Digging for cryptocurrency: The newbie’s guide to mining altcoins

Play your cards right, and you could be swimming in Arscoins.

Disney

A few weeks ago, whenour own "Arscoin" cryptocurrencywas first minted, it looked like Senior Reviews Editor Lee Hutchinson would control the majority of the coins. He started mining early, and he has a crowd of Linux servers sitting in his closet that can outrun the all-in-one desktops and power-sipping Ultrabooks most of us have on hand.

Send coins to a friend or buy a silly hat for the Ars Technica forums.

When our little experiment began, I knew enough about Bitcoin and Litecoin mining to know that there are more efficient ways to rack up coins than using the default miner, but I had never actually mined either of those currencies myself. Coingen.io, which we used to produce the Arscoin code, provides no explicit documentation and little post-creation support for newly minted cryptocurrencies, so it was up to me to feel my way forward. I couldn't out-muscle Lee's closet full of computers, but I've worked with him for long enough to know that I could outsmart him. (See me after class, Mr. Cunningham. -Ed.)

My research led me down a rabbit hole that ran through several wikis and dozens of half-helpful forum posts, but when I finally climbed back out, I knew enough to overpower Lee's computer closet using only a 2012 iMac. To save you from having to follow my dusty path, we'll walk you through the best ways to mine out Arscoinsand other altcoinswith your existing hardware.

A couple of notes before we begin.In these directions, we'll try not to assume any knowledge about mining on your part, but the most straightforward mining utilities use the Windows, OS X, and Linux command lines. We'll cover graphical utilities where appropriate, but you Linux users in particular should make sure you know your way around a Terminal window, especially if you intend to GPU mine. We will also require you to download some files from external siteswe haven't encountered any problems with any of the tools we're about to recommend, but we assume no responsibility for anything you do to your hardware or software while mining Arscoins or any other cryptocurrency.

Second, while you'll be able to mine plenty of Arscoins with your CPU and GPU (thereby securing yourself somesweet fake hats for the comment section), folks who are serious about actual Bitcoin mining have long since moved to dedicated mining devices like the Butterfly Labs ASIC box we tested out last summer. ASIC-based mining devices are much, much faster than CPUs or GPUs, and they use less power to boot. As of this writing, ASICs that can run the scrypt algorithm used to encrypt Litecoin, Arscoin, and other altcoins aren't in widespread circulation, but it's only a matter of time.

Finally, the Arscoin project is for those who want to experiment with digital currenciesand buy some fun hats and colored usernames along the way. In other words, it is for educational use only; we have centralized the system in order to prevent it from developing into a real-money economy.

Your wallet page will track your most recent payments, including deposits from the pool.

Read more here:
Digging for cryptocurrency: The newbie’s guide to mining altcoins

Flashback: WikiLeaks Cables Show Ukraine Worried About Russian Incursion in 2006

While were all flashing back to the olden days when various officials warned of Russias potential push into Ukraines Crimea peninsula, heres an interesting tidbit via the International Business Times: Diplomatic cables from 2006 and 2009, unearthed by WikiLeaks in 2011, show Ukrainian officials fretting over an emboldened Russia, asking for help to stem the potential for an invasion.

With Ukraine under intense pressure from Russia, any appearance of U.S. disengagement from the region will embolden Russia further, then-U.S. diplomat Alexander Vershbow wrote from the Ukrainian capital of Kiev.

At another point, Vershbow wrote that Ukrainian security official Raisa Bohatyrova told him that the Kremlin is directly interfering in its former territorys political affairs. Bohatryova said she believes Russian intelligence has devised plans for the dismemberment of Ukraine, the U.S. diplomat explained.

Similarly, a 2006 cable from U.S. State Department official Sheila Gwaltney relays Ukrainian concerns that the overall degradation of Kyivs ability to assert central power and authority in the past two years has provided a conducive climate for destabilizing efforts, particularly in Crimea.

Russian troops moved into the Crimean peninsula last Friday, drawing international concerns and condemnation.

More from the WikiLeaks-obtained 2006 cable, via the IBTimes report:

Gwaltney reported that her Ukrainian counterparts said Russia was trying to slowly take control of the ethnically divided peninsula by increasing communal tensions. Russia, they said, is attempting to destabilize Crimea, weaken Ukraine, and prevent Ukraines movement west into institutions like NATO and the EU.

[S]everal Crimean journalists referred to as Ukraines soft underbelly, the U.S. official wrote at the time.

[h/t David Kashi/IBTimes] [Image via CBS]

>> Follow Andrew Kirell (@AndrewKirell) on Twitter

View original post here:
Flashback: WikiLeaks Cables Show Ukraine Worried About Russian Incursion in 2006

Putin Nominated for Nobel Peace Prize

The controversial Russian president is one of 278 nominees for the honor, a list that includes Pope Francis and whistleblowers Edward Snowden and Chelsea Manning.

