[-] Saki@monero.town 1 points 11 months ago

Nitter had been indeed generally Tor-friendly until around September, 2023. After that, even the official instance nitter.net started blocking Tor from time to time (currently not blocking), and there are now relatively few working instances for Tor users.

This is something most Tor users know through daily experiences. The problem seems to be, your link was a "meta link" redirected to a random Nitter instance, right? If so, that’s the problem; not every instance is Tor-friendly. Another problem is, your knowledge about this privacy front end is not up-to-date.

The current situation is so obvious for actual users that if you were actually using Tor/Tails every day, you would have never done what you did. But it’s okay. Thanks for a $20 donation to Tails, you seem to be very proud of. Well, xmr user would be more likely to send or say 0.2 XMR etc. because we tend to think in our native currency :)

[-] Saki@monero.town 1 points 11 months ago
  1. Bisq is Non-custodial. It’s listed #1 in kycnot.me too. Your fund is always with you. It’s Pure P2P. Which is better than Trocador but it does have both good sides and bad sides. See 4) and 5) below.

  2. If you’re just taking an existing offer, Altcoin Instant, then the trade window is one hour. It’s rather quick and painless, certainly safer than Trocador, except the rate may be better or worse (it depends).

  3. If you’re just taking an existing offer, Altcoin, then the trade window is 24 hours. Not suitable if you’re in hurry. But you don’t need to “sit there and wait”. 24 hours means, it’s enough for you to check it twice a day. Otherwise you can go out or sleep or do whatever. (This is when you’re a maker. If you’re a taker, you can take an offer instantly.)

  4. Good thing: Since it’s non-custodial, you can freely cancel your offer any time even if you’re a maker; your fund is always with you, there’s no custodian who might freeze it.

  5. Bad thing: Since it’s de-centralized pure P2P over onion (Darknet) not controlled by someone in the center, if you’re a maker, you need to run Bisq 24-hours. You can close it and turn off your machine, but then your offer is not visible. It’ll be visible again, if you restart Bisq, though.


A philosophical point to think about: “That’s inconvenient.” “I don’t like to wait.” — That’s a conventional customer-provider point of view. This is pure P2P, peers on an equal footing are helping each other with no central custodians. In a way, you could be a volunteer, who sells XMR to those who want to try it. When other sellers are doing say +5%, you could make with −1% (meaning “Hey, try XMR, I’ll share mine cheaper than the market price"). Of course, this will be often taken very quickly, because it’s a nice offer. Why do that? Well, you might be generous, or perhaps you got XMR when it was less than 100€ so spot −1% is actually selling high for you, or you just want to make it easy for new people to get XMR because of philosophical reasons, with some self sacrifice.

Bisq is one of the largest DEX, if not the largest, where the top 3 currencies are EUR, USD and XMR. The OP asked “Is there any way to swap a coin to xmr?” Not mentioning Bisq is absurd and unhelpful, no matter whether you like it or not.


Then again, obviously Bisq is not something Monero users generally love very much. It’s BTC-centric. I only seldom, if ever, use it myself. Another thing is, a peer-to-peer trade on Bisq is secured trustlessly by 2-of-2 multi-sig by the seller and buyer. While this is cool, it’s something not yet practical with XMR, so frankly I kind of feel a sense of inferiority about that. I hope the XMR version of this platform, Haveno, will become usable soon! Because what happens to Binance could happen to any CEX, including Instant-Swap CEXes or Cake (?) or anything. A pure P2P may be inconvenient but it seems critically important.

[-] Saki@monero.town 1 points 1 year ago

The fact that multisig was not widely used yet, was indirectly related to the unfortunate CCS Wallet Incident, which happened a few months ago, as well.

@ErC (ErCiccione), a contributor, commented elsewhere a few days ago:

This is a bit of a dog biting its tail. Multisig was shipped and has been live for a long time. Nobody really used it, so it ended up being unstable and full of problems, but that came out only relatively recently (couple of years ago) when services started to build on it.

