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2023-11: Warosu is now out of extended maintenance.

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16803358 No.16803358 [Reply] [Original]

Holy shit. Even Blockstream is working with ARPA. Check this Liquid WP. https://arxiv.org/pdf/1612.05491.pdf

Were the Bitcoin Core shills really government agents. We are going to see them move to ARPA to try and kill ETH. The question is, how much ARPA is enough to make it once they totally kill crypto. As far as I see it, we got one shot left. Bitcoin has already been cucked by the deep state, problem, solution, profit.

>China overthrows internet privacy, unironically. World goes ham.
>Andrew Polestra
>Mimble Wimble Whitepaper writer
>ARPA = Fully Homomorphic Encryption
>Ben Gorlik, Liquid sidechain writer
>Gorlick, ARPA advisor

>> No.16803360
File: 335 KB, 1874x786, ARPAQ.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
16803360

Was this anon trying to tell us something between the lines?

>> No.16803381

>>16803358
"The name ARPA is a tribute to ARPANET, the world’s first internet."

- Yemu

any anons have further research between deep state ties?

https://cryptodiffer.com/news/ama-recap-arpa/

>> No.16803394

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) is an agency of the United States Department of Defense responsible for the development of emerging technologies for use by the military.

Originally known as the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA), the agency was created in February 1958 by President Dwight D. Eisenhower in response to the Soviet launching of Sputnik 1 in 1957. By collaborating with academic, industry, and government partners, DARPA formulates and executes research and development projects to expand the frontiers of technology and science, often beyond immediate U.S. military requirements.[4]

DARPA-funded projects have provided significant technologies that influenced many non-military fields, such as computer networking and the basis for the modern Internet, and graphical user interfaces in information technology.

DARPA is independent of other military research and development and reports directly to senior Department of Defense management. DARPA has about 220 employees, of whom approximately 100 are in management.[5]

The name of the organization first changed from its founding name ARPA to DARPA in March 1972, briefly changing back to ARPA in February 1993, only to revert to DARPA in March 1996

>> No.16803396

The Adaptive Execution Office (AEO) is one of two new DARPA offices created in 2009 by the DARPA Director, Regina Dugan. The office's four project areas include technology transition, assessment, rapid productivity and adaptive systems. AEO provides the agency with robust connections to the warfighter community and assists the agency with the planning and execution of technology demonstrations and field trials to promote adoption by the warfighter, accelerating the transition of new technologies into DoD capabilities.
The Defense Sciences Office (DSO) vigorously pursues the most promising technologies within a broad spectrum of the science and engineering research communities and develops those technologies into important, radically new military capabilities.[28] DSO identifies and pursues high-risk, high-payoff fundamental research initiatives across a broad spectrum of science and engineering disciplines – sometimes reshaping existing fields or creating entirely new disciplines – and transforms these initiatives into radically new, game-changing technologies for U.S. national security.

>> No.16803398

The Information Innovation Office (I2O) aims to ensure U.S. technological superiority in all areas where information can provide a decisive military advantage. Some of the program managers in I2O are Wade Shen (as of December 2014), Stuart Wagner (as of September 2014), Steve Jameson (as of August 2014), Angelos Keromytis (as of July 2014), and David Doermann (as of April 2014). Brian Pierce is currently the office director.
The Microsystems Technology Office (MTO) mission focuses on the heterogeneous microchip-scale integration of electronics, photonics, and microelectromechanical systems (MEMS). Their high risk/high payoff technology is aimed at solving the national level problems of protection from biological, chemical and information attack and to provide operational dominance for mobile distributed command and control, combined manned and unmanned warfare, and dynamic, adaptive military planning and execution.
The Strategic Technology Office (STO) mission is to focus on technologies that have a global theater-wide impact and that involve multiple Services.[29]
The Tactical Technology Office (TTO) engages in high-risk, high-payoff advanced military research, emphasizing the "system" and "subsystem" approach to the development of aeronautic, space, and land systems as well as embedded processors and control systems.
The Biological Technologies Office (BTO) fosters, demonstrates, and transitions breakthrough fundamental research, discoveries, and applications that integrate biology, engineering, and computer science for national security. Created in April 2014 by then director Arati Prabhakar, taking programs from the MTO and DSO divisions.[30]

>> No.16803400

You won't know until it's already over.

