Jacob Phelps
@colbitrun
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Apprentice of Jesus Christ. Husband & father. Wealth management for the orange pilled.
Colorado
Joined March 2021
Bitcoin is “freedom” money right? Libertarian freedom is freedom as an end in itself. Freedom to choose or not choose as long as that choice doesn’t infringe upon others. What is good is determined by the individual. Christian freedom is orienting human acts towards the good as defined by the natural, old & new law (together a holistic moral law). Goodness and truth are one and the same. Libertarianism creates “my truth” and does not hold to a “the truth”. Bitcoin itself is supposedly amoral and so holds no views, but if its freedom money in the sense of liberal freedom, which it is, then as a Christian we have to reconcile that fact.
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@mitchdmoore That said I’ve been using this and it works really well. It saves stuff locally though so not as efficient as loom. You can also just use the built in QuickTime
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@AdamSimecka Nope, Bitcoin is an extension of the (classic) liberalism ideals. Maybe a better descriptor for us moderns would be libertarianism.
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I will be received into the church this Easter Vigil. As I’ve gone through OCIA and see the discourse around the church online, I can’t help but be grateful for my naivety and absence of the baggage that so many cradle Catholics or long time converts seem to carry with them. In this period I have got to see the beauty of the church on full display. There’s a lightness of spirit that comes with it. I wish that more people could see this (or see it again). Rose colored glasses aren’t all that bad after all.
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@JoinCrowdHealth FTW, again.
Just searched a health insurance comparison site (works like when booking a flight). Family of 4, PPO, no tobacco: $32k a year. If you lose your job tomorrow and want a PPO plan, this is what you're facing. Health insurance creates HUGE pressure to stay at your current job.
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RT @mitchdmoore: Unchained forced my last podcast appearance to cancel prior to recording. Any podcasts (not sponsored by them) looking fo…
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So it goes in the game of bingo bitcoin It’s way more fun this way
Variance is important to understand. @ocean_mining has been on an incredible luck streak this month. Remember it cuts both ways! I like ocean, but for folks who are newer to the game, do NOT forget that you made more due to luck. Nothing else.
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@wrowclif So it goes with life in the consistency space (long time since we discusssd this lol)
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Right, exactly. Utility leaves minimal room for humility and no room for finding the Truth. Searching for truth does not create more widgets or treat more patients today. Maybe it does in the future, maybe it doesn’t. Modernity has mostly decided that juice isn’t worth the squeeze. It’s also hard to have any sort of true humility when the majority of your worth is tied up in the production of your utility.
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TLDR: we are moving closer to ChainAnchor, not farther away.
So we're regularly noticing how unacceptably large Foundry has gotten and it would be good if Bitcoiners in general understand why we are where we are. First, let's talk about what it is pools actually do, starting from the theoretical going all the way the practical. In theory they make no difference to anything - they simply reduce variance. Instead of earning $.X per year, you earn $.X/365 per day. This is far more consistent and makes day to day operations easier and it's clear why someone would want to do this - assuming they're a smaller miner who is not capable of finding block frequently enough without pooling and splitting rewards with others. This might be desirable to the point where you'd even pay a split to the coordinator (pool) because it's that valuable of a service. To take it further, the absolute hands-down most common payout model for a pool to use is FPPS - this doubles down on the supposed benefit that is so compelling here. It stands for For Pay Pay Share which -in theory - means that miners get paid on a share to share basis (something they're submitting multiple times a minute) a highly predictable amount. This means you not only have you abandoned dealing with lotto-variance (waiting until you find a block) or even standard pool variance (waiting until someone on the pool finds a block) but instead you're mining with a pool that grants you earnings multiple times per minute regardless of if the pool is finding any blocks or not. This is variance reduction to such an extreme that the product becomes unbelievably expensive because pools have now put themselves in a position where they must pay miners for blocks that might - and very often don't - happen. This was demonstrated beyond doubt with OCEAN (non-FPPS) released its numbers and they outperformed FPPS by over 30% in some cases during its first year of operation. *Note: This is NOT a "You should mine on OCEAN" post. I am simply trying to explain why miners are making the decisions they are because it seems to be eluding almost everyone. So miners are apparently opting for variance reduction to the point where they want to get paid no matter what for blocks that may or may not even exist with resolution all the way down to the share level. But here's the part where the disconnect between theory and reality comes in. Nearly all the miners on Foundry have absolutely zero need for this kind of variance reduction - or indeed any at all. The publicly traded miners that make use of Foundry all have the ability to find multiple blocks a day without any third party whatsoever which is way more than enough. As mentioned already, FPPS is an extremely expensive product that logically would only be required by a miner faced with 24 hourly energy bills who only has 100 Petahash or so. Again, the typical Foundry miner is 100 times the size of this coming in at almost 10 Exahash at the smaller end. So if Foundry solves a particular issue - variance - and charges a fortune to do it, and its main customer is miners that could lotto-mine and find multiple blocks without incurring the costs of FPPS then what on Earth are they doing? The naive answer is that they haven't done the maths. In some cases I actually know this to be true. You're an enormous miner and you do a deal with Foundry - they charge you 0.1% fee and you think that's equivalent to if you cut out the middle man entirely pretty much so it becomes worth it. But with FPPS the fee is never the fee. That is the airport currency exchange sign that says "0% COMMISSION" and gives you something about 14% worse than market rate. Where is the money going? I don't think most miners are actually making that mistake, at least not all of them. It's time to explain the real reason here. Compliance