Dark pools are regulated as of today. no? Sent from my iPhone
On Nov 27, 2021, at 1:17 PM, Gunnar Larson <g@xny.io> wrote:
I think dark pools are illegal in New York? But you might need to ask Harvard Management Company how deep their STX fraud goes?
On Sat, Nov 27, 2021, 2:06 PM Uwe Cerron <uwecerron@gmail.com> wrote: Remind me again, how many mining pools make up the entire bitcoin ecosystem?
Sent from my iPhone
On Nov 27, 2021, at 10:01 AM, Gunnar Larson <g@xny.io> wrote:
MIA Coin and NYCCoin use PoX as part of their fraud. Harvard Management Company perhaps has a hand in the scheme?
PoX when used for participation rewards, as described, could lead to miner consoli- dation. Because miners that also participate as holders could gain an advantage over miners who do not participate as holders, miners would be strongly incentivized to buy the new cryptocurrency and use it to crowd out other miners. In the extreme case, this consolidation could lead to centralization of mining, which would undermine the decentralization goals of the public blockchain.
Bitcoin Bandwidth: Because PoX miners must send Bitcoin transactions to participate in the consensus algorithm and send PoX rewards, PoX mining would occupy some Bitcoin transac- tion bandwidth. Given Bitcoin bandwidth is limited by design, given security require- ments, new PoX blockchains need to reduce their bandwidth use requirements. SIP- 007 does this by limiting the number of participants, using a STX holding threshold. Other ways to address bandwidth limitations are also possible e.g., lighting channels between Bitcoin and the new blockchain. Optimizations at the Bitcoin transactions layer could also be possible, which would reduce the total size needed for PoX trans- actions.