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Showing 15 of 15 results by StinkiePhish
Post
Topic
Board Digital goods
Topic OP
blockchain.online for sale
by
StinkiePhish
on 19/01/2016, 19:01:11 UTC
Please PM me reasonable offers.

I will be happy to use escrow or other means to protect buyer/seller.
Post
Topic
Board Armory
Re: Clarifying armoryd software license
by
StinkiePhish
on 24/04/2015, 21:15:33 UTC
I thought I would add the relevant explanation from https://www.gnu.org/licenses/why-affero-gpl.html :

Quote
Why the Affero GPL

The GNU Affero General Public License is a modified version of the ordinary GNU GPL version 3. It has one added requirement: if you run the program on a server and let other users communicate with it there, your server must also allow them to download the source code corresponding to the program that it's running. If what's running there is your modified version of the program, the server's users must get the source code as you modified it.

The purpose of the GNU Affero GPL is to prevent a problem that affects developers of free programs that are often used on servers.

Suppose you develop and release a free program under the ordinary GNU GPL. If developer D modifies the program and releases it, the GPL requires him to distribute his version under the GPL too. Thus, if you get a copy of his version, you are free to incorporate some or all of his changes into your own version.

But suppose the program is mainly useful on servers. When D modifies the program, he might very likely run it on his own server and never release copies. Then you would never get a copy of the source code of his version, so you would never have the chance to include his changes in your version. You may not like that outcome.

Using the GNU Affero GPL avoids that outcome. If D runs his version on a server that everyone can use, you too can use it. Assuming he has followed the license requirement to let the server's users download the source code of his version, you can do so, and then you can incorporate his changes into your version. (If he hasn't followed it, you have your lawyer complain to him.)

Both the ordinary GNU GPL, version 3, and the GNU Affero GPL have text allowing you to link together modules under these two licenses in one program.

The GNU Affero GPL does not address the problem of Service as a Software Substitute (SaaSS).

SaaSS means that users use someone else's web server to do their own computing. This requires them to send their data to the server, which does their computing for them and sends the results back to them. SaaSS is an injustice because the users cannot control their computing when it's done that way.

If some program on this server is released under the GNU Affero GPL, the server is required to offer the users the corresponding source of that program. That is good, but having this source code does not give them control over the computing done on that server. It also does not tell them what other software may be running on that server, examining or changing their data in other ways.

We don't see any sensible way to address the SaaSS problem with license conditions on particular programs. Even to write a legal condition to distinguish between SaaSS use and non-SaaSS use would be a challenge, and if we had that, it is not clear what we would want to require in the SaaSS case. Thus, our solution to the problem of SaaSS is simple: refuse to use it.

If a program is meant specifically and only for SaaSS, you shouldn't write it. But many programs are useful for a variety of kinds of services, including some that are SaaSS and some that are not. It's useful to write and release these programs so people can set up non-SaaSS services with them, and good to release them under the AGPL.

As for the reasoning why ATI has always licensed Armory under AGPL 3, it was an attempt to balance the benefits of allowing other people to see and use the code, which is absolutely critical for security related software, against the costs or lost opportunity associated with a third-party using it to build their own commercial platform. (I won't speak for Alan, although he and I had lengthy discussions regarding the choice of open source license years ago).

As a developer, once you release code with a license that is very permissive, you cannot re-license the released code with a more restrictive license. So, for example, if you release your code with the BSD license and then find out that someone is making millions using it as the foundation for their offering, you cannot go back and get value from them. Therefore, using a more restrictive license like the AGPL 3 from the start allows the developer to ratchet the license down on a case-by-case basis as users request.

Using the AGPL 3, we thought that it would either 1) force code into open source, which we thought was a good thing; 2) force developers to talk to us, which we also thought was a good thing.

Please don't misinterpret that when I say "custom license" that it means it has to have a price. If someone wanted to experiment or start their business using Armoryd, we certainly could talk about a no-cost license for a period of time.