by proxy. And this is what's key to understand. History: Once upon a time a pool called GHash(.)io got above 40% of the hashrate (which Foundry is doing repeatedly at this point) and the miners all fled out of instinct to protect the network. You simply cannot have any single entity making 50% of the blocks that get added to the chain or anything approach that. So why aren't miners doing it today? Are they that addicted to variance reduction when the calibre of miner that uses Foundry is perfectly capable of reducing their own variance anyway even though it's costing them a fortune? Again the entire space needs to understand why history will not be repeating itself here and this where I find the greatest amount of self-delusion and dishonesty in this space. Compliance by proxy was not a thing in 2016. At least not for miners. Since then, someone has come along and turned what is completely unacceptable to the powers that be - Bitcoin mining and turned it into a completely sanitized, censorship prone shell of its former self - and *that* is the true motivation for "miners" paying these exorbitant fees. Compliance is new. And it isn't a factor people are taking into consideration. Whenever we point out how precarious the situation has become, there is the typical response - "If Foundry ever do then their miners will just leave". It's time to put this cope-strategy to bed. If a miner is perfectly capable of reducing their own variance to the tune of reliably finding multiple blocks per day themselves - why are they using a pool at all? Especially if that pool costs a fortune? Or more crudely - If losing a tonne of money for no apparent reason isn't compelling enough to leave Foundry, then jeopardizing Bitcoin isn't going to be either. The true motivation is all that matters, and its overwhelmingly just compliance. "Miners" of substantial size increasingly do not want anything to do with Bitcoin and want all their hashrate transformed from raw Bitcoins coming out of the blockchain fresh from a block into a nice clean product that their accounts and lawyers can tolerate regardless of the cost. To take the counter position to my argument here, there are of course costs to rough-housing it and grappling with Bitcoin directly as MARA does and I don't want to pretend otherwise but I don't think they come anything like close to justifying the enormity of the revenue lost due to the extreme over-kill that is FPPS. This is the only area in which I will take pushback from someone in one of the relevant companies as it's possible I am just wrong. The following companies - BitFarms, Hut8, RIOT, WULF, HIVE, Cleanspark and a couple of handfuls of others are all - to the best of my knowledge - paying a fortune for the combined benefit of variance reduction (which they absolutely have no need of) and compliance by proxy. If anyone from any of those companies can explain to me why I am wrong and that if/when Foundry's size results in them engaging in censorship or any other abuse of the network (heck, already requiring KYC and regular inspections of mining facilities is unacceptable and that's already been the case for Foundry miners for years) then why should anyone believe you would move to another pool or go the Mara route? At present I believe that Foundry could continue its inexorable ascent to the 51% magic number we're all afraid of and the new cope will be "Well they haven't done yet" and we'll just keep moving the goal posts about what constitutes a bad thing. At the moment "It's just KYC", "It's just mandatory inspections" and "It's just lost revenue." All of that is unacceptable. "It's just transactions associated with Russia/Iran" comes next and the shareholders of publicly traded Bitcoin miners are unlikely to view censorship based on that criteria as being anything to worry about. The old cope of "another miner will just include them and their business will survive while the censoring miners die" is complete and utter delusion. Almost 100% of revenue from the chain is subsidy. Transaction fees are neither here nor there. And if we think the US Pubcos are all going to voluntarily go admit bankruptcy because they lost a few hundred bucks a week from mining blocks that censored blacklisted UTXOs then we are deluding ourselves. I reiterate - miners are with Foundry because compliance is increasingly all that matters. This has resulted in enormous centralization of template construction that becomes a genuine attack vector at ~30% and has been consistently way above that for a long time now. 51% is a meme, and imo not a powerful enough one to inspire change if it actually comes to that. Let's be honest. None of the miners on Foundry are leaving any time soon but the variance reducing product they offer that can be so trivially replicated elsewhere is not why any of them are doing what they are doing. Foundry is the sole occupant within the regulatory moat that is Bitcoin mining in America and I don't see that as trivial to replicated at all. And the reason I wish to sound the alarm 10,000 louder than I have been before this point is that the current US administration has run a campaign that specifically talks about centralization Bitcoin in the US. The phrase "We will make all the Bitcoins in America" is exactly the worst possible thing you could want to hear given everything I've talked about in this post and not only is it not being rejected by Bitcoiners, it is being celebrated as a good thing.
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@JordanHedberg They don’t rely on studies, they rely on the standardized processes derived from those studies. Standardized processes require no critical or creative thinking and greatly lessen the likelihood of lawsuits.
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@JordanHedberg Maybe DOGE will end crop subsidies & insurance and then we’ll see what operations are actually sustainable?? 😅
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@metathomist The bitcoin space has shown me over & over again just how true it is that we were created for worship. This mindset isn’t all that uncommon & does make sense if you’re coming from the perspective of a humanist/materialist.
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RT @leo_haf: -Mstr is a shitcoin. -Strategic bitcoin reserve is not adoption. -Your favorite bitcoin politician is useless. -FPPS is a scam…
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@pseudotoshi @leo_haf You earn less for the sake of having more consistent income. And don’t have any control over block template. And likely have to be KYC’d.
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Oh yeah it’s not just seems like it. In one of the classes we took they said an induction increased the odds of C-section by something like 30%. There is no justification outside of “this is just the way we do it”. Never any thought of the basis for that way. Modern births are viewed as a medical emergency, not a normal & natural human event. That fundamental difference in approach is exactly what you’re experiencing. Your wife is now a patient to be treated and cured of her internal baby!
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