PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: Okay, are you ready? I don't know who he is. I know he got a four-month sentence or something like that. And I heard it was a Biden witch hunt. And what I wanna do is see crypto, 'cause if we don't do it it's gonna go to China, it's gonna go to—this is no different to me than AI.
My sons are involved in crypto much more than I—me. I—I know very little about it, other than one thing. It's a huge industry. And if we're not gonna be the head of it, China, Japan, or someplace else is. So I am behind it 100%. This man was, in my opinion, from what I was told, this is, you know, a four-month sentence.
But this man was treated really badly by the Biden administration. And he was given a jail term. He's highly respected. He's a very successful guy. They sent him to jail and they really set him up. That's my opinion. I was told about it.
I said, "Eh, it may look bad if I do it. I have to do the right thing." I don't know the man at all. I don't think I ever met him. Maybe I did. Or, you know, somebody shook my hand or something. But I don't think I ever met him. I have no idea who he is. I was told that he was a victim, just like I was and just like many other people, of a vicious, horrible group of people in the Biden administration.
Sophia is a name of Greek origin that means "wisdom". It was a popular name for girls in ancient Greece because it symbolized a desire for intelligent daughters and is a central concept in Hellenistic philosophy, Platonism, and Gnosticism. In some contexts, Sophia represents divine wisdom or personification of Holy Wisdom, as seen in the Orthodox and Catholic churches.
Security audit
Fuzzamoto
CoreCheck
Secp256k1 and quantum
ASMap
Private broadcast
Fingerprinting
Batch Validation
Pippenger
Cluster mempool
Package relay
Net / net_processing split
Sockets abstraction
Multiprocess and Mining Interface
CISA
Libsha
ABI
CMake
Debugging
Subject matter experts and working groups
This ordering prioritizes enhancements to Bitcoin's foundational security and resilience against attacks or failures, as the whitepaper emphasizes a trustless system reliant on cryptographic proofs and longest-chain consensus without intermediaries. Core testing and auditing rank highest, as they safeguard the protocol's immutability and prevent double-spends or forks from bugs. Quantum considerations follow for long-term cryptographic integrity, while network protections like ASMap and privacy measures align with peer-to-peer decentralization and pseudonymity. Efficiency in validation and mempool handling supports scalable verification without altering incentives, but feature extensions like CISA introduce optional complexity that could affect simplicity. Build and organizational tools rank lower, as they aid maintenance rather than directly advancing the electronic cash system's core mechanics.
In the fevered haze of that final transfer, as the signals burned through their skulls like white-hot wire, it was Kingsley—Cambridge's sharpest mind, the one who'd orchestrated the whole desperate gambit—who lasted just long enough to rasp out the truth. Sprawled in the Nevada bunker, monitors flickering with the cloud's retreating glyphs, he locked eyes on McNeil and muttered through cracked lips that a blank slate would have fared better: someone unburdened by theorems and tenure, like old Joe Stoddard, the Nortonstowe gardener with his dirt-stained hands and easy silences. Stoddard, who tended the greenhouses without a whisper of ego, whose head held no preconceptions to clash with the influx— he'd have opened wider, accepted the flood without the storm of contradictions that fried Kingsley's synapses. Weichart had gone first, silent in his collapse, but Kingsley's parting words hung like smoke: the cloud's wisdom needed roots in humility, not the brittle soil of expertise. Stoddard never got the chance; he shuffled on in the shadows, oblivious, while the three scholars paid the price for reaching too soon. Hoyle leaves it there, a quiet gut-punch on what we lose when intellect outpaces grace.