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150 lines
9.8 KiB
Plaintext
150 lines
9.8 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3909
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Title: HPR3909: Permission tickets.
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3909/hpr3909.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 07:50:24
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3909 for Thursday the 27th of July 2023.
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Today's show is entitled Permission Tickets.
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It is hosted by one of Spoons and is about 11 minutes long.
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It carries an explicit flag.
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The summary is collective delusions of elective conclusions.
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Hello Hacker Public Radio, this is one of Spoons.
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I've had several non-finished episodes in a directory for more than a year.
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Nevertheless, I thought I might be able to stitch together a preview.
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I would prefer to submit a more comprehensive episode, but I haven't for such a long time.
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I think I should just contribute something to the conversation.
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So, briefly, from my perspective, money is permission.
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You can work very hard and get none at all because the people who are controlling it,
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issuing it, issuing that currency, do not value or want to strongly discourage
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whatever behaviour it was that you were expressing.
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One of the main problems of money, along with many other social concepts,
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is that people are using the same word to describe very different relationships
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and the confusion is not resolved and is deliberately used to gain advantage
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or maintain power structures in the interests of those of the powerful.
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Because it is so contentious, it deserves a thorough definition and discussion,
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so I won't try to do that here.
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What I can discuss is an implementation and the various applications of a non-mutable ledger
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that is a distributed database which once written to is not altered.
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You can append to it.
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In fact, I imagine you can alter the way it represented, but the state is non-mutable.
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I will also attempt to be non-lazy in relation to words like cryptocurrency and cryptography.
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Energy costs are rising across Europe, the cost of the customer at any rate,
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and this will get back to it later.
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I suppose it is part of tokenisation and the economy, the naming of the factors
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which are involved in our day-to-day lives.
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I suppose before you switch off, I should clarify one opinion or one observation
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about cryptographic tokens and the lengths that people will go to get them
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or what they are willing to gamble to hold these tokens in the hope that they might gain
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some advantage over their fellows or difficult to pry the two things apart,
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but very easy actually.
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So your network and all of its capabilities, all of the transactional functions,
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all of the pointers that you can store and the things to which you can point
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and the interactions between these tokens and how they can act as functions
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upon each other, all of that ordinary computational and ledger-based,
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memory-based stuff will all work regardless of the market price of the token.
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So it is difficult for me to say market price of the token,
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but people do obtain these tokens with money.
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I mean, you can also obtain them by arrangement, just the same as any other token.
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Most of the tokens, certainly national currencies.
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What I am trying to say is, if you want to use a token as a means of recording a transaction
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where you change one currency into Bitcoin and send the Bitcoin to the other side of the world
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in 10 seconds and then the person on the other side transfers exchanges
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that Bitcoin back into some national currency, then what have they lost?
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What's the volatility across 10 seconds? Not very much, really.
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And it would literally be limited by how many transactions could transpire.
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And so the point is, so long as you're only buying the tokens you need
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or obtaining the tokens you need, then you're not losing anything.
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You don't hold a cryptocurrency, you don't need to hold it to use the token.
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You use the token for its purpose, or you buy, you exchange something,
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you obtain a token, and then you use it.
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You don't need to buy 10,000 tokens for half of your house, then don't do that.
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If you're just trying to send somebody a message, it's going to cost you six pence.
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So enough said.
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Also, you shouldn't worry that if the market price of some token falls to the floor,
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whether that's a penny or whatever, your network still works.
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You can still do everything that you could before, except now maybe you've got access to,
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well, approaching as close as it approaches to zero than closer to infinite number of tokens you have.
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But it still works.
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Half of the point of things like Filecoin or certain aspects of why people find cryptocurrency interesting
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is that maybe you will find the price where like a fair price.
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The price for energy combined with the price for people's time, combined with the fair price for maintaining equipment, all of that bundled in.
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So when you're buying tokens, you're paying for what you've used, and that would be,
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it would be in a better place if we knew how many resources we had available for which tasks,
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because then perhaps we could not expend the planet, the other five planets, which we don't have.
