So replying to DaveF here so he can't delete my posts for retarded reasons.
Not sure what point you are making here.
My point is that LibreRelay does preferential peering. Do you take that to mean LibreRelay is trying to hard fork Bitcoin?
My point is that Knots was doing preferential peering ever since Knots was created over 12 years ago. Do you take that to mean that Knots was trying to hark fork 12 years ago when Segwit and B-cash didn't even exist yet?
The point is that there is code out there for core nodes to run so they can ban Knots nodes from their peers. Not just preferencial peering, but an outright black list.
But it's only when BIP110 does prrferencial peering that you suddenly declare that the only reason to do this is to hard fork?
Is it even remotely possible that there could be other reasons to do preferential peering? Or are you going to stick to that stupid secret hard fork BIP110 conspiracy theory?
In knots the code says use knots for the most part and kind of connect to core / other nodes.
Yes, that's what preferencial peering is. Similar to what LibreRelay is doing. Do you think Peter Toad and LibreRelay are trying to hard fork the spam miners away from the rest of us? Or could there be other reasons to do preferential peering?
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What you linked to is some code that is not in core or any other distribution that I am aware of that people have to manually download and put into a config file.
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Even if I knew how, I ain't fucking telling you how to install and run it. And besides, it no longer works anyways.
Many people have been doing that or something similar for months to improve their node performance since not having all the TXs causes your node to have to do more when it gets a block that it does not have all the TXs for. So making sure you don't connect to nodes that are not sending the full mempool helps you.
So you claim that there are valid non-hard fork reasons for an outright ban of a specific client. But no valid reasons other than hard fork, for preferential peering. And only when BIP110 is concerned but not when LibreRelay.
What you are saying is that LibreRelay has legit reasons to do preferential peering.
Core nodes have legit reasons to outright ban Knots nodes.
And Knots had legit reasons to do preferential peering, but those legit reasons suddenly became nefarious last year?
Your conspiracy theories are retarded. You should focus on Big Foot and space lizzards.
Futhermore, here's something interesting:
Many people have been doing that or something similar for months to improve their node performance since not having all the TXs causes your node to have to do more when it gets a block that it does not have all the TXs for. So making sure you don't connect to nodes that are not sending the full mempool helps you.
Knots filters out spam. Knots doesn't filter out legit monetary transactions. So if you get around Knots filters and block Knots from connecting with you, you are basically facilitating spam.
If you oppose Knots, you fight for spam. And you will be tarred, fetgered, and ran out of town. Sooner or later.
Furthermore, Knots uses a 2nd mempool. Something coretards are too retarded to know about.
When my node filters out a jpeg, it goes into the 2nd mempool. It doesn't get relayed to others, but it doesn't get deleted either. So that I don't have to download and verify the same transaction twice if it gets into a block.
Core is stoopit. Core deletes what they already downloaded and filtered out, so that can download it again later on if it gets in a block.
And to solve core's horrible inneficient and wasteful design, some people decide to block Knots from connecting with their nodes?
How fucking stupid is that?
But I tell you what. Don't ask core to get a 2nd mempool like Knots does. Just ask them to make software that doesn't delete your keys and steals your coin. Okay?