Post
Topic
Board Armory
Re: Clarifying armoryd software license
by
StinkiePhish
on 24/04/2015, 15:57:47 UTC
btchris,

I am Armory Technologies, Inc.'s COO and General Counsel, and although I am not an IP attorney, I can hopefully provide a brief response to the problem that you have highlighted regarding a great deal of open sourced software and what Armory's intent has always been regarding its license. We hesitate to make any modification to the AGPL 3, since we are relying on the critical mass of acceptance of AGPL 3 that give it its legal credibility.

ATI believes that the use of Armory or Armoryd, licensed under the AGPL 3, as a backend application that interacts with any information from the Internet, causes all software in between Armoryd and the Internet to also be AGPL 3 licensed. Therefore, the source code is required to be publicly available.

We encourage developers who desire to customize or use Armory/Armoryd in other processes to contact us regarding custom licensing terms. If you seek to run an exchange or webshop with Armoryd as the backend and you do not want your exchange or webshop code to be publicly available under AGPL 3, then a custom license is necessary.
Post
Topic
Board Armory
Re: Armory Support G+ login broken
by
StinkiePhish
on 19/03/2015, 18:32:42 UTC
Thanks for the report. Armory (currently) uses HappyFox for its support portal, and the error was on their end. The link to Google+ login has been removed.
Post
Topic
Board Armory
Re: Lets support the Bitcoin Armory Bootstrap.torrent
by
StinkiePhish
on 26/03/2014, 19:30:41 UTC
Subo, is there a way for you to automatically update your seedbox(es) when Armory updates the torrent? Would an RSS feed be helpful?
Post
Topic
Board Altcoin Discussion
Re: Ripple Giveaway!
by
StinkiePhish
on 16/04/2013, 06:03:56 UTC
rNFqB5pHxyFwQgF2sUh4X9YxkZPvgibXJN
Post
Topic
Board Off-topic
Re: Rental Property Investment Analysis
by
StinkiePhish
on 24/09/2012, 17:08:31 UTC
Disclaimer: IANYL, nor may I provide tax advice.

If you want to avoid all the craziness of accountants and lawyers (now), form an LLC. They are laughably easy to form. From a legal standpoint, you get the benefit of limited liability. That way, if anything does come up in the future (completely regardless if you have been doing everything correct or not), your personal assets are not at stake or at issue. From a tax standpoint, the IRS has made it as easy as checking a box on your individual 1040. The LLC is a "disregarded entity" in the eyes of the IRS, and its income is reported as your individual income. I do not know what you forego in terms of being able to claim deductions of the business; talk to an accountant.

Post
Topic
Board Obsolete (selling)
Re: 5970 for sale
by
StinkiePhish
on 24/05/2011, 23:09:59 UTC
Looking for advice here, because I've had a few people interested but none will accept using ClearCoin charity.  Without using charity, I cannot see how I (as seller) am in any way protected in the sale.

Am I being unreasonable in trying to further build trust (e.g. proving my real identity so you can come knock on my door, sue me, break my knees, etc... or a telephone conversation for starters), and/or use ClearCoin charity?

Using ClearCoin takes all the risk away from the buyer.  But it gives them too much power because they can simply not release the funds and wait for them to eventually be returned.  They end up with my card and the money, and I end up with nothing.
Post
Topic
Board Obsolete (selling)
Re: 5970 for sale
by
StinkiePhish
on 24/05/2011, 17:02:40 UTC
I would try if a client seriously offered and the BTC price was relatively stable at the time. 
Post
Topic
Board Obsolete (selling)
5970
by
StinkiePhish
on 24/05/2011, 02:25:06 UTC
Selling a XFX HD 5970 for the BTC equivalent of $575 including shipping.  Latest Ebay sales have it going for $580-633, but I'd rather not give Ebay and Paypal the fees and pass the savings on to you!  I currently have it running at 815 MHz and hashing at ~700 Mhash/sec.  

