• @LufyCZ@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Main chain transactions should, on average, take around 6 minutes to confirm.

    It’ll be seconds only if you’re very lucky.

    Don’t wanna hate, crypto is hella cool, but overselling it won’t help anyone.

    Edit: oh yeah, and lightning won’t confirm in microseconds, you’ve got your scales mixed up mate, it’s gonna be tens to hundreds of milliseconds, simply of your wifi’s latency.

    • @makeasnek@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      For everyday spending, I would consider “The tx is valid, signed, seen by nodes, and has a fee high enough to make it into the next couple blocks” as plenty of confirmation on main chain. That part takes seconds. Like if I’m splitting a bill w a friend a merchant selling somebody a coffee a double-spend attack is really not even in my realm of considerations, I don’t need it to make it into a block.

      • @LufyCZ@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Nobody serious is ever gonna sell you anything without a block confirmation, that’s just delusional.

        For a settlement with a friend, sure, but don’t tell me you believe you’ll walk out of a store before it hits at least 1 conf

        It’s not a double spend if it hasn’t been confirmed yet, you can always replace-by-fee before it even makes it onchain

        • @makeasnek@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          A. Lightning solves this with their super fast confirmation times.

          B. Merchants do this regularly. The equivalent to a full block confirmation (the money is yours now and the transaction can’t be reversed) for credit cards is on the order of 30 days. Venmo and paypal have similar policies. Plus higher fees. Plus sometimes they charge or otherwise punish you even in the unlikely event you win the dispute.

          The risk of fraud is the cost of doing business and buyer-initiated fraud is rampant on these platforms. It’s why I don’t sell anything > $50 USD on ebay, because the buyer can just say it “doesn’t work” and get to keep the item and get their money back.

          • @LufyCZ@lemmy.world
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            31 year ago

            A. I’m not saying it doesn’t, I’m just disputing what you said about onchain txs.

            B. CCs are much less anonymous, making engaging in fraud much riskier. If you did this 10 times your bank would notice, adds up for you. If you do it with an anonymous system, you’re forgotten the second you walk out of the store (barring being caught on camera but you can solve that by wearing a mask or something).

            I do see your point, but I don’t think it’s an apples to apples comparison.