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Question: Will you support Gavin's new block size limit hard fork of 8MB by January 1, 2016 then doubling every 2 years?
1.  yes
2.  no

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Author Topic: Gold collapsing. Bitcoin UP.  (Read 2032243 times)
cypherdoc (OP)
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June 12, 2015, 11:19:13 PM
 #26361

Statoshi, aka Jameson Lopp, @24:40 states he thinks there are about 20,000 full nodes out there in actuality.  can /u/nullc respond to this?  i referenced our interactive posts yesterday.  and this from a guy who actually does measurements and works for BitGo.  that's good news.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IgETC2JMUBI&feature=youtu.be
solex
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June 12, 2015, 11:21:36 PM
 #26362

https://twitter.com/jgarzik/status/609371913748529153

Making Decentralized Economic Policy
BIP 100 ­ Theory and Discussion, v0.3 ­ draft
Jeff Garzik <jgarzik@gmail.com>

a.k.a.

Another proposal to scale up bitcoin removing the max block size limit

Protocol changes proposed:

Hard fork to remove 1MB block size limit.
Simultaneously, add a new soft fork limit of 2MB.
Schedule the hard fork on testnet for September 1, 2015.
Schedule the hard fork on bitcoin main chain for December 11, 2015.
Default miner block size becomes 1MB (easily changeable by miner at any time, as today).
Changing the 2MB limit is accomplished in a manner similar to BIP 34, a one­way lock­in upgrade with a 12,000 block (3 month) threshold.

This is fantastic news. Jeff is the one person who can push the 1MBers in Core Dev into a reasonable compromise.
Together with the Greek slow-motion Inception-style trainwreck finally off the rails...
...BITCOIN on the launchpad at $230.
UP!

cypherdoc (OP)
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June 12, 2015, 11:35:52 PM
 #26363

https://twitter.com/jgarzik/status/609371913748529153

Making Decentralized Economic Policy
BIP 100 ­ Theory and Discussion, v0.3 ­ draft
Jeff Garzik <jgarzik@gmail.com>

a.k.a.

Another proposal to scale up bitcoin removing the max block size limit

Protocol changes proposed:

Hard fork to remove 1MB block size limit.
Simultaneously, add a new soft fork limit of 2MB.
Schedule the hard fork on testnet for September 1, 2015.
Schedule the hard fork on bitcoin main chain for December 11, 2015.
Default miner block size becomes 1MB (easily changeable by miner at any time, as today).
Changing the 2MB limit is accomplished in a manner similar to BIP 34, a one­way lock­in upgrade with a 12,000 block (3 month) threshold.

This is fantastic news. Jeff is the one person who can push the 1MBers in Core Dev into a reasonable compromise.
Together with the Greek slow-motion Inception-style trainwreck finally off the rails...
...BITCOIN on the launchpad at $230.
UP!

yes, the charts are primed and ready.  inevitable, imo, with halving just over a year away.

yes, it is good news that Jeff is taking a leadership role.  too bad that Adam didn't take my advice yesterday.  he could have been that person and still can be.  i told him his extension block idea was overly complex given where we are in the dispute.  everyone is worn out and just wants something simple they can understand w/o too much effort as this is a complex issue that has been debated to death with all sorts of unknown variables that ppl honestly can't keep track of anymore.  or just don't want to.  Jeff's formula is simple which is why it has got some traction.  but nothing goes down w/o /u/nullc.  and he's in a sour mood so i'm not holding my breath.  and unfortunately, Adam has taken to a somewhat confrontational rhetoric on Twitter.  i know he's worried.  but he should be as the economic majority is going to follow Gavin:

https://twitter.com/adam3us/status/609280982949187584
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June 13, 2015, 12:04:29 AM
 #26364

yes, the charts are primed and ready.  inevitable, imo, with halving just over a year away.

yes, it is good news that Jeff is taking a leadership role.  too bad that Adam didn't take my advice yesterday.  he could have been that person and still can be.  i told him his extension block idea was overly complex given where we are in the dispute.  everyone is worn out and just wants something simple they can understand w/o too much effort as this is a complex issue that has been debated to death with all sorts of unknown variables that ppl honestly can't keep track of anymore.  or just don't want to.  Jeff's formula is simple which is why it has got some traction.  but nothing goes down w/o /u/nullc.  and he's in a sour mood so i'm not holding my breath.  and unfortunately, Adam has taken to a somewhat confrontational rhetoric on Twitter.  i know he's worried.  but he should be as the economic majority is going to follow Gavin:

https://twitter.com/adam3us/status/609280982949187584

Agreed.