>> No.16803418

>>16803358
Shill harder... maybe the price will recover to its 2 week previous.

>> No.16803425
File: 39 KB, 1000x716, ARPANET.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
16803425

>Mid 1900s ARPA creates inter webs
>1950s, Morris Worm nearly ends it while trying to plot / map it
2013 ARPA (now DARPA) announces MEMEX
>plan to plit internet, comprehensive map
>deep and surface web
>impossible with all fringe sites, constant fluctuation
>Snowden tells how volatile security is and how invasive the gov is
>NSA can view all cloud saves / shares
>Celeb leaks from 4chan
>gaming bs
>misinformation
>FCC shutting down net neutrality
>cut down the fringe sites
>silence opposite
>BITCOIN
>map and police the web
>this is all (D)ARPA
>this is military taking back control
>we CAN fight this
>MUSK
>ARPA
>ARPA

>> No.16803437

How to tell if the shill is a pajeet 101: they use the word 'cuck' or any variants

>> No.16803446

>>16803358
Warosu doesn't seem to work anymore (not updated after 27 december), I need to see the amount of shilling that happened on ARPA.

>> No.16803479
File: 9 KB, 288x175, ARPANET2.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
16803479

I will modify this timeline now :

>Mid 1900s ARPA creates inter webs
>1950s, Morris Worm nearly ends it while trying to plot / map it
2013 ARPA (now DARPA) announces MEMEX
>plan to plit internet, comprehensive map
>deep and surface web
>impossible with all fringe sites, constant fluctuation
>Snowden tells how volatile security is and how invasive the gov is
>NSA can view all cloud saves / shares
>Celeb leaks from 4chan
>gaming bs
>misinformation
>FCC shutting down net neutrality
>cut down the fringe sites
>silence opposite
>BITCOIN
>map and police the web
>this is all (D)ARPA
>this is military taking back control
>we CAN fight this
>MUSK
>ARPAchain
* YOU ARE HERE ****
>China overthrows internet privacy, unironically. World goes ham.
>Andrew Polestra
>Mimble Wimble Whitepaper writer
>ARPA = Fully Homomorphic Encryption
>Ben Gorlik, Liquid sidechain writer
>Gorlick, ARPA advisor

>> No.16803487

>World goes disillusioned after Chinese internet takeover
>Andrew Polestra becomes new Fluffy
>Entire crypto space donates $50M into new global currency running sidechain data feeds on ARPA.

>> No.16803492

MASS CHAOS. DEGENERACY RAMPANT. 1 ARPA = 1 ENTRANCE TO THE CITADEL

>> No.16803495

ARPANET initially connected four independent network nodes situated at University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), Stanford Research Institute (SRI), the University of California-Santa Barbara (UCSB) and the University of Utah.

The first node of the ARPANET was established when networking hardware was installed to UCLA and connected to a host computer on September 2, 1969, but its birthdate is taken from when the first transmission was made, October 29, 1969.

The team of engineers at UCLA was led by Professor Leonard Kleinrock and featured young graduate student Vint Cerf.

Cerf later teamed with fellow engineer Bob Kahn to create the TCP (Transmission Control Protocol)/IP protocol suite.

>> No.16803496

>>16803446
Started like a week ago. Looks like it will overtake FTM shills soon.

>> No.16803497

Government contractor BBN supplied the Interface Message Processor (IMP) that connected nodes on the nascent network. Each IMP comprised a Honeywell DDP-516 mini-computer with 12KB of memory. This gateway allowed a host machine at UCLA (an SDS Sigma 7 running the SEX operating system) to send a message to a terminal at SRI (an SDS-940 computer with the Genie operating system).

