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  1. Eric Hughes is an American mathematician, computer programmer, and cypherpunk. He is considered one of the founders of the cypherpunk movement, alongside Timothy C. May and John Gilmore. [1] [2] He is notable for founding and administering the Cypherpunk mailing list, [3] authoring A Cypherpunk's Manifesto, [4] [5] creating and hosting the ...

  2. Milwaukee Bucks (assistant) 2019 – 2021. Philadelphia 76ers (player development) 2021 – 2023. Philadelphia 76ers (assistant) 2023 –present. Dallas Mavericks (assistant) Eric Hughes (born April 30, 1965) [1] is an American basketball coach currently working as an assistant for the Dallas Mavericks of the National Basketball Association (NBA).

    • Assistant coach
    • NBA
  3. Sep 4, 2017 · Eric Hughes left his corporate job at Universal Studios to pursue his passion for interior design. He has created eclectic and elegant homes for celebrities like Sarah Jessica Parker, Matthew Broderick, Hank Azaria and Andy Cohen.

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  4. Mar 9, 1993 · A Cypherpunk's Manifesto by Eric Hughes. Privacy is necessary for an open society in the electronic age. Privacy is not secrecy. A private matter is something one ...

    • Rebels with A Cause
    • Cypherpunk Economics
    • The Double Spend Problem
    • Chaumian eCash
    • Other Attempts
    • The Problem with Collateral
    • Bitgold and B-Money
    • Additional Reading

    Back in the early 90s, cyberspace was still the domain of hobbyists and hackers. But the cypherpunks believed that it was only a matter of time before the Internet would become central to society. Once governments understood the Internet's importance, they would move to co-opt, monitor, and censor it. Long before Facebook, long before the Great Fir...

    It's important to understand the cypherpunk take on economic philosophy. The cypherpunks were deeply suspicious of central banks and their control over monetary policy after the end of Bretton Woods. Many years later, their suspicions were arguably justified after the financial crisis of 2008, when central banks created massive amounts of money to ...

    The double spend problem is easy to understand in principle. Imagine I have a digital $10 bill. If that $10 bill is entirely digital, then it's just a bunch of bits on my hard drive. What's to stop me from copy and pasting those bits so I now have two $10 bills? And if I pay two people with copies of that $10 bill, how could they know which one is ...

    David Chaum is considered by many to be the father of the cypherpunk movement. A prolific academic researcher, Chaum single-handedly created the field of anonymous communications research and invented many cryptographic protocols, including group signatures, mix networks, and blind signatures. In 1990, David Chaum spearheaded the first serious atte...

    DigiCash was not the only attempt at creating a digital currency. The cypherpunks launched many experiments, including Mojo Nation, a payments system for incentivized file sharing, and Hashcash, a "payments" scheme for mitigating email spam. (We'll look at Hashcash and implement it ourselves in the cryptography module.) But the cypherpunks weren't ...

    While e-gold was collateralized with gold, DigiCash was collateralized with US dollars. But both ultimately fell within the purview of the state. If you wanted to create a currency that was beyond state control, it seemed that every form of collateral came with a centralization chokepoint. So maybe, the cypherpunks thought, they should avoid collat...

    B-money and BitGold, like Bitcoin, use public key cryptography for identity.
    Both b-money and BitGold use proof-of-work to mint new coins. Bitcoin uses proof-of-work to also update the blockchain and append transactions.
    B-money and BitGold each use trusted timestamping servers for transaction ordering. Bitcoin implements a decentralized timestamping server via the "longest chain rule," as we'll discuss later.
    B-Money and BitGold achieved consensus by counting the total nodes in the network and letting the nodes vote. Bitcoin achieves consensus by counting the total work performed in the network.
  5. Apr 4, 2024 · Obyte. ·. 4 min read. ·. Apr 4, 2024. --. Satoshi Nakamoto is far from being the sole anonymous figure in the cypherpunk arena. They’re privacy activists, so they value their own privacy more than anything. That’s also the case of Eric Hughes, known for being one of the founders of cypherpunks and creator of the first anonymous remailer.

  6. Mar 17, 2024 · Eric Hughes, a prominent figure in the cypherpunk movement, played a pivotal role in advocating for digital privacy and developing the first anonymous remailer. His Cypherpunk Manifesto and contributions to privacy-enhancing technologies continue to influence the fight for online freedom and privacy.

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