Vladimir Putin

Vladimir Putin has been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. The Russian president, who has generated worldwide controversy in past months by signing antigay laws and seizing the Crimean peninsula from Ukraine, is one of 231 individuals and 47 organizations nominated for the 2014 prize, which in past years has been awarded to Nelson Mandela and Elie Wiesel for their contributions to humanity.

The Committee reports this year as having the highest number of candidates ever, according to NPR. It must narrow this pool of 278 nominees to about 12 candidates by April.

In addition to Putin, whistleblowers Edward Snowden and Chelsea Manning (the imprisoned trangender veteran) were among the nominees, as well as Pope Francis, whom The Advocate titled Person of the Year for his evolving views on gays and lesbians.

Geir Lundestad, the director of the Nobel Committee, told Reuters that recent events would be taken into consideration when selecting a winner, which is set to be announced on October 10, 2014. The prize will be officially conferred on December 10, the date of founder Alfred Nobels death.

"Part of the purpose of the committee's first meeting is to take into account recent events, and committee members try to anticipate what could be the potential developments in political hotspots," Lundestad said.

Anyone can be nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize, but only those approved by the Nobel Committee have the power to nominate, reports the Peace Research Institute Oslo, which monitors the Nobel Committee. Thousands, including members of national assemblies and government worldwide, are eligible to submit candidates for consideration.

According to the will of Alfred Nobel, the Peace Prize should be awarded to the person who shall have done the most or the best work for fraternity between nations, the abolition or reduction of standing armies and for the holding and promotion of peace congresses.

Read the original here:
Putin Nominated for Nobel Peace Prize

Nobel Shortlist: Putin, Snowden, Manning

politics Nobel Shortlist: Putin, Snowden, Manning Posted by George Prentice on Wed, Mar 5, 2014 at 9:04 AM

Forget the Oscars. The real who's who is the list of 278 people and organizations nominated for the 2014 Nobel Peace Prizea record number of candidates.

The Nobel selection committee met for the first time March 4 to narrow their prospects. They have their work cut out for them before revealing the winner of the $1.24 million award on Oct. 10 in Oslo, Norway.

Each year, the Peace Research Institute Oslo creates its own shortlist for the prize. Among 2014's prospects are Russian President Vladimir Putin, master leaker Edward Snowden, Pope Francis, Chelsea Manning (the former Bradley Manning who leaked U.S. military documents), Uruguay President Jose Mujica, the International Space Station Partnership and 16-year-old Malala Yousafazi, the young Pakistani girl who survived a Taliban assassination attempt only to become a global advocate for education opportunities and human rights.

Last year, the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons won the Nobel Peace Prize. This year, 47 organizations are nominated

Tags: Nobel Peace Prize, Image

View original post here:
Nobel Shortlist: Putin, Snowden, Manning

Putin Reportedly Joins List Of Nobel Peace Prize Nominees

Russian President Vladimir Putin is among the 278 nominees for a 2014 Nobel Peace Prize, according to Peace Research Institute Oslo, an institution that closely tracks the Nobel committee's work.

Putin, who of course is now at the center of one of the world's most dangerous situations the crisis in Ukraine has been "nominated by the International Academy of Spiritual Unity and Cooperation Among the Nations of the World and backed by Russian MP Iosif Kobzon, for his averting of an air strike on Syria after the chemical gas attacks in August 2013," PRIO reports.

hide captionRussian President Vladimir Putin.

Russian President Vladimir Putin.

According to the Nobel committee, the 278 nominations for this year's prize "is the highest number of candidates ever. The previous record was 259 from 2013."

We've reported before that the so-called NSA leaker, Edward Snowden, is among the nominees.

Among others who PRIO says it has confirmed are on the list:

Malala Yousafzai, the Pakistani teen who was shot by the Taliban because of her outspoken support for the education of girls. She was a nominee last year as well.

Chelsea Manning, formerly known as Bradley Manning. The Army private is now serving a 35-year prison sentence for leaking the largest amount of classified information in U.S. history.

Yousafzai and Snowden have made it onto PRIO Director Kristian Berg Harpviken's shortlist of likely Peace Prize honorees. The other three people he puts on that list:

Read the original post:
Putin Reportedly Joins List Of Nobel Peace Prize Nominees

Moshe Ishai at Hadshot Hashabat channel1 – "The leak of Edward Snowden"- 01.02.2014 – Video


Moshe Ishai at Hadshot Hashabat channel1 - "The leak of Edward Snowden"- 01.02.2014
Moshe Ishai responds briefly to an article revolved around the American espionage story following the leak of Edward Snowden. Edward Snowden is an American c...

