Author: Jonathan C. Frei 2017-11-15 15:40:05
Published on: 2017-11-15T15:40:05+00:00
On November 15, 2017, the Lightning-dev mailing list received multiple messages from different individuals. One of these messages was from an unknown user named Satoshi Nakamoto, which contained only an HTML attachment that was scrubbed. Matt Corallo replied with a "+1" and encouraged everyone to "Keep Bitcoin Weird." Another message shared the minutes from the Dev Meeting on November 13, 2017, including updates on integration tests, a proposal by ACINQ for htlckey separation, and bitcoin fee updates. Marcel Jamin responded to Matt Corallo's message with a comment about a hypothetical hair color hard fork that did not have consensus.The next day, on November 14, 2017, Satoshi Nakamoto wrote an email to the Lightning-dev mailing list in which he mentioned his search for his lost twin brother since 2007. He noticed something lightning in the cyberspace and urged members to be optimistic and plan ahead with a systematic strategy. He also advised them to be kind to each other and not be affected by backbiters.In another email, Tomas asked about SIGHASH_NOINPUT and its use in working around malleation issues. Rusty Russell replied that while it could be used, one needs separate keys on every output to ensure that transactions cannot be connected to the wrong outputs.Overall, the Lightning-dev mailing list received messages from various individuals discussing topics such as updates on integration tests, proposals for htlckey separation, bitcoin fee updates, and solutions for malleation issues. Additionally, Satoshi Nakamoto shared his personal search for his lost twin and offered advice to members to remain optimistic and kind to each other.
Updated on: 2023-05-24T02:56:08.637010+00:00