>> No.16803500

NSFNET was founded in 1985 with significant effort by Dennis Jennings, who was responsible for leading the development of NSFNET in linking university based super computer networks to be able to share information and resources with each other. Jennings built NSFNET as a general purpose research network wherein the connection is not limited to the super computer centers, it was to serve as a backbone connection for regional networks at every super computing site and use ARPANET's TCP/IP protocol. A team from the National Center for Superomputing Applications (NCSA) and Cornell University built the initial backbone of NSFNET with 56 kbps lines. Dave Mills from the University of Delaware and Hans-Werner Braun of Merit Networks Inc. also assisted in building the backbone.

>> No.16803505

Commercial firms noted the popularity and effectiveness of the growing Internet and built their own networks. The proliferation of private suppliers led to an NSF solicitation in 1993 that outlined a new Internet architecture that largely remains in place today.

From that solicitation, NSF awarded contracts in 1995 for three network access points, to provide connection points between commercial networks, and one routing arbiter, to ensure an orderly exchange of traffic across the Internet. In addition, NSF signed a cooperative agreement to establish the next-generation very-high-performance Backbone Network Service. A more prominent milestone was the decommissioning of the NSFNET backbone in April 1995.

In the years following NSFNET, NSF helped navigate the road to a self-governing and commercially viable Internet during a period of remarkable growth. The most visible, and most contentious, component of the Internet transition was the registration of domain names. Domain name registration associates a human-readable character string (such as “nsf.gov”) with Internet Protocol (IP) addresses, which computers use to locate one another.

The Department of Defense funded early registration efforts because most registrants were military users and awardees. By the early 1990s, academic institutions comprised the majority of new registrations, so the Federal Networking Council (a group of government agencies involved in networking) asked NSF to assume responsibility for non-military Internet registration. When NSF awarded a five-year agreement for this service to Network Solutions, Inc. (NSI), in 1993, there were 7,500 domain names.

>> No.16803508

In September 1995, as the demand for Internet registration became largely commercial (97 percent) and grew by orders of magnitude, the NSF authorized NSI to charge a fee for domain name registration. Previously, NSF had subsidized the cost of registering all domain names. At that time, there were 120,000 registered domain names. In September 1998, when NSF’s agreement with NSI expired, the number of registered domain names had passed 2 million.

""""""The year 1998 marked the end of NSF’s direct role in the Internet."""""

>READ
>BETWEEN
>THE
>LINES.

you are too late

>> No.16803524
File: 30 KB, 208x288, lefty_kman.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
16803524

>>16803505
no question he would try to get the door

>> No.16803525

>>16803524
Lefty has the power.

>> No.16803557
File: 565 KB, 4096x2304, kraken.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
16803557

"… most Internet vulnerabilities at the protocol and standards layers have been there since day one. Because they were quite deliberately built in from day zero.

It was almost certainly not done maliciously but to “solve problems within resource constraints” that no longer apply.

The thing is nobody wants to spend money to solve these problems, usually portrayed with the excuse of “don’t break legacy systems” as it’s the almost perfect “get out clause”. As well as the biggest soirce [sic] of not just technical debt but building in security vulnerabilities across the board."

>> No.16803563

Where Wizards Stay Up Late.

>> No.16803567

Everything in the universe has an opposite. Light - dark, Happy - sad, war - peace, sky - ground, etc. Matter must have an opposite called anti-matter. Supposedly, it is extremely unstable when it comes in contact with anything including air. One small drop can have the explosive power of the Hiroshima bomb. The only problem is that it is hard to create and has only been seen in outer space so far...that we know of.

Another thing mentioned in the book was about an underground cult made up of scientists called the Illuminati. I guess the pyramid and eye on the back of the dollar bill is their doing and also one of their symbols. It makes sense though.

>> No.16803571

Anti-Matter exists, CERN proved they could make it.

>> No.16803573

After the NSA seeded doubt in 2012, companies around the world refused to purchase network routers from Chinese maker Huawei, concerned that they concealed “back doors” in their code that would let a knowledgeable hacker log on to intercept or interject network packets. This after Der Spiegel broke news that NSA had infiltrated Huawei’s IT system to retrieve source code for their products, as well as “a list of 1,400 customers as well as internal documents providing training to engineers on the use of Huawei products, among other things.”

