Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: Bitcoin puzzle transaction ~32 BTC prize to who solves it
by
kTimesG
on 21/04/2025, 00:11:05 UTC
At this point, I invite everyone to test it with as many simulations as they wish and to publish it, for a neutral environment.

OK. They did, and the results indicate your prefix method wins in 55.2% of cases, sequential in 40.6%, and ties for the rest.

Now do you understand where your error is? Or do you consider all of these identical results as a valid proof of your theory?

I'll give you a hint: you're running all tests on the same distribution, so obviously you'll get the same results.

You might as well pre-map all the values to their keys and do a lookup to get a 100% to 0% winning method.

Try again? Smiley


lol, What do you mean? Are you suggesting that a comparison of two methods under equal conditions is unfair? Elaborate. Are you implying that it's rigged? Quote some code. Go ahead, look for five legs on the cat...it's open source.

Yes. Any non-uniform distribution will ALWAYS exhibit the same effect. Because it's set in stone.

Do we need to go back to the basics, and explain what a uniform distribution is defined as?

Then you'll say: the 69 bit range is also not uniform.

However, that doesn;t mean your prefix method wins, because you can't know that unless you bring it from its uniform state to the non-uniform observed immutable state and actually run your method.

Until that point, the only valid way to compare your method to whatever other method is to use a uniform distribution, not one that favors your method.

And yes, it's called rigged, cheating, however you want to call it. Do we now need to find the first distribution that does NOT favor your method? Are you serious?!