Tech worker/consumer.

Joined January 2009
73 Photos and videos
Another conference in the bag. 2026 @BTCPrague was exactly what I had hoped it would be. Got to see some familiar faces. Got to meet @BTCsessions , @r0ckstardev , @UsDylan and see all the people I admire and respect do their thing on stage.
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What's more, I brought my friend that I orange pilled and exposed him to the world of Bitcoin conferences. He already wants to dedicate everything to this world. For now, we return to the land of fiat but only for a while. Děkuji, Praho. Tak zase příště.
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Met @BTCsessions today. What a classy dude.
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Yaazer Yazingstein retweeted
Boltz API and related services are currently facing an unexpected downtime ⚠️ We are looking into the issue and will be sharing more information soon 🙏
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Yaazer Yazingstein retweeted
Jun 12
History's first trillionaire is a guy who catches rockets out of the sky with chopsticks and beams internet to every dead zone on the planet. Same guy ships cars that drive themselves, humanoid robots for the factory floor, brain chips that let paralyzed people move a cursor with pure thought, and an AI running on a supercomputer his team stood up in months instead of years. And the people crashing out about his net worth are doing it on the app he owns. The same app governments spent years trying to censor. You cannot legislate a rocket into orbit.
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Did he really link to an article that references himself as the "expert"… Such hubris. I hope you're ready to be humbled, Pete.
Gold bull warns Bitcoin could face ‘Black Monday’ finance.yahoo.com/markets/cr…
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Yaazer Yazingstein retweeted
Jun 3
We're doing another @Bitkey giveaway! A built-in screen. No seed phrase. 2-of-3 multisig. Follow @Bitkey and us, RT to enter. ✅ Winner announced Tuesday 6/9 at 4PM EST.
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Absolute fire.
🔥COFFEEZILLA REFUTED - STRC IS THE GREATEST FIXED INCOME INVESTMENT EVER🔥 Coffeezilla just made an 18 minute CHARACTER ASSASSINATION on Strategy by saying it was comparable to a PONZI SCHEME. He made ZERO arguments in his video, provided ZERO mechanisms by which the structure is fraudulent, and provided ZERO proof that Strategy hasn't disclosed the proper risks. This didn't stop thousands of people from immediately thinking that Strategy is FRAUDELENT. DO BETTER, COFFEEZILLA. THIS IS YOUR RECKONING:
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Yaazer Yazingstein retweeted
🎶 "It's Raining Guns!" 🎶 The BIGGEST GUN CONTEST In Canadian History!! 🇨🇦 Canada’s Gun Lobby is launching an unprecedented project to hold the Liberals accountable—and to fund it, WE ARE GIVING AWAY 100 GUNS!! ENTER HERE 👉 firearmrights.ca/2026-its-ra…
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Yaazer Yazingstein retweeted
Replying to @Polysesouvient
You people know nothing about the actual things you lobby about. The MPX was banned in 2020 not 2022, you posted a pic of an AK variant not an ATF SBR-9, and the Hotchkiss Universal is a full auto SMG banned decades ago. And you have the government's ear? Jesus Christ.
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Question of the day: Casa vs Unchained vs Nunchuk Specifically for multisig/inheritance plans. I'm trying to figure out what the best #multisig solution is best between these three options. Anyone out there have experiences to share? ... Discuss.
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Yaazer Yazingstein retweeted
28 Sep 2025
This is a long post that hopefully bridges some gaps between technical people (devs) and non-technical users and how they look at spam prevention in Bitcoin. I hope that it clarifies why I think that there is such a huge misunderstanding between both camps. I'll preface this post with first disqualifying any malicious attempts to misrepresent the motives of either camp. Everybody wants to improve Bitcoin as money. Money is Bitcoin's use case. It's not a data storage system. If you think otherwise, there are countless shitcoins to play with. Alright, let's get into it. I have worked on anonymous systems for over a decade. I have read tons of research on spam detection, rate-limiting, and I've implemented spam prevention techniques in the real world. I am very confident to say that there is not a single known method to prevent spam in decentralized anonymous open networks other than proof of work. This is what Satoshi realized when he designed Bitcoin and it's why only transaction fees can reliably fight spam without sacrificing any of Bitcoin's properties. Let me explain. Spam prevention is a cat and mouse game. As a system's architect, your goal is to make the life of a spammer harder (increase the friction). This is why, on the web, you see captchas, sign-ups, or anything that can artificially slow you down. Slowing down is key. This is why Satoshi turned to proof of work. Let's contrast this to other methods for spam prevention. This is not an exhaustive list but it illustrates the design space of this problem, other methods are often derivatives of these: CAPTCHAS are a centralized form of proof of work for humans: Google's servers give you a hard-to-solve task (select all bicycles) that will slow you down so that you can't bombard a website with millions of requests. It requires centralization: you need to prove Google that you're human so that you can use another website. If you could host your own CAPTCHA service, why would anyone believe you're not cheating? LOGINS with email and passwords are most popular way to slow down users. Before you can sign up, you need to get an email address, and to get an email address, you often need a phone number today. The purpose of this is, again, to slow you down (and to track you to be honest). It only works well when emails are hard to get, i.e. in a centralized web where Google controls how hard it is to get an email account. If you could easily use your own email server, why would anyone believe you're not a bot? The next one is the most relevant to Bitcoin: AD BLOCK FILTERS are another form of spam prevention but this time the roles are reversed: you as a user fight against the spam from websites and advertising companies trying to invade your brain. Ad blocking works only under certain conditions: First you need to be able to "spell out" what the spam looks like, i.e. what the filter should filter out. Second, you need to update your filters every time someone