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I dont mind taking over & running the server if you are going to shut it down Ryan.
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Miles
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As a followup to this old thread, Ripple Inc. has asked if I'd be willing to change the name of Ripplepay to avoid any possible confusion as they continue growing their new version of Ripple. I guess it doesn't look good when banks search them up and find my old site :) So I've changed the name to Rumplepay. I hope that feels familiar enough, and also communicates the benign neglect that the site has seen since, oh, about 2008...(Old ripplepay.com links should redirect.)
Cheers!--On Wed, Nov 13, 2019 at 12:48 AM Jeffrey Cliff <jeffre...@gmail.com> wrote:i'll second that, except i still do use it (very occasionally)--
On Sunday, 25 March 2018 23:32:37 UTC-4, Dan wrote:I think users/supporters might be willing to fund a bitcoin address to
help defray server operating costs to keep ripplepay going a little
longer. I'm very nostalgic about it too. I no longer use it, there is
very much the network effect involved.
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But wasnt ripplepay first?
I think your invention Ripple is one the of the most groundbreaking inventions of this century. I think your priorities to first prove the concept by focusing on proving (and popularizing) decentralization of credit (ripplepay a central ledger on one server, ripple.com a central ledger on many servers, trustlines.network a central ledger on many servers) first, and then proving decentralization of transaction processing, seems like the ideal approach at the time.
To me, decentralization of credit is primary; decentralization of transaction processing is secondary (albeit important). twitter.com/rfugger/status/609922839454466050
Decentralization of transaction processing seems like it makes Ripple much easier to implement. Each person can keep their own ledger, no need for it to be public, no need for public proof (therefore no need for asymmetric digital signatures or hash linking proofs. ) The signature just has to be a MAC (message authentication code), so, relying on a hash function but no public evidence in any way. Bidirectional query flooding seems like it would scale, since nodes queried is sqrt(unidirectionalQueryFlooding). In the human body, the immune system has 10^18 antibodies per milliliter of blood, mediating connections between antigen and lymphocytes. It scales. Using network addressing that somehow "knows" how to do greedy routing might be better (I made a post about that on this forum a year ago) but for a first generation bidirectional query flooding seems like it would work.
To prevent spam, I think paying for payment queries seems like it would work.
Establishing peer-to-peer data transmission connections is the part I'm worst at. The internet solved that in the 1960s? I'm not very good at that part so it is what I have to learn to build a person-to-person Ripple.
torsdag 27 augusti 2020 kl. 09:46:11 UTC+2 skrev Ryan Fugger:On Thu, Aug 27, 2020 at 12:14 AM Melvin Carvalho <melvinc...@gmail.com> wrote:But wasnt ripplepay first?
Yes, but Ripple Inc. (then OpenCoin) took over the project in 2012 with my blessing. Ripple was very stagnant at that point due to my ill health and the fact that no one else had stepped up to do anything with it. I'm pretty impressed what they've done, especially in terms of open decentralized protocol development, very much in line with what I had originally envisioned. Actually, probably way better:It's totally possible to run a decentralized Ripplepay (sorry, *Rumplepay*) type system on this protocol, and one day if I ever get healthy I'd love to work on that. I'm happy to help anyone who wants to work on it now. As always, it's less of a technical challenge and more a question of how to get enough people using it for it to be useful...
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I've been in this group for about 10 years now. I don't understand much of the development/technology side of things, but I'm an accountant who would like to see systems like this thrive and someday be a viable option to help people out.I'm now starting to help intentional communities and eco villages establish structure & processes, and having some sort of internal currency is one of the major components of that. For groups of 500 or less, do you think Ripple is the way to go? I know there are other systems like CES that seemed to work when I was last looking into them years ago. What else has popped up since then that shows promise?I'd love to hear some thoughts from a standpoint of ease-of-access and practicality.
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Where can I learn more about international ecovillage communities?
---- On Sun, 30 Aug 2020 17:01:47 -0300 Adam Wascholl <adam.w...@gmail.com> wrote ----
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