A sign of the times
good post
I was reading today that her husband is CEO of a big pharma corp. that corp is owned by pfizer…
and yes she approved the buying of millions of vax doses and approved of mandates…
after a long time as a grassroots campaigner
this is welcome news. kind of hard to believe.
as we speak, Assange is on US soil, not out of the woods yet.
but the Aussie PM is pro-assange, at least in word. we’ll see.
waiting to see if wikileaks will accept monero (or crypto) for the assange rehabilitation fund and will donate there :)
an historic day
those are all tax havens, coincidence?
also could be vpn locations
super lame, but interesting!
does someone who is capable of a massive attack on XMR actually believe that lightning is the answer? skeptical.
it also reminds me of the suspicious mempool flood in BTC in 2015 - https://bitcoinwiki.org/wiki/july-2015-flood-attack
Looking through various sources I have a short list of causes for high tx count:
Unlikely:
BTC ATH sellers off ramping to a much better cryptocurrency that preserves privacy
XMR trending as a massive gainer (after a drop) attracts traders
More Likely:
Chain analysis firm floods the tx pool so that their heuristic analysis can pinpoint some XMR transactions
Binance has released the secret store of XMR they had stacked up before delisting for unknown reasons
A Monero Whale is churning a large amount of XMR
5.b) ‘Incognito Market’ [darknet market] is reportedly exit scamming - escrows estimated in the millions of USD of XMR
Nobody has put forward a clear case yet, and most Monero folks are nonplussed. However, XMR’s dynamic block size is making much better work of the flood than other cryptos and tx fees remain fairly level throughout so at least it’s a good stress test.
I want to be a part of it too so I’m gonna throw a few more transactions into the pool right now :)
o7
can confirm Doug is still the host :D
More info: Blockstream’s Bitcoin Satellite node
Hey Terry, I didn’t snap any pics myself. However see pic related of Vincent de Stefano - founder of Assange Defense - wearing one up on the stage at the protest. (1:26 https://inv.tux.pizza/watch?v=7hrtcOfHhms)
Reflections on the protest: It was a good day, with lots of high energy. It felt like the amount of people turning out (the highest for any Assange court case so far) combined with a large turnout of media (at least 25 separate camera,mic,presenter setups) will have lead to widespread awareness. In this case I think that awareness is key - as the prosecution is political, Assange’s freedom will rely on political pressure. Needless to say that his lawyers put forward great arguments on the day. We
I actually got inside the Royal Courts of Justice (and put a secret sticker inside) however, as reported by Kristinn Hrafnsson (Wikileaks editor in chief), the court chose the smallest courtroom (5) for the hearing, meaning only about 20-25 people in the courtroom, with an overflow room for journalists with a dodgy video connection. This meant there were no spaces for public access to the kangaroo court. Julian wasn’t in attendance as he broke a rib coughing, having fallen ill in solitary confinement in prison. So I dipped from the courtshouse. I must add the staff were really friendly - even the one that confiscated my fork (from my packed lunch) - the uk fork license meme is too real.
Outside the spirits were generally good. I met a wicked mix of people, and giving out stickers is a great way to chat to a lot of people. I noticed that the crowd was hugely international, not just European. Iraqi guys had a banner, big bunch of Italians and a battalion of French. A representation from South Africa plus Aussies too. Most people were really engaged with the issues and seemed intellectual, compared to other protest i’ve been to. I also met 3 open bitcoiners (one with a genesis block tee, one with a luminous orange hoodie and balaclava). Didn’t meet any overt monero-ers but at least one was in attendance (@alphonse :) ).
Obviously as monero and the fundraiser are anonymous I don’t know who donated but wanted to once again express thanks for them helping it happen. Plenty of people put high-qual glossy ‘Free Assange’ stickers on their phones, lapels and all over London thanks to you guys, I hope each one can prompt at least one conversation in the real world. Lastly;
FREE ASSANGE
But can it do Atomic Swaps?
UPDATE:
Thanks so much to our 4 donors over at Kuno (https://kuno.anne.media/fundraiser/i3gx/). You anonymous few are true legends.
We raised 0.502 XMR !!!
That’s enough to print over 100 high quality stickers. I have now had them printed and delivered. They will be travelling with me tomorrow to the Royal Courts of Justice in London where they will be handed out to protestors and speakers at the protest.
In all, using Kuno was great - I had communication with staff there and they were supportive and helpful. We had an interesting debate too about anonymous fundraising - which I will put into another thread. I’d recommend using Kuno for random small-scale fundraisers, particularly those which relate to Monero.
Any UK based people here, feel free to DM me an address and I’ll send you a sticker.
You can still donate towards stickers and any extra Monero will be donated to the Assange Extradition Fund and Wikileaks. I will close it at the end of the month, or if it reaches its goal.
imo, most ‘above board’ businesses won’t accept monero payments.
they have to bend over backwards to the state - commercial law, tax law, aml procedures with commercial banks. If they lose their business bank account they’re done so they are cautious actors. think how slow shops are to adopt new payments technology compared to say internet based payments.
those shops are to an extent part of the state apparatus as they are ‘permitted’.
as monero is, to an extent, money, you can use it to transact in as far as you can convince the other party to accept it - barter. barter works a lot better with individuals, and within communities than it does with formal business. however, monero is not physically limited, like gold, butter or bullets, monero is infinitely transactable around the globe at high speed. So it is furthermore suited to the aforementioned internet based payments services. its anonymity is not a problem when you have the tech on hand, wallets, escrow services etc. so that’s where it is best suited to help.
the perspective of wanting more ‘real-world applications’ is, in my opinion, a diversion. those shops stuck in the fiat system are passé and monero is a new technology. it’s not up to monero to try and fit into a bank card, although that can be useful (and possible with iterations of cakepay) but it’s up to monero to blaze a new trail for the cypherpunk ideology. to be anonymous digital money that is fungible. if you have that, it is a unique and novel value proposition that new economies can be built on.
tl;dr monero doesn’t need commercial adoption.
welp
have we hit the local bottom?
long term, this is good for xmr, when binance inevitably gets torpedoed </cope>
looking at the stats, binance is about 34% of the exchange volume - kucoin, mexc, kraken all added together don’t make up for it.
don’t think many xmr users will want to KYC for some minor exchange.
I would direct people to localmonero for p2p trades, and tradeogre for private exchange.
any other suggestions? is any atomic swap protocol functional yet?
bandcamp sold out
look forward to its demise
invidious.io is unstoppable. unshackle yourself from the g**gle gulag
https://xcancel.com/BowesChay/status/1813556150933115055