Quote from: psztorc on May 24, 2016, 01:11:10 AM
> Mining power doesn't matter. A government sponsored blockchain could be the attacker.
Only by offering prediction market services to the public.
(Mission accomplished!)
Quote from: psztorc on May 24, 2016, 01:44:49 AM
A good metaphor is starting your own business. Anyone can start their own business, yes. But you should not be able to barge into someone else's pharmaceutical research laboratory and take photos of everyone's notes, and whatnot.
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The parasite prevents the real oracle from scaling up -- it can only guard a small amount of value. So it will never truly be useful.
QuoteSo I think there's still a misunderstanding here. If you're still talking about restaurants, there's a fundamental disconnect. The real target is companies and industries who can ABUSE brand and trust through economies of scale and aggregation of users. Amazon does this to it's suppliers, Twitter did this to it's datafeed partners, Facebook does it to it's users, Uber is starting to do this as well.
One kind of trust is cheap for a computer to create, and extremely useful. The other kind of trust is extraordinarily expensive for a computer to create, and trustlessness would marginally add almost no effectiveness. Each day, people eat in restaurants without paying...until the very end. Or they purchase something online, and pay upfront (and wait -with trust- for it to be shipped).
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Oh, so you agree that there are problems? : )
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Miners do not need to "foresee all problems". They merely need to listen carefully to developers complaints, and refuse to incorporate anything which does not get widespread developer support. Because this filter would work, probably no malicious developer will bother trying to write anything which is clearly problematic.
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It is the reverse -- Taleb makes it very clear that there is a fractal structure: something can only be antifragile if it is made up of fragile pieces. So growth / complexity requires the ability to keep things removed (which will be harder for Ethereum than for Bitcoin Sidechains).
Quote from: zack on May 23, 2016, 06:41:29 PM
2) "bankrupting" isn't the failure mode we are afraid of. We need to pay the oracle enough, or it will lie.
All the rep in the oracle is sell-able all the time. If you can win X amount of money by getting the oracle to lie, and it costs Y amount of money to buy up enough rep to make it lie, and X>Y, then the oracle could profitably lie.
If there is a separate blockchain with a large volume of trading in parasite contracts, then the person doing the attack could earn money on both blockchains.
It sounds like Crystal and Hivemind are vulnerable to altcoin parasite contracts in the same way. Read some of my posts about it.
QuoteJust like bitcoin, I see on-chain smart contracts being used to settle disputes, whereas offchain channels are used in the day-to-day. Crystal plans to implement the first version of this in the form of a "shadowchain", which is calculated offchain using a reputation system, and then only run onchain if somebody pays to check the results.
5) True. Permissionless implementation makes it much less fragile.
Ethereum style smart contracts is not how permissionless implementation will be standardized. Smart contracts belong in the channels. Storing state on-chain is unnecessary and expensive.