People are now saying, “If multsig had been used…” “should have” “could have” (Hindsight is 20/20 😢). Anyway, fluffypony replied, “when it reached a level of maturity (this year? late last year?) it should have been prioritized.”

We can expect that multisig will be now more prioritized and to be carefully tested and tuned, soon to be available more generally, if not right now. So perhaps the answer to your question is, “No, but maybe soon…”?

[-] Saki@monero.town 1 points 1 year ago

I don’t know anything technical (not an investor), but the XMR/USD high around Nov 1 looks like around 175.

[-] Saki@monero.town 1 points 1 year ago

Yeah, personally 160+ feels rather good, even 150–160 is not so bad. Nevertheless 175-ish -> 165-ish can be a significant move, though it well may be just a random move too.

Not “worrying“ at all like investor people (who buy and re-sell without actually using it), but somewhat curious about the effects of not-so-accurate (irresponsible) media reports, or more generally: do people now trust Monero less because of this incident (which seems to be, ultimately, just a human error of one person and bad luck)?

That is a valid PR question to ask (so to speak), while talking about price movement is admittedly inelegant 😅 Asking an unpopular question without hesitating, that’s part of freedom I believe in!

[-] Saki@monero.town 1 points 1 year ago

Welcome back :) Many tools (incl. p2pool & xmrig) are both cross platform. The same command line works for both.

While windows version is free (open-source) too, it’s obvious better to do that on GNU/Linux. What matters most is CPU speed.

[-] Saki@monero.town 1 points 1 year ago

Well, his nick suggests he’s in a minority group. He wants to use VPN and he wants to pay secretly, which could mean various delicate/difficult situations.

@sleepybisexual For your privacy, use Tor Browser whenever possible. If you just need an exit node in a specific country, I could tell you how to do that w/ Tor Browser.

[-] Saki@monero.town 1 points 1 year ago

impossible to benefit

He was worried about his age, so he’s likely to be young, which means perhaps he has “free (gratis) electricity” = pure benefit at no cost

[-] Saki@monero.town 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Running a full-node itself is easy, but before running it, you need to download a huge file, like 100 GB (?), which may take a lot of time depending on your bandwidth (first time only). Monero GUI already has everything you need. If your gaming machine has a faster CPU, you may want to use it :)

PS: Don’t worry, things like "signing up" "registration" "your ID" "KYC" "permission" etc. are not necessary. No one asks your age, gender, name, phone number, etc. You’re free to have a wallet, send and receive XMR, start/stop running a node, start/stop p2pool'ing—totally privately, secretly, and anonymously. That’s why Monero is called privacy coin. Ni estas liberaj homoj (Esperanto: “We are free people”).

[-] Saki@monero.town 1 points 1 year ago

Sorry, this question was SearXNG specific, so MetaGer was irrelevant. I’ve never self-hosted it, but I’d say Brave. It’s supposed to have its own index (correct me if I’m wrong), so one can expect some diversity.

As for DDG, there shouldn’t be any problems if used via SearXNG. In general, there are a few comments about DDG here: https://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic-t-1164105.html and I quote:

Negative:

~1-2 years back they collected data on which search results their users clicked on by default with their own link-forwarder. After some outcry they removed that. Their "privacy browser" allowed third party cookies by Microsoft to track their users because DDG made a deal with them without telling anyone. When it came out Gabriel Weinberg released some BS statements.

Positive:

DDG doesn't even have a Linux browser, but I love their Android browser. The DDG search engine provides results that are quite fine

[-] Saki@monero.town 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Apparently their fundraising (in xmr) having been successful to some extent, the person got medical care (perhaps, otherwise too expensive). While there may be fake charity donation scams too, if Monero genuinely did save someone's life, that is a good thing — not just for them but also for public relations.

You're welcome (though I'm not a donor...). Get well soon. / 不客气 快点好起来

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