By: comsecglobal

Read the rest here:
Moshe Ishai at Hadshot Hashabat channel1 - "The leak of Edward Snowden"- 01.02.2014 - Video

Fugitive and whistleblower Edward Snowden to speak from Russia at SXSW

By Josh Rubin, CNN

updated 5:34 AM EST, Wed March 5, 2014

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

Austin, Texas (CNN) -- Even though he can't set foot in the United States for fear of arrest, fugitive National Security Agency whistleblower Edward Snowden has joined the speakers' roster at this year's South by Southwest Interactive Festival.

Snowden, who fled the United States in June with thousands of top-secret documents, will appear via teleconference Monday from Russia for a discussion about how the tech community must defend itself against mass surveillance.

Snowden will chat with Christopher Soghoian, principal technologist with the American Civil Liberties Union's Speech, Privacy and Technology Project.

"The conversation will be focused on the impact of the NSA's spying efforts on the technology community and the ways in which technology can help to protect us from mass surveillance," an SXSW news release says.

Audience members will be allowed to ask questions, and The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit media organization, intends to livestream the session.

Josh Baer, a tech entrepreneur who has been attending the festival for more than 15 years, said he is excited to hear what Snowden has to say.

"The news and the government each have so many different perspectives," Baer said. "It's always refreshing to get it straight from the source."

Originally posted here:
Fugitive and whistleblower Edward Snowden to speak from Russia at SXSW

Snowden to speak at SXSW

U.S. intelligence leaker Edward Snowden will speak at SXSW, a leading media, technology and music festival in Austin, Texas next week, organizers said Tuesday.

The former National Security Agency contractor, who has been living in Russia under temporary asylum, will participate in a South by Southwest (SXSW) Interactive Festival conversation on surveillance and online privacy at 11 a.m. CT next Monday, according to a description of the event on the festival website. He is slated to appear via videoconference.

The session will be moderated by Ben Wizner, the director of the American Civil Liberties Union Speech, Privacy & Technology Project and Snowden's legal adviser.

"The conversation will consider the impact of the NSA's spying efforts on the technology community, and the ways in which technology can help to protect us from mass surveillance," the festival said on its website.

Snowden is wanted in the U.S. on espionage charges for allegedly pilfering thousands of classified documents from the NSA and turning them over to several journalists who have since published reports about the spy agency's vast surveillance programs.

First published March 4 2014, 8:05 PM

Here is the original post:
Snowden to speak at SXSW

Edward Snowden to Speak at SXSW Festival

U.S. intelligence leaker Edward Snowden will speak at SXSW, a leading media, technology and music festival in Austin, Texas next week, organizers said Tuesday.

The former National Security Agency contractor, who has been living in Russia under temporary asylum, will participate in a South by Southwest (SXSW) Interactive Festival conversation on surveillance and online privacy at 11 a.m. CT next Monday, according to a description of the event on the festival website. He is slated to appear via videoconference.

The session will be moderated by Ben Wizner, the director of the American Civil Liberties Union Speech, Privacy & Technology Project and Snowden's legal adviser.

"The conversation will consider the impact of the NSA's spying efforts on the technology community, and the ways in which technology can help to protect us from mass surveillance," the festival said on its website.

Snowden is wanted in the U.S. on espionage charges for allegedly pilfering thousands of classified documents from the NSA and turning them over to several journalists who have since published reports about the spy agency's vast surveillance programs.

First published March 4 2014, 8:05 PM

Read more here:
Edward Snowden to Speak at SXSW Festival

Edward Snowden To Speak Via Video Link At SXSW Conference

hide captionEdward Snowden.

Edward Snowden.

Edward Snowden, who is exiled in Russia, will appear via video conference at this year's South by Southwest Interactive Conference.

While Snowden has given plenty of interviews since he leaked a cache of highly-sensitive documents about the United States' surveillance programs, he has not done so live and on video.

SXSW announced that Snowden will participate in a conversation with the American Civil Liberties Union on Monday, March 10 at noon ET. According to a press release, the talk will focus on "the impact of the NSA's spying efforts on the technology community, and the ways in which technology can help to protect us from mass surveillance."

The conversation will be moderated by "Ben Wizner, who is director of the ACLU's Speech, Privacy & Technology Project and Edward Snowden's legal advisor."

Here's a bit more about the chat from the SXSW website:

"Just as technology has enabled our modern surveillance state, so too can technology protect us. But regular users cannot make privacy-preserving tools themselves. The technology industry and the tech community can and must do more to secure the private data of the billions of people who rely on the tools and services that we build.

"Edward Snowden's revelations have launched a historic debate about surveillance practices and democratic controls, in which all three branches of government are actively and publicly engaging. But the technology community has too often been left out of the debate. It's time to fix that."

Read more:
Edward Snowden To Speak Via Video Link At SXSW Conference