MobileCoin is a censored, Monero wannabe, premined cash-grab from Signal
Some of you may have heard that Signal is testing payments in the app for UK users. You may think "yay crypto adoption!" Don't.
MobileCoin is a new cryptocurrency that takes the basic building blocks of Monero (RingCT, Bulletproofs, subaddresses, etc) and implements them in Rust. Then it implements in Signal, a leading messaging application that I have been using for 7 years.
Sadly, that's where the cool parts end. There are a huge number of concerns below:
MobileCoin is 100% premined
100% of the supply was created in 16 outputs that can be distributed however the initial founders like. There is extremely limited information about how they will be distributed, though it's highly likely that the founders will keep some for themselves.
MobileCoin seems to be a monetization strategy for Signal
I am told by a trusted source that the investment pitch of MobileCoin to VCs was that it would be implemented in Signal. MobileCoin seems to be a monetization strategy for Signal.
Monetization alone isn't bad, but Signal should be up-front about what this is. Instead, they are telling media misleading statements while the Signal board is profiting through another venture. Signal would not just choose MobileCoin over Monero if there weren't other incentives involved.
MobileCoin relies on Intel SGX to verify transactions
Simply, MobileCoin uses trusted Intel SGX hardware to verify transactions. Many experts believe this is a terrible security assumption. It's unclear to me at this stage what would happen if these assumptions start to break down. You also rely on Intel SGX to not have a backdoor.
https://wccftech.com/intel-cpu-plundervolt-flaw-spills-secrets-through-voltage-manipulation/
The MobileCoin team seems intent to discredit Monero wherever they can
Monero is a pretty well-respected project in the cryptocurrency space. In my mind, the fact that MobileCoin used so much cryptography researched at the Monero Research Lab speaks to the opportunity for a mutual relationship. Ideally, MobileCoin could use some of its resources to contribute back to Monero and support research they are using.
Instead, they don't mention Monero at all. They instead mention CryptoNote, a protocol that doesn't have RingCT or subaddresses. It's one thing to disagree with certain design decisions, but it's obviously in poor taste to not mention the people who did all this work AT ALL https://twitter.com/fluffypony/status/1379559273504641025
Further, a MobileCoin developer describes Monero as "having literally the worst codebase I've ever seen." https://twitter.com/fluffypony/status/1379603450175053825
Edit for balance: Monero is mentioned in one technical document written by the same author of Zero to Monero: https://twitter.com/selsta541/status/1379809205864050691
MobileCoin is blocked in some countries, including the US, and MobileCoin supports currency controls
MobileCoin actively blocks US users as a crude compliance measure, as well as users in other countries. Using MobileCoin in these jurisdictions is against their ToS. Do you ever wish Bitcoin wasn't available to US users? I didn't think so.
MobileCoin supports "currency controls": "At MobileCoin, we believe governments have a legitimate interest in regulating the economic lives of their citizens." https://twitter.com/_benkaufman/status/1379760279324614664
Summary
If you want a premined, centralized coin that censors transactions, with security assumptions reliant on Intel, and which makes a bunch of VCs rich, then use MobileCoin. Otherwise, use Monero.
This whole MobileCoin release was going to be bad even in the best of cases if they support censorship. But they actively made it even worse with their actions. MobileCoin reflects poorly on Signal, something I have recommended in the past. I will encourage all users to use Matrix instead.
Thanks to Seth for their excellent Tweet on the topic: https://twitter.com/sethisimmons/status/1379791201558278144
submitted by /u/SamsungGalaxyPlayer
[link] [comments]