Binaryck (@itsbinaryck) 's Twitter Profile
Binaryck

@itsbinaryck

Programmer

ID: 1526958044357222401

calendar_today18-05-2022 16:09:54

398 Tweet

811 Followers

354 Following

BitMEX Research (@bitmexresearch) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The first debate about arbitrary data in the blockchain happened in December 2010 and Satoshi was involved On 8th December 2010, Satoshi released Bitcoin version 0.3.18, which included a standardness check, to only include known transaction types 🧵

The first debate about arbitrary data in the blockchain happened in December 2010 and Satoshi was involved

On 8th December 2010, Satoshi released Bitcoin version 0.3.18, which included a standardness check, to only include known transaction types

🧵
Binaryck (@itsbinaryck) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Bitmap is the resource, bitmap names are secondary pointers. I inscribed an association between a district and a bitmap name using recursion. The same can be done for parcels. ord.io/106624917 The movement started back in 2023, and even if small it has meaning. Another

Signal (@signalapp) 's Twitter Profile Photo

We are alarmed by reports that Germany is on the verge of a catastrophic about-face, reversing its longstanding and principled opposition to the EU’s Chat Control proposal which, if passed, could spell the end of the right to privacy in Europe. signal.org/blog/pdfs/germ…

bitoshi blockamoto 🧱 BITMAP 🟧 (@blockamoto) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I just inscribed the WORLDTREE module to Termina! You can now build, save, and import entire worldtree's, cached locally, with or without full content scraping! ordinals.com/content/7bdc2a… TRY > worldtree bitmap > worldtree bitmap full This may take some time, or you can BRING

Riccardo Spagni (@fluffypony) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Why doesn’t BIP 444 merely propose to add a single space after every 80 bytes on disk, and that way the data isn’t contiguous, and the world is safe?

Binaryck (@itsbinaryck) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Miners do not have legal responsibility over what happens on the network. If criminals use the internet, nobody's suing who owns the internet cables. You can't sue the infrastructure, the accountability lies upon the suspect of the crime. Nobody sued miners for illegal markets,

Miners do not have legal responsibility over what happens on the network.

If criminals use the internet, nobody's suing who owns the internet cables.
You can't sue the infrastructure, the accountability lies upon the suspect of the crime.
Nobody sued miners for illegal markets,
lifofifo ◉ (@lifofifo) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Hal Finney invented the first Bitcoin metaprotocol 🤯 OP_NOP1 ➔ OP_PUSHDATA ➔ OP_DROP is conceptually very similar to how inscription envelopes work. "Overlay aware code" is basically describing the ord indexer. GM ☀️

Hal Finney invented the first Bitcoin metaprotocol 🤯

OP_NOP1 ➔ OP_PUSHDATA ➔ OP_DROP is conceptually very similar to how inscription envelopes work.

"Overlay aware code" is basically describing the ord indexer.

GM ☀️
Binaryck (@itsbinaryck) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Did freedom destroy the internet? No, it's actually it's greatest feature. It's a disgrace that criminals exist? YES! Is it wrong to block, just like a dictator would, the whole rest of humanity from legitimately using a technology? ALSO YES! See, your argument is EXACTLY the

Adam Back (@adam3us) 's Twitter Profile Photo

bitcoin nodes have no concept of images AND any internet protocol, p2p, real time-gaming, client/server can have data hidden in formats, fields, messages. it's just FUNDAMENTAL for any moderately complex internet protocol and programming languages.

Jameson Lopp (@lopp) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The "bad actors" aren't the folks openly using Bitcoin in ways you dislike. The "bad actors" are the ones wasting months rehashing the same fruitless arguments, holding secret meetings about consensus changes, using fear of lawfare to coerce compliance with their desires.