2.0 From empty page to WabiSabi

preview_player
Показать описание


02:13 Why did you start writing code? / At that time it was common to find source code to video games in magazines.
03:59 Did you basically start off with Free Software? / If you don't control software, software controls you.
06:00 Other than games what were other practical things you were trying figure out? / Everything was there to be built [...] everything was possible.
08:14 Did you also share your code with others or have contributors? / Community of programmers.
09:52 Tell me about your first experience connecting to the internet. / Studying malware.
12:37 Were you analysing malware, writing them or defending against them? / The best way to find the code was to get infected. / Fascinated by computer viruses. / Michaelangelo virus. / Studying assembler. / Trying to make a virus bigger than 512 bytes. / Building a botnet as a hobby.
15:33 What is your experience with the protocol layer? / Web servers, web proxies, NAT traversal.
16:49 How did you get interested in privacy? / Preventing adversaries from being able to shut down a network. / Command and Control botnets. / Onion architecture makes it harder to learn about a network. / The business model of the internet leads to privacy problems but Bitcoin fixes this. / Pay for what you are getting and [...] there's no need to extract information from you.
22:40 Implementing the Tor protocol in Wasabi.
24:39 What excited you about Bitcoin? / Software creating incentives to organise people. / Contributing to nBitcoin.
37:12 Ikigai: Something you are good at, that is meaningful, that solves an actual problem, that you can get paid for.
39:03 What was changed in Wasabi Wallet? / Bug fixes. / How to decide which features to implement.
45:42 Wasabi's history in 3 unique parts: HiddenWallet, Wasabi 1.0 (architecture), improving stability and performance. / Wasabi 2.0 improving UX. / Coin control, coin selection, Coinjoin / Wabisabi.
52:24 Wabisabi: a coinjoin protocol that is super-flexible, where input and input, input-to-output, output and output are not correlated at all and the coinjoin coordinator knows nothing. / Large design space for coinjoins.
54:54 Economics and the libertarian bitcoin rabbit hole. / Inflation changes the way you think.
58:50 Money is a tool to reduce uncertainty.
01:02:49 Global problems cause understanding of Bitcoin becomes more intuitive.
01:05:59 Where will the world be when the money changes to Bitcoin. / Many are loyal to government. / Taxes.
01:08:54 Is Bitcoin good enough to withstand state control? / Printing money makes friends.
01:13:17 State violence. / Social unrest.
01:15:07 The war on encryption.
01:17:47 What happens with governments when people begin to encrypt their money.
01:19:17 Governments controlling the money. / Money is one half of every trade. / Easier and more scalable for governments to control the money than to censor commodities.
01:23:43 Conclusion.
Рекомендации по теме