Post edit history
bitcoin might be dead.
| Before | After | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Mt. Gox? Lawl. | 1 | Mt. Gox? Lawl. |
| 2 | \n | 2 | \n |
| 3 | http://cryto.net/~joepie91/blog/2014/02/10/why-mtgox-is-full-of-shit/ | 3 | http://cryto.net/~joepie91/blog/2014/02/10/why-mtgox-is-full-of-shit/ |
| 4 | \n | 4 | \n |
| 5 | [quote] | 5 | [quote] |
| 6 | The issue with spoofing a transaction ID ... has been known and documented for years ... the official Bitcoin daemon (bitcoind) does not rely on a transaction ID. | 6 | The issue with spoofing a transaction ID ... has been known and documented for years ... the official Bitcoin daemon (bitcoind) does not rely on a transaction ID. |
| 7 | \n | 7 | \n |
| 8 | So why does Mt. Gox experience this issue? They run a custom Bitcoin daemon, with a custom implementation of the Bitcoin protocol. Their implementation, against all advice, does rely on the transaction ID, which makes this attack possible. | 8 | So why does Mt. Gox experience this issue? They run a custom Bitcoin daemon, with a custom implementation of the Bitcoin protocol. Their implementation, against all advice, does rely on the transaction ID, which makes this attack possible. |
| 9 | [/quote] | 9 | [/quote] |
| 10 | \n | ||
| 11 | Mt. Gox is dead, btc will be live on. At least until doge prevails. | ||
| 12 | \n | ||
| 13 | To the moon. |
