BitcoinNewsMagazine
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August 25, 2015, 06:40:22 PM |
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I am relatively new to this discussion, but seems that everybody (or almost) supports a raise in the block size, either by BIP 100, 101 or XT.
Some people say it is not needed to raise block limit yet, but still support a raise. I have seen considerably less people supporting that maintaining the block size to 1MB is the way to go so ...
Wouldn´t be better to make some preasure on the developers to do the raise instead of fighting about the XT vs. Core thing?
Publishing Bitcoin XT on Aug 15 is putting pressure on the Core developers to reach consensus.
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BitProdigy
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August 25, 2015, 06:41:29 PM |
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Yes looks like BIP100 is gaining some traction fast!
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johnyj
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August 25, 2015, 06:51:35 PM |
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"surpass Visa" is the most irrelevant claim I have ever heard, it is like a cruiser that carries 3000 person are trying to challenge the speed of a F35 jet plane
Centralized clearing system like Visa or Mastercard can do several thousand transactions per second, because they do not move any money at all, all it did is adjusting the numbers of each account so that they match the transaction, and the numbers of all those accounts are located in the same database server with multi Gigabytes/second of data trasfer rate
In fact, any centralized bitcoin service like exchanges and online wallets can already achieve similar transaction speed like Visa. What bitcoin blockchain is doing is like bank's settlement network, and 2 banks only do ONE TRANSACTION PER DAY (not including weekends and holidays) to settle the difference between debit and credit against each other
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johnyj
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August 25, 2015, 07:13:00 PM |
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This is a good place to look, it seems I can point my hash power to those pools that support BIP 100, currently btcchina and f2pool are supporting it
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glub0x
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August 25, 2015, 07:17:42 PM |
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"surpass Visa" is the most irrelevant claim I have ever heard, it is like a cruiser that carries 3000 person are trying to challenge the speed of a F35 jet plane
The cost of mediation increases transaction costs, limiting the minimum practical transaction size and cutting off the possibility for small casual transactions https://bitcoin.org/bitcoin.pdfThat may be irrelevant, but that was part of the initial the goal ... BIP 100 is not so bad in the midterm (2-5 years), So that's a good start to me too.
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The cost of mediation increases transaction costs, limiting the minimum practical transaction size and cutting off the possibility for small casual transactionsSatoshi Nakamoto : https://bitcoin.org/bitcoin.pdf
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Mickeyb
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August 25, 2015, 07:19:52 PM |
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Yes looks like BIP100 is gaining some traction fast! This would be a great solution. I also see that majority here likes BIP 100. Lest hope this will be pushed and that this never-ending debate will finally end. According to some reddit sources, already 35% of all miners are in favour of this change. Lets hope!
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Muhammed Zakir
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August 25, 2015, 07:30:35 PM |
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-snip- Regarding, 32Mb limit. I'm not sure if it comes from the original network message limitation in Bitcoin or is a new addition related to BIP100. It was explained somewhere on this forum, that the block no longer has to fit in one network message (due to headers first implementation), so that original 32Mb limit may no longer apply. But better call the experts on this. -snip-
It is not an BIP 100 addition. It was unlimited but p2p protocol limited maximum size to 32 MB. Edit: This would be a great solution. I also see that majority here likes BIP 100. Lest hope this will be pushed and that this never-ending debate will finally end.
According to some reddit sources, already 35% of all miners are in favour of this change. Lets hope!
https://www.blocktrail.com/BTC/pools
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TheAnalogKid
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August 25, 2015, 07:43:24 PM |
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Ok, so thankfully that was explained in the first couple paragraphs, otherwise there's no way I'm reading a full 22-page thread right now. I'll stand corrected on the actual speed. I spent a whole 5 minutes on mine as well, but at least I'm not being an uppity snot about it. Also don't say "surpass Visa". To surpass their network, we would need to be able to process more than 56 000 transactions per seconds (which is their current maximum).
I stand by my word "surpass". If you actually read the context of the sentence I mention their real daily transaction volume, not what their network is capable of. If we exceed their number of average daily transactions, then we have surpassed their actual daily volume. Our 7Tps theoretical limit is the same as their 56k Tps theoretical limit, although in practice they are not coming anywhere near that high number, nor are we coming close to ours. Furthermore, since Visa's is a closed network it is not comparable to the Bitcoin network. They need to have that high of a total capable Tps because each processing server they have is critical to that number. If they lose a datacenter, their theoretical limit drops accordingly. If a node or 100 nodes fall off the Bitcoin network, our Tps does not suffer.
