Sun, Apr 27, 2014 at 3:50 PM, Kristov Atlas <
>> author@???> wrote:
>>
>>
>> On 04/27/2014 12:04 AM, Robert Jakob wrote:
>> >
>> > So, let's say hypothetically the open-source community works out all
>> > the bugs and the software is rock-solid and unhackable. The TradeNet
>> > is competing with well established companies with loyal venders and a
>> > pretty hard-core customer base. Inherently the consumer doesn't like
>> > change unless you give them a good reason. Such as, better price,
>> > superior product, convenience, better customer service, etc... So
>> > let's say you're the consumer and you want to buy a toaster, but you
>> > don't feel like going to the store and you don't need it right now.
>> > So you go online, you have several options: Ebay, Amazon, Overstock,
>> > Craigslist, BestBuy, Sears, and the TradeNet. Let's say you already
>> > have your assets in bitcoin. So we won't even factor in time to
>> > convert fiat to bitcoin. So you decide to buy your toaster using
>> > bitcoin from TradeNet. It's maybe delivered a week later. You plug
>> > it in and nothing happens. Now you have to contact the vender, but
>> > the vender get's hundreds of emails, ships thousands of products per
>> > week, they're just not able to respond to your defective toaster
>> > problem. You have very little recourse. You can post negative
>> > feedback, but you won't be able to get your money back. Ultimately,
>> > you've wasted your time and money on a defective toaster and that's
>> > not even malicious.
>>
>> For some thoughts on how buyers and sellers could mitigate the risk of
>> unsatisfactory transactions of that kind, I recommend Justus Ranvier's
>> whitepaper on Lex Cryptographia:
>>
>> http://bitcoinism.blogspot.com/2013/12/lex-cryptographia.html
>>
>> One way is through the surety bonds described in the whitepaper.
>>
>> > So you just have to ask, what is the advantage of using TradeNet? No
>> > taxes, anonymity, and it's unregulated.
>>
>> I agree that one of the competitive advantages will be a lack of taxes,
>> in the not-so-near future when this becomes feasible and scalable.
>> Remove the taxes that take place at virtually every step of production,
>> and stuff gets cheap REAL fast. This is especially true when parties are
>> forced to compete in a coercion-less, global market, rather than being
>> co-opted by organized criminals after state prohibition.
>>
>> -Kristov
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