circumvents them. Have you ever installed a youtube ad blocker and then noticed that it stops working after a few weeks? That's because you're playing cat-and-mouse with youtube. You block, they circumvent, you update your filters, repeat. The fact that you need to update your filters is critical and that's where it ties back to Bitcoin: Suppose you have a mempool filter for transactions with a locktime of 21 because some stupid NFT project uses that. You maybe slow them down for a few weeks, but then they notice it and change their locktime to 22. You're back at zero, the spam filter doesn't work anymore. What do you do? You update your filter! But where do you get your new filter from? You need a governing body, or some centralized entity that keeps updating these filters and you need to download their new rules every single day. That's what ad blockers in your web browser do. They trust a centralized authority to know what's best for you, and blindly accept their new filters. Every single day. I hope you see the issue here. Nobody should even consider this idea of constantly updating filter rules in Bitcoin. This would give the filter providers a concerning level of power and trust. It would turn Bitcoin into a centrally planned system, the opposite of what makes Bitcoin special. This is why filters do not work for decentralized anonymous systems. They require a central authority. Until now, these rules were determined by Bitcoin Core, but they have realized that these rules do not work anymore. Transactions bypass the filters easily and at some point, carrying them around became a burden to the node runners themselves. Imagine you're using an outdated ad blocker but instead of filtering out ads, it now also filters out legitimate content you might be interested in. That's what mempool filters do, and that's why Bitcoin Core is slowly relaxing these filters. This has been discussed for over two years, it's not a sudden decision. The goal of this change is not to help transactions to slip through more easily. The goal is to improve your node's prediction of what is going to be in the next block. Most people misrepresent this part. They say "it's to turn Bitcoin into a shitcoin" but that is just a false statement at best, or a manipulation tactic at worst. Let's tie it back to proof of work and why fees are the actual filter that keeps Bitcoin secure and prevents spam reasonably well: Satoshi realized that there is no technique that could slow down block production and prevent denial of service attacks in a decentralized system other than proof of work. Fees prevent you from filling blocks with an infinite number of transactions. All the other options would introduce some form of trust or open the door for censorship – nothing works other than proof of work. He was smart enough to design a system where the proof of work that goes into block production is "minted" into the monetary unit of the system itself: You spend energy, you get sats (mining). This slows down block production. How do you slow down transactions within those blocks? You spend the sats themselves, original earned form block production, as fees for the transactions within the block! This idea is truly genius and it's the only reason why Bitcoin can exist. All other attempts of creating decentralized money have failed to solve this step. Think about it: without knowing who you are, whether you're one person pretending to be a thousand, or a thousand people pretending to be one. Bitcoin defends itself (and anyone who runs nodes in the Bitcoin system) from spam by making you pay for your activity. People sometimes counter this by saying: the economic demand for decentralized data storage is higher than the monetary use case. First of all, I think that's just wrong. There are way cheaper ways to store data (there are shitcoins for this), and the value of having decentralized neutral internet money is beyond comparison. However, there's a much deeper concern here. If you truly believe this, I ask you: what is Bitcoin worth to you? If you think Bitcoin can't succeed as money (i.e. be competitive), why do you even care? If you're not willing to pay fees for the use case that we all believe Bitcoin is designed for (money), and you believe that no one is willing to pay for it, how can it even persist into the future? You can't have it all. If Bitcoin is money (which I believe it is), then we need to pay the price to keep it alive. There is no free lunch. Either we centralize, or we pay the price of decentralization. I know where I stand. Peace.
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Yaazer Yazingstein retweeted
NEW VIDEO! A Hardcore Tech Upgrade - AMD $5000 Ultimate Tech Upgrade youtu.be/b5hZVDoifHo Enter the AMD giveaway for a chance to win 1 of 10 AMD 7800X3D and 7900XTX Avatar CPU and GPU bundles! gleam.io/g7ak2/amd-avatar-bu… #sponsoredby @AMD
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Yaazer Yazingstein retweeted
1 Mar 2023
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Yaazer Yazingstein retweeted
Get this. The Premier of the province banned a woman of color from his rally because she wrote true things about him he didn’t like. Fucking wild.
#BREAKING I am barred from entering @fordnation election kickoff event. When asked why, security said, “We know who you are.” Was it the comics? The skits? The #Qrista tweets? The parody songs? #cdnpoli #onpoli #GetTheFordOut
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Yaazer Yazingstein retweeted
2 Feb 2022
Replying to @gofundme
@gofundme Ottawa police have racked up a bill over $3million so far because of the truckers. You should reimburse them from the fund gofund.me/cf5c9fcf Why should my city have to pay for a bunch of overgrown toddlers throwing a temper tantrum who are attempting to profit.
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Yaazer Yazingstein retweeted
14 Nov 2020
“So if the impossible happens twice, if it does, then the Supreme Court could do the immoral and we could erase the will of the voters. And then Trump is President.” Fox News is a cancer in the collective mind of America.
14 Nov 2020
“There’s less than 30,000 votes in Georgia and Arizona dividing Biden and Trump. And if those two states turn, if they do, then the Supreme Court could make the decision on Pennsylvania. And then Trump is president." — Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick
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Yaazer Yazingstein retweeted
6 Nov 2020
if Trump dealt with coronavirus as aggressively as he's been dealing with imaginary voter fraud over the last two days, he would have sailed to re-election
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