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dachnik
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August 25, 2015, 08:12:12 PM Last edit: August 25, 2015, 09:35:26 PM by dachnik |
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-snip- Regarding, 32Mb limit. I'm not sure if it comes from the original network message limitation in Bitcoin or is a new addition related to BIP100. It was explained somewhere on this forum, that the block no longer has to fit in one network message (due to headers first implementation), so that original 32Mb limit may no longer apply. But better call the experts on this. -snip-
It is not an BIP 100 addition. It was unlimited but p2p protocol limited maximum size to 32 MB. I would pay more attention to this before jumping to any conclusions too fast. If the code to implement BIP100 is complex enough there is a chance of a slip up somewhere and the whole thing might go belly up. The hard limit is important because it greatly reduces the incentive for rogue entities to start piling up the hashpower in order to manipulate the block size and push the majority of the full nodes out of capacity to operate and validate the blockchain. Just having a reliable hard limit has a psychological effect to not bother attacking, because the network cannot be destroyed through this mechanism alone (provided it is capable of operating at near full capacity). Whether 32Mb is a good enough limit to prevent abuse by (potential rogue) miners for the next few years is debatable (8Mb seems safer). We must make absolutely certain, that the 32Mb cap still holds (it may not be true in more recent implementations as blocks can occupy more than one network message of 32Mb) before expressing full support for BIP100. Edit: This would be a great solution. I also see that majority here likes BIP 100. Lest hope this will be pushed and that this never-ending debate will finally end.
According to some reddit sources, already 35% of all miners are in favour of this change. Lets hope!
https://www.blocktrail.com/BTC/poolsThe 8Mb option is still holding up nicely. It might be more appealing to those who don't want to change Bitcoin too much. Bitcoin with high enough hard limit and gradually increasing soft limits is the one we're all used to and the one that is proven to work. The 8Mb option provides just that, only the numbers are different (hard cap: 8Mb, soft caps can be: 2Mb, 4Mb, 6Mb). Run this for the next four years, collect the data, evaluate the number of full nodes, reach consensus on how to move forward, celebrate the halving, be happy! That's the recipe for success right there.
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knight22
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August 25, 2015, 08:25:09 PM |
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"surpass Visa" is the most irrelevant claim I have ever heard, it is like a cruiser that carries 3000 person are trying to challenge the speed of a F35 jet plane
The cost of mediation increases transaction costs, limiting the minimum practical transaction size and cutting off the possibility for small casual transactions https://bitcoin.org/bitcoin.pdfThat may be irrelevant, but that was part of the initial the goal ... BIP 100 is not so bad in the midterm (2-5 years), So that's a good start to me too. Indeed, but do we really want this debate again in 2-5 years though? Not me.
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BitProdigy
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August 25, 2015, 08:29:20 PM |
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Indeed, but do we really want this debate again in 2-5 years though? Not me.
True, that is why I also support BIP100
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Lauda
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August 25, 2015, 08:31:42 PM Last edit: August 25, 2015, 09:33:25 PM by LaudaM |
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-snip- I stand by my word "surpass". If you actually read the context of the sentence I mention their real daily transaction volume, not what their network is capable of. If we exceed their number of average daily transactions, then we have surpassed their actual daily volume. Our 7Tps theoretical limit is the same as their 56k Tps theoretical limit, although in practice they are not coming anywhere near that high number, nor are we coming close to ours.
Sorry, but this is wrong again. It's not their theoretical limit, but an actual limit as they've conducted tests. This limit has been growing over the years as they've been improving their technology. The 7tps limit is just a old myth and was debunked (a good explanation can be found in that thread that I've linked). Indeed, but do we really want this debate again in 2-5 years though? Not me.
I don't think that there will be one, at least not one on a scale as this one. BIP100 gives enough time for other solutions to come after which we will not be limited/relying solely on the block size limit. Looks like support for BIP100 is growing as pools have started to switch from 8MB. If a few more switch it is very likely that we will proceed with BIP100.
I'll just make an update here: Okay, I agree. However, we can't put it in the same bag as the '7 tps myth'. I would also like to correct you that they reach(ed) 1/3 (so, not 1/4) of that theoretical maximum during peak times.
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"The Times 03/Jan/2009 Chancellor on brink of second bailout for banks" 😼 Bitcoin Core ( onion)
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brg444
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August 25, 2015, 08:35:08 PM |
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"surpass Visa" is the most irrelevant claim I have ever heard, it is like a cruiser that carries 3000 person are trying to challenge the speed of a F35 jet plane
The cost of mediation increases transaction costs, limiting the minimum practical transaction size and cutting off the possibility for small casual transactions https://bitcoin.org/bitcoin.pdfThat may be irrelevant, but that was part of the initial the goal ... BIP 100 is not so bad in the midterm (2-5 years), So that's a good start to me too. Indeed, but do we really want this debate again in 2-5 years though? Not me. This white paper is over 5 years old can we stop quoting it like it's actually relevant to the reality and new technical challenges we've observed over the years?
