Transaction

10cea93c8e1d2068b425dfd27cebecf5b923539f96203d85ce3ba06e26dc85f6
( - )
4,286
2024-03-28 17:06:05
1
1,748 B

2 Outputs

Total Output:
  • j"1LAnZuoQdcKCkpDBKQMCgziGMoPC4VQUckMØ<div class="post"><div class="quoteheader"><a href="https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=661.msg7314#msg7314">Quote from: creighto on August 03, 2010, 08:01:22 PM</a></div><div class="quote"><div class="quoteheader"><a href="https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=661.msg7230#msg7230">Quote from: throughput on August 03, 2010, 01:33:08 PM</a></div><div class="quote"><br/>Yes...<br/>But what you describe is only possible after someone have noticed and prooved the network split is happening.<br/>Do you propose any method to detect the beginning of the network split?<br/><br/></div><br/>I started another thread along this line elsewhere, but for an individual vendor, a simple watchdog daemon that tracks the average time between blocks since the last official change in difficulty and alerts the vendor if a single block takes more than twice as long as the average, perhaps suspending the acceptance of new coins until the vendor checks to see what is happening.&nbsp; Each block in a row that takes longer than the average increases confidence against a false positive.&nbsp; So if one block takes twice as long as average, followed by a series of blocks that take 75% longer than average, then you can be fairly certain that you are no longer on the majority network.<br/><br/><br/></div><br/>Really? It seems to me more likely that a bunch of people left/crashed than a whole new network half the size of the legit one has gotten to you.<br/><br/>I'm probably misunderstanding.</div> text/html
    https://whatsonchain.com/tx/10cea93c8e1d2068b425dfd27cebecf5b923539f96203d85ce3ba06e26dc85f6