Despite all the obvious benefits of mollywopping the middlemen with P2P money, the thing people can’t seem to handle is the 10 block lock (~20 min delay). I like to tell people it takes a minute to launder Monero so it comes out scrubbed. How do you explain the 10 block lock as a benefit not a bug?

  • jet@hackertalks.com
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    9 hours ago

    It is NOT a benefit. It’s a huge impediment to adaptation as digital cash.

    Oh you paid a bill? Now you have to wait 20 minutes to pay the next bill…

    Going to the market to buy multiple things? Better have a coffee between each store. Forget something and need to add one more item? Sucks to be you

    The trade-off is reasonable, but it is not a strict benefit,

    • Poached DarklingOP
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      7 hours ago

      Personally consider it a small price to pay for direct payment no middle men

  • XMR_loving_AnCap
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    6 hours ago

    I don’t think it’s so bad tbh. If you look at BTC/BCH they have 10min block time so if you wait for at least 1 confirmation you have around 3 XMR confirmations on average. But for bigger sums you most likely want at least to wait for a second or third which brings you close to or close above 20min. (For really small sums you can just accept 0-conf. Monero does NOT have RBF (replace by fee), so the other person can NOT betray you.) And that is only IF you get into the next block (which is a problem for BTC).

    In reality, if you start using Monero, vast majority has more than a single output, so you can buy a few things in quick succession. Also you can just use Cake as a receiving wallet and then Monerujo as your spending wallet, which has the feature named Pocket Change (that makes sure you always have a bigger amount of outputs available). That’s why I’d argue that the 10 block lock isn’t really a big hindrance in reality.