I sent out an email after 48 hours of dealing with trying to open up my ports
for Bitcoin, I was quite frustrated and angry since I had to call like 10 times
and I was making zero progress. Most of the AT people didn't give me any
helpful clues on how to fix the situation. The original email
stores your IP and other stuffs for 6
> months or longer.
> Same for
Comcast. Verizon retains your stuffs for
> 18 month minimum, probably
>
longer though. Qwest/Century, 1 year.
> Cox, 6 months. AT retains for
longer
> than a year. This is just
> what they ar
The only reason someone would want to make a license is so they can
sue/threaten people for not following the license rules. At best this is
pointless since Bitcoin cannot be controlled, and at worst it will result in a
group of people using coercion against the community to gain profits.
mething working. Depending what languages you're writing in, I
might help with code.
On Mon, Aug 31, 2015 at 8:06 AM, Zach G via bitcoin-dev
<mailto:bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org;>bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org>
wrote:
The de-centralized f
I have been struggling to get port 8333 open all year, I gave up and was using
blockchain for months despite a strong desire to stay on Bitcoin Core, but now
the issue has reached critical mass since I'm using the python Bitcoin server
module. I have literally spent my entire day trying to open
When I say de-centralized I mean it, all the things you listed are
centralized. Reddit is actually a purely centralized system and just as
unhealthy as the current bitcoin forum. We have the technology, I'm simply
putting together the pieces that other people have already built. This forum
The de-centralized forum directly integrates the Bitcoin blockchain with every
post. I can see how you misunderstood since I wasn't specific in my first
email. I'm surprised no one has done this yet, people have done things very
similar but never took the leap to integrate the actual Bitcoin