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"I believe this will be the ultimate fate of Bitcoin, to be the "high-powered money" that serves as a reserve currency for banks that issue their own digital cash." Hal Finney, Dec. 2010
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dachnik
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August 25, 2015, 09:21:54 PM |
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In case BIP100 gains enough momentum and wins the race, I would put its proclaimed static 32Mb limit in place of the current 1Mb cap explicitly (to be extra sure) instead of relying on some legacy network message limitations which may no longer fully apply to current (and future) block propagation mechanisms (blocks split across multiple messages, etc).
If that can be guaranteed to be implemented reliably, I would likely support BIP100 without much further hesitation, though I haven't studied it with enough scrutiny to know for certain that there aren't any holes there.
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TheAnalogKid
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August 25, 2015, 09:30:33 PM |
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Sorry, but this is wrong again. It's not their theoretical limit, but an actual limit as they've conducted tests. This limit has been growing over the years as they've been improving their technology. The 7tps limit is just a old myth and was debunked (a good explanation can be found in that thread that I've linked).
I'm sorry to say, but I'm not wrong. I run large infrastructure for a living, and I know very well the difference between what is stated capability, and what will actually be achievable. I can assure you that the number they state (56k) is a theoretical limit based upon extrapolation of numbers from baseline stress testing done in a staging environment. If you research how they did their stress testing, it was not on their own equipment, but done in a third-party facility with a replicated environment that is not a full-on replica. It's also all low-latency local networking within a datacenter facility, not higher latency interconnected fiber which is subject to routing and other issues when you are communicating between datacenters. So, yes, it's a theoretical limit. It may be a fairly accurate limit (chances are it's not), but it's still theoretical as their network has never pushed that many transactions in real life. They've only ever hit 1/4 of that in a real live peak situation.
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TheAnalogKid
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August 25, 2015, 10:32:53 PM |
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-The historical 32MB limit remains. BIP 100 was better before Jeff re-added this limitation (it didn't exist in his original BIP100) and I'm concerned about the miner vote being easy to manipulate. I'm not really sure how easy this would be to manipulate. From the proposal: - Limit increase or decrease may not exceed 2x in any one step. - Miners vote by encoding ‘BV’+BlockSizeRequestValue into coinbase scriptSig, e.g. “/BV8000000/” to vote for 8M. Votes are evaluated by dropping bottom 20% and top 20%, and then the most common floor (minimum) is chosen. From what I understand it's the pools, not the miners themselves, which will be doing the voting upon block submissions. The highest pool right now I think only has about 25% of the total hashrate (f2pool at ~70PH, right?) You would need to own 80% of the hashrate to vote for a change. Right now I know of no one who could bring online another 300PH of mining power, I think it's fairly impossible to do something like that. And, even if you could, you could raise or lower it no more than 2x the current rate, once every 83 days. Starting at 1MB today, you could conceivably get it to 16MB block sizing by the beginning of August 2016. I hardly call that any area for concern which couldn't be rooted out well before then.
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dachnik
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August 25, 2015, 10:39:31 PM Last edit: August 26, 2015, 10:26:17 AM by dachnik |
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-The historical 32MB limit remains. BIP 100 was better before Jeff re-added this limitation (it didn't exist in his original BIP100) and I'm concerned about the miner vote being easy to manipulate. On one hand, there must be a hard limit approximating network's technical ability to consistently converge on a single chain, on the other hand, it would seem appropriate for miners to decide on the current soft limit. Miners manipulating the soft limit should present no danger to the network's ability to operate. However, touching the hard limit without the overwhelming consensus of all full nodes must be prohibited. The hard limit also defines the potential size of the network, thus (mis-)placing it way above current technical capabilities of the average home connection will significantly reduce the amount of nodes participating in consensus (if limit is reached prematurely). I'm uncertain that 32Mb limit is safe enough to not create significant turbulence in the network's operation, if reached within the next 2-4 years. We are not necessarily talking about Chinese miners here as those are bandwidth limited already, but rather about potential rogue miners that might be interested in taking advantage of the situation. If you're concerned about miners' ability to manipulate the soft limit, you should advocate for lower static hard limit to counter that, but instead you seem to be disappointed by its re-introduction in BIP100, which sounds contradictory. Please clarify.
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LFC_Bitcoin
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August 25, 2015, 10:45:32 PM |
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Anybody know what massive bitcoin service providers like Bitpay & blockchain.info are set to support & who they side with Core devs or XT?
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Hazir
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August 25, 2015, 10:49:58 PM |
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Thats great. Lets end this useless dispute for now. If majority agrees upon BIP 100 for now, then we can focus on creating and implementing future changes without all this hot fuss. And then bitcoin can be the rescue tool for approaching economic crisis, because as of now it seems that bitcoin is sinking because internal war and stock exchanges collapse.
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