There’s no direct evidence that NSA slipped spyware into Huawei equipment, but in 2014 the Intercept revealed NSA documents indicating that NSA was “interdicting” shipments of US-made networking equipment destined overseas to inject its own code before buyers took delivery. A network router or a switch may have 30M lines of code, not easy for a customer to verify that it’s spook-free. And should NSA’s bugs be discovered, the manufacturer’s reputation and stock price will certainly take hits.

>> No.16803575

We can only speculate whether there are similar trapdoors in routers sold in the US market, but it almost doesn’t matter. NSA has many other ways to sniff out your packets to archive your messages for future reference, along with data on your computer’s Internet traffic generously supplied by your ISP. And for that robust surveillance capability, give thanks to Bobby Inman and the unsung architects of the Arpanet who paved the way.

2020 is the new timeline.

>> No.16803586

>>16803425
>MEMEX
oh wow... nice find anon

>>16803487
> at least he's one of us...r..ri..right?

>> No.16803594

>>16803496
At least the coin is a thousand times better

>> No.16803596

>>16803586
Yes.

>> No.16803606

>>16803594
This whole thing is a VPN fiesta. This is so sad.

>> No.16803607

itt: poo shills replying to each other

>> No.16803618

ARPA is confirmed scam.

There is a Discord group where shilling is rewarded with 0,0025 ETH for each ARPA thread so it's infested with pajeets.

>> No.16803619

They will assume control.

Do not fight it. Buy into it.

You have the power to choose, today.

>> No.16803622

>>16803606
>>16803607
What are you talking about? You really haven't looked into Arpa have you?

>> No.16803626

>>16803618
Invite me please

>> No.16803627

>>16803618
wrong

https://www.coinspeaker.com/cypherpunk-ux-multi-party-computation/

>> No.16803628

>>16803622
Man... just... enough. Let it die already. I can't believe this is happening in 2020.

>> No.16803629

"“Ultimately, using sMPC, we can realize the separation in data of the right to use and the right of use, and directly calculate results on multi-source and heterogeneous ciphertext data,” detailed ArpaChain CEO, Felix Xu, in a ChainNode AMA. ArpaChain has emerged as one of the leaders in sMPC globally, and already has a functioning product on their testnet.

Their insights and innovation into sMPC represent a broader initiative to reconcile the issues of security vs. UX.

At a high level, sMPC empowers users to compute something over a large set of data without revealing their individual inputs, furnishing enhanced privacy, and a means to produce a specific outcome. Consequently, sMPC affords advantages over two existing modes of key management: multi-sig and hardware storage."

>> No.16803631

“We have implemented an agreement to support the participation of any party, and as long as there is an honest node in it, it can ensure the security of the data,” says Xu. “Either of these two points is a breakthrough, and as far as we know, the vast majority of projects can only support the involvement of two parties.”

>> No.16803640

>>16803628
> I can't believe this is happening in 2020.
Research the ARPA MPC stuff. I thought it wasn't real either

>> No.16803647

>>16803640
It's all real. Anyone not holding some ARPA bags is going to hate themselves in 2021.

>> No.16803649

“Imagine multi-party joint credit information, data leasing, secure data analysis, and other scenarios in the financial industry such as multi-source data joint risk control in the insurance industry with sMPC,” says Xu. “In the future, applications will exist for corporate finance, marketing, medical applications, and even artificial intelligence.”

ArpaChain achieves this dynamic balance using an off-chain, layer two structure – making ARPA compatible with any public blockchain.

“The ARPA secure computing network can be used as a second layer to provide privacy computing capabilities for any public blockchain, enabling developers to build efficient, secure computing networks on ARPA computing networks, while also protecting the data privacy of business applications,” says Xu.

“Enterprise and personal data can be safely analyzed or utilized on ARPA computing networks without worrying about exposing data to any third party,” he continues.

A confluence of security, privacy, and better UX – a compelling proposition.