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An application of a ledger, there are various schemes, notably in the UK, the Bristol Pound,
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there was also the Let's scheme, and I've heard of time sharing, where people recognised that they were all capable of working
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and had all the things they needed to work a job if they had an employer who could give them money.
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And they would do exactly the same things for the employer as they could do to each other.
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So they recognised they could just do all these things for each other and use their own currency,
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so long as they asked for the same prices, they just mimicked being paid,
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and then sort of IOUs to each other, and there's the issue, the issue is a trust,
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so you can use seashells to record how much work one person has done for another,
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but someone goes to the beach and picks up some seashells, counterfeit tokens.
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So rather than telephone the plumber to see if they fix the taps for the hairdresser,
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so that the hairdresser can buy some groceries from the shopkeeper,
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you know, you can make your own tokens and record them in this ledger,
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which is maintained by thousands of people across the planet,
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and you know there's only one place to get those tokens because they're a cryptographic object,
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they were issued, you were all present when they were issued, something like that.
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So you know that if anybody's got them from anybody else,
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then they obtained them in the same way they would obtain ordinary national currency.
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You can't stop people giving gifts of that currency, or you know, taking another service,
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or even buying some ridiculous piece of artwork or sculpture from somebody for half of the currency,
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and you can't stop people from buying your minted currency, your personal currency,
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with currency of a state, so someone could buy ten Bristol pounds for ten United Kingdom,
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great British pounds. It's the same as using ordinary money in an ordinary bank.
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The difference is people who couldn't get a bank account,
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or people who couldn't get a national currency, can now have their very own bank account,
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and their very own currency.
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Or of course, people on the other side of the world could agree with other variously distributed people
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to provide financial backing in various other national currencies,
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for people whom agree to use this token.
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I'm afraid the money schema will continue to haunt us,
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but I'm going to re-abstract back to a cryptographic ledger.
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I will outline key derivation, and then leave it until next time.
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I will mention UTXOs and scripts.
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They are unspent transaction outputs and lists of instructions,
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which are specific to a particular application of a cryptographic ledger.
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Let's try to describe the structure.
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You generate, here's a procedure, you would generate a seed phrase,
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so you can choose a seed phrase from, I think, 2048 different words.
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It's a word list, and you choose, say, 24 words.
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They can be not any of these words, because there's a checksum function,
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so I think one out of 256 of the possible immense number of possibilities are valid seed phrases,
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and then feed this seed phrase into a function which will give you a root private key for a wallet, they call it.
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It's a, basically, you've got a root private key, haven't you?
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The artifact which exists after you've passed the seed phrase into the function,
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and from that root private key are derived, all of the many other keys,
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private keys and public keys, verification keys, signing keys,
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and then from those keys are derived addresses.
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First glance, when you're, you might think the addresses come first,
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and then keys are generated from those, but no.
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Start with a key, which makes sense, because you'd have a very full block chain already,
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if you had a fantastic number of addresses ready to use.
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You just, one might never need any of those addresses.
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They're a result of a function which iterates many, many times upon a key set,
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and then generates an address.
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They then exist on the ledger, those addresses you can search for them,
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and if they exist, you can find them, and you can query what stored at that address,
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there'll be an index of UTXOs.
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Addresses can also resolve to scripts.
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So as a disclaimer, if it wasn't clear at the beginning,
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if you recognise that someone who exchanges a bunch of money for a bunch of cryptographic tokens
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is essentially holding next to nothing at all,
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then your halfway to recognising that someone who holds a bunch of money
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is holding next to nothing at all.
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What they need is to convince somebody to exchange or to swap
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for the permission tickets, which they have acquired.
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Good by Hacker Public Radio.
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I hope it wasn't too dull. Choose well and keep well.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
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Today's show was contributed by a HPR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast,
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then click on our contribute link to find out how easy it leads.
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Hosting for HPR has been kindly provided by an onsthost.com,
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the internet archive and our sync.net.
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On this advice status, today's show is released under Creative Commons
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Attribution 4.0 International License.
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