I don't understand how an RBF pinning attack is carried out. How can an attacker pin someone else's transaction ? Because in order to make a transacation you must be the owner of all the inputs of that transaction. So only if the attacker own at least one input of an transaction he could pin another transaction that uses the same input. What do I miss.
If I understand correctly it’s like a ddos attack just to flood the network. If the mempool is full with useless transactions you’re not able to send funds ? Maybe I’m wrong.
You're right. "Normal" RBF transaction can have its fees bumped only by the emitter. But there are special types of RBF that you can decide to create where the receiver himself has the possibility to create a child to the transaction. And so this child may for example, bumps the parent's transaction fee. Therefore, if the child is in fact an impossible-to-process transaction, the parent transaction gets "pinned".
@@jackmaxwell3134Yes this is how I forced a transaction through when it was lagging for weeks... I chose too small fee, so just created new tx and it went through with the old one.
With all of the lighting security issues along with RBF pinning, it is increasingly difficult to maintain the belief that keeping small blocks forever is the best solution.
the boss...onboarded an entire epoch of bitcoiners until 2017. I'd recommend watching his presentation to the Canadian senate in 2014 to witness the full-blown baller and diplomat that he is.
You are the best. I’m reading through mastering Bitcoin and all I can say is thank you. Any recommendations on coursework to be a Bitcoin job ready dev?
Hi Andrea's, I have been following you for years now. I wonder whether yu would careto comment on this statement: "xrp is decentralized" I believe it is centralised. If I'm wrong, then I have not fully understood your teachings. 🤔
I'm so happy to see you active on youtube again Andreas!! I hope you can stick around during the 2024 halving. You have so much knowledge to offer!
The community loved and appreciates you Andreas !! ❤️
Thank you, Andreas! Your work is still so valuable in the space! 🧡
Antonopoulos you're a wonderful teacher, keep up the great work more blessings and happy life, am your student forever
Miss you man!
Good to see you posting videos here again
Whattup Andreas! 🙌🏻 Glad you’re still on here, this is solid info
I don't understand how an RBF pinning attack is carried out. How can an attacker pin someone else's transaction ? Because in order to make a transacation you must be the owner of all the inputs of that transaction. So only if the attacker own at least one input of an transaction he could pin another transaction that uses the same input. What do I miss.
If I understand correctly it’s like a ddos attack just to flood the network.
If the mempool is full with useless transactions you’re not able to send funds ?
Maybe I’m wrong.
@@PuscH311 I am afraid I think your are wrong indeed 😅
You're right. "Normal" RBF transaction can have its fees bumped only by the emitter. But there are special types of RBF that you can decide to create where the receiver himself has the possibility to create a child to the transaction. And so this child may for example, bumps the parent's transaction fee. Therefore, if the child is in fact an impossible-to-process transaction, the parent transaction gets "pinned".
@@jackmaxwell3134Yes this is how I forced a transaction through when it was lagging for weeks... I chose too small fee, so just created new tx and it went through with the old one.
With all of the lighting security issues along with RBF pinning, it is increasingly difficult to maintain the belief that keeping small blocks forever is the best solution.
Awesome to see you back on YT Andreas 😃
the boss...onboarded an entire epoch of bitcoiners until 2017. I'd recommend watching his presentation to the Canadian senate in 2014 to witness the full-blown baller and diplomat that he is.
I was just reading about this earlier and trying to make sense of it, thank you.
Would be great to have you on Nostr!
Great explanation as always
More more more. Thank you for being there .
Love your content!
Huge gap. I really missed you a lot❤❤❤
your old bitcoin videos orange pilled me and started me on my bitcoin journey!
Aant good info as always
❤ andreas antonopoulos yay
I can’t thank you enough for orange pilling me back in 2018 🧡 some of your clips from the early days are f*cking epic
Actually ecpic do forward thinking
Welcome back
My favorite Bitcoin evangelist
ANDREAS ANTONOPOULOS IS BACK
What about KASPA? Is this the project based on SATOSHI's Vision?
You are the best. I’m reading through mastering Bitcoin and all I can say is thank you. Any recommendations on coursework to be a Bitcoin job ready dev?
Yeah but it cost money to implament this attack bro. I would love to see this in action and how much it cost the attacker. Am i wrong?
Hi Sie, please make video for compile bitcoin source code
Hi Andrea's, I have been following you for years now.
I wonder whether yu would careto comment on this statement: "xrp is decentralized"
I believe it is centralised.
If I'm wrong, then I have not fully understood your teachings. 🤔
It's centralised
Who is that young kid at the end..LMAO!!??
i think AAntonop is Nakamoto!
You redeem the Greek community just so you know and we really needed redeeming lol
❤❤❤❤
Just be like Solana and turn it off then turn it back on
His past self came forward to the future at the end.
Must be the moneyee
This is the first time I didn't understand his video 😩
🍊
We've come so far in technology. After hearing this my grandmother can't wait to begin transacting!
😬🤢🤮
Demon Saw