>> No.16803654

>>16803628
Yeah I agree its literally over. Everyone and everything is a government spook. Don't trust anyone. Get all your ARPA off Binance immediately and make sure you have XMR as well.

>> No.16803657

>>16803654
GRIN, too. GRIN + ARPA + XMR + LINK

>> No.16803663

>>16803657
> Still buying GRIN
anon ARPA is literally better in everyway

>> No.16803666

This is like a VPN sponsored segment. You've been literally posting for a week now about this.

>> No.16803668

>>16803663
It's probably better R/R and ROI but everyone should have at least 5,000 Grin IMO.

2M ARPA
50K LINK
5K GRIN
300 XMR

>> No.16803672

>>16803666
shut up and let the big boys talk

>> No.16803679

>>16803358

Just another scam. Keep your bags faggot.

>> No.16803680

"Overall, sMPC effectively removes the requirement of trusted third parties for security (i.e., custody), the cold/hardware storage solutions preferred by exchanges, and affords a better UX by removing significant points of friction altogether like key management.

What’s the cherry on top? Better privacy. For enterprises, mainstream users, and the broader trajectory of crypto adoption alike, that’s a potent recipe for success."

Bullish

>> No.16803686

Biz doesn't deserve ARPA.

>>16803679
Classic poorfag thinking

>> No.16803691

>>16803666
Yes anon. This must be you. Are those your sponsored links too?

>>>16803655

>> No.16803692
File: 50 KB, 660x440, PajeetWarfare.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
16803692

ITT:

>> No.16803702

>>16803691
LOL

>> No.16803706

>>16803691
kek

That's gotta be him

>> No.16803714
File: 185 KB, 466x492, 1517680058950.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
16803714

>>16803692
Literally

>> No.16803724

>>16803706
his next thread : "can i make it with .2 BTC?"

>>16803714
give me the shotgun.

>> No.16803725

>>16803358
Finally got in on something with biz BEFORE it started pumping

>> No.16803733

>>16803725
hold to 100M cap.

>> No.16803737

actually, fuck that, hold to $1B cap. sell half then and continue running the node.

>> No.16803750

>>16803724
> posts portfolio thread
> holding RSR and no LINK

Arpa is my biggest low cap holding by far

>> No.16803761

Bullish amount of autism ITT.

>> No.16803774

>>16803761
yeah i'm watching this coin too

>> No.16803787

>>16803774
Just buy some and wait for staking.

My next buy is 0.008 if BTC allows.

>> No.16803822

>>16803628
Is this what it's like to be a boomer and miss out on 2020s biggest pumps?

Let me guess. DASH holder.

>> No.16803869

>>16803618
link pls?

>> No.16803892

>>16803869
He doesn't have a link because it's bullshit. I'm also waiting because I'm holding ARPA and want to shill it for some neetbux

>> No.16803900

Based thread is based.

>> No.16803977

>>16803358
Another erc20 token with the same marketing bullshit we have seen a thousand times.

>> No.16804002

>>16803977
this time, unironically, may be different.

>> No.16804232

>>16803761
Autism = Buy signal. Going for it. If 0.007 is the floor I'll just buy more.

>> No.16804460

Kek. This is golden. Locked up another 40K.

>> No.16804726

>>16803680
Okay, fuck it, I'm in.

>> No.16804740

>>16803479
>Written by Hideo Kojima

>> No.16805046

>>16803977
oh you mean the main-net that's about to launch ?

it's not about the marketing, its about the fundamentals AND the marketing.

>>16804740
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0aIM9ispc0w

Based AF will see you in our government facility (entry ticket 100k ARPA) since the world is going to shit.

>> No.16805062

When the fuck is this shitcoin going to move?

>> No.16805225

>>16804740
kek

>>16805062
give 'er time. range might be 0.0085 - 0.01, but it'll go violent sooner or later.

>> No.16805417

>>16805062
once you sell we will take off without you

you were the bag we were holding all along, the rest of us? Free.

>> No.16805620

>>16805417
Hahaha.