Edit: sold

HD597ACNF9

http://xfxforce.com/en-gb/products/graphiccards/hd%205000series/5970.aspx

I am an attorney in Wisconsin and will provide more information if necessary to assure you that I am not trying to run a scam.  I am also willing to use a third-party mediator or ClearCoin charity.
Post
Topic
Board Mining software (miners)
Re: hashkill - testing bitcoin miner plugin
by
StinkiePhish
on 14/05/2011, 06:25:13 UTC
Many thanks for sharing this software.  I have it running a box with 5770x2 and a 5870 and is generating beautifully.  On another machine, I have a 5970 and a 5870, and the Speed is being displayed incorrectly:

Code:
[hashkill] Version 0.2.4
[hashkill] Plugin 'bitcoin' loaded successfully
[hashkill] Found GPU device: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. - Cypress
[hashkill] Found GPU device: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. - Cypress
[hashkill] Found GPU device: Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. - Cypress
[hashkill] GPU0: ATI Radeon HD 5800 Series  [busy:0%] [temp:50C]
[hashkill] Temperature threshold set to 90 degrees C
[hashkill] This plugin supports GPU acceleration.
[hashkill] Initialized hash indexes
[hashkill] Initialized thread mutexes
[hashkill] Spawned worker threads
[hashkill] Successfully connected and authorized at btcmine.com:8332
[hashkill] Compiling OpenCL kernel source (amd_bitcoin.cl)
[hashkill] Binary size: 349352
[hashkill] Doing BFI_INT magic...

Mining statistics...
Speed: 172 MHash/sec [cur: 24%] [proc: 128] [subm: 98] [stale: 3] [eff: 76%]     

The "proc" and "subm" are going up, indicating that it is submitting shares near the expected speed.  "aticonfig --odgc --adapter=all" returns that all GPUs are being fully used.

I have attempted with and without -D and -G 1 to -G 4 with no change on the display.  I am running ATI SDK 2.4 on Ubuntu 10.10, Intel Xeon 3.0 GHz, 8 GB RAM.
Post
Topic
Board Pools
Re: BTCMine - mining pool (GPU/CPU miners friendly, LongPolling, JSON API)
by
StinkiePhish
on 15/04/2011, 04:32:37 UTC
Heh - I had created #bitcoin-btcmine and had been idling in there...

One question - for last block solved, (118405) I submitted 18104 shares against the 166,119 shares total or 10.899%.  My bounty was just 4.184 BTC.

I would have suspected 50 * .98 (2% commission) = 49 * 10.899% = 5.34 BTC.  Why such a large discrepancy?

I will take a guess that the discrepancy arises because BTCMine uses a score-based method and not a proportional-share method.  So your calculation should be based on your "score / total round score," rather than "your shares / total shares."
Post
Topic
Board Mining
"Private" Pool?
by
StinkiePhish
on 28/03/2011, 01:57:48 UTC
Hello,

I have set up a server using poold.py, which I understand was experimental and development has been discontinued.  Is there any other released code to run a pool server?  I don't need a fancy web interface, and want to manually add user/pass into the database.  Poold.py seems to satisfy my basic needs now, but I know there has been development of pool software and I don't want to lose coins if I have a bad server setup.  All I am looking for is simple tracking of number of shares contributed.

The idea is that a small number of friends and I want a pool that we can assure is "fair."  Not that I necessarily distrust any of the current pool operators, but there's an extra level of comfort when I know the contributors in real life.
Post
Topic
Board Development & Technical Discussion
Re: Generating Bitcoins with your video card (OpenCL/CUDA)
by
StinkiePhish
on 13/07/2010, 20:18:21 UTC
I didn't realize that the Mac dmg was already posted to a different thread.

http://heliacal.net/~solar/bitcoin/Bitcoin-MacOSX-Intel-svn-75-opencl-2010-05-10.dmg

Looks like it is a little outdated.

Any chance of the opencl code being patched to the current SVN version?
Post
Topic
Board Development & Technical Discussion
Re: Generating Bitcoins with your video card (OpenCL/CUDA)
by
StinkiePhish
on 13/07/2010, 00:32:24 UTC
OS X 10.6.4

Geforce GT 220.

Thank you!