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DISCUSSION: How Can Public Blockchains Have Privacy?

On today's show, we discuss the idea of true privacy on public, transparent blockchains and some of the ways it's working (or not) in Bitcoin or related projects right now.

Updated May 2, 2022, 3:51 p.m. Published Dec 8, 2019, 1:05 p.m. 2 min read
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The best Sundays are for long reads and deep conversations. Today we're asking: how can public blockchains have privacy?

More ways to Listen or Subscribe.

On today's show:

Let's Talk Bitcoin! is sponsored by Brave.com & eToro.com

  • Obscuring origins and game theory security
  • Breaking links with lightning and other layer-2s
  • Adversarial relationships are economic in nature
  • Attacks in theory vs. practice
  • Security through obscurity?
  • Researchers, cryptographers and state level actors
  • and more...

Let’s Talk Bitcoin! is a long-running independent podcast on the ideas, people and projects powering the cryptocurrency narrative. On this show, we basically talk about everything other than the price.

Since we started this conversation in early 2013, a whole world of blockchains and tokens has sprung up alongside bitcoin, and we talk about those too as real-world events help us see what’s real and what’s just clever marketing.

Visit LTBShow.com for all 419 of our past episodes or to subscribe directly to the Let's Talk Bitcoin! show.

Episode 420 (How can public blockchains have privacy) Credits:

Hosts:

Other Staff

Sizin için daha fazlası

(Win McNamee/Getty Images)

CNBC reported Tuesday that Musk is discussing a merger between Tesla and SpaceX that would tie his tech empire closer together and instantly create the world’s fifth-largest corporate bitcoin treasury, worth $3.3 billion.

Bilinmesi gerekenler:

  • Elon Musk is exploring a potential merger of Tesla and SpaceX, a move that would deepen operational overlap in areas such as power infrastructure and AI-related computing.
  • A combined Tesla-SpaceX entity would control about 30,221 bitcoin, worth roughly $3.3 billion, making it the fifth-largest public corporate holder of the cryptocurrency.