I am really puzzled as to why Adam is pushing the extension block proposal for the 1MB. It is obviously the wrong place for it, but is exactly what is needed to overcome the original 33.5MB message-size limit which still remains. Tier Nolan came up with the extension block idea about 2 years ago IIRC and it is very good, but too soon now. Also it should be coupled with IBLT as the two together will future-proof Bitcoin as far as block sizes are concerned (within Moore's Law) allowing on-chain scaling and elimination of a lot of the out-of-band block-stuffing miner spam.

I am also puzzled as to why Greg keeps wasting mind-boggingly large amounts of time spamming reddit with dead pro-1MB arguments. Surely his time is more valuable than that.

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June 13, 2015, 12:27:49 AM
 #26365

I hate the fact that politics must be played.  But after this debacle, sidechains had better be more awesome than the second coming of Satoshi if they want to make mods that are so much more complicated than changing a constant that there is simply no comparative basis.

My guess is that they want to delay blocksize so they can cram sidechain mods into the same fork as a negotiated compromise.  But this is turning into a huge mistake.  They are burning all the goodwill they had, and making us suspect them of not wanting what's best for bitcoin.  This reputation is going to badly affect their ability to get consensus in the future.
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June 13, 2015, 12:35:42 AM
 #26366

Chevron, an example of a large energy provider going over the cliff.  Exxon looks just as bad.  Deflation everywhere. Bitcoin inhaling:


Chesapeake also but should be able to meet drilling costs and debts but this is a guess, the shares are in a five year low even while USA begins to export worldwide LNG a first in many decades.     Low world growth and higher supplies of energy with the Saudis offering to meet any future demand just to let speculators know they have the upper hand on this price, greatly helps the case for deflation
Its quite surreal they have become so determined to keep the price low, its to do with Iran having a higher cost of production and more investment needed and Saudis dont want them to expand their influence at all.  Im told Iran have been nominated as the strong man in the room for the middle east by the powers that be, this makes no sense to me as they fight in Syria but are opposed to Isis at least I suppose

My only thought is a quote from a former president
Quote
"If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around them will deprive the people of all property until their children wake up homeless on the continent their Fathers conquered."
The main point being there I think that its the whipsaw effect that does most damage, the volatility of a swing between the two extremes causes most loss.  While we certainly appear to have deflation on many fronts, it is certain they have expanded the total money supply greatly and GDP has not

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gmaxwell
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June 13, 2015, 12:45:40 AM
 #26367

I hate the fact that politics must be played.  But after this debacle, sidechains had better be more awesome than the second coming of Satoshi if they want to make mods that are so much more complicated than changing a constant that there is simply no comparative basis.
My guess is that they want to delay blocksize so they can cram sidechain mods into the same fork as a negotiated compromise.  But this is turning into a huge mistake.  They are burning all the goodwill they had, and making us suspect them of not wanting what's best for bitcoin.  This reputation is going to badly affect their ability to get consensus in the future.

The opposition to Gavin's 2000% jump proposal comes unanimously from every active technical contributor to Bitcoin Core who has spoken up. This should suggest to you that your understanding of the comparative basis likely miscalibrated.  Though there is no comparative basis, 2WP sidechains are something that just requires non-broken smart contracts, it's not something that needs a hard-fork (and the centralized fedpeg sidechain stuff is indistinguishable, uncensorable, and unblockable: you can't prevent people from using it no matter how much you think you should be able to tell them that they can manage their funds).

Considering how often cypherdoc brags about his thread here being filled with economic wisdom, it's surprising to see views like "changing a constant simple and safe", after all 21 million bitcoins is merely a constant (and, pedantically, one the system didn't originally enforce....).  Try another strawman. Smiley
 
justusranvier
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June 13, 2015, 12:50:49 AM
 #26368

I hate the fact that politics must be played.  But after this debacle, sidechains had better be more awesome than the second coming of Satoshi if they want to make mods that are so much more complicated than changing a constant that there is simply no comparative basis.
My guess is that they want to delay blocksize so they can cram sidechain mods into the same fork as a negotiated compromise.  But this is turning into a huge mistake.  They are burning all the goodwill they had, and making us suspect them of not wanting what's best for bitcoin.  This reputation is going to badly affect their ability to get consensus in the future.

The opposition to Gavin's 2000% jump proposal comes unanimously from every active technical contributor to Bitcoin Core who has spoken up. This should suggest to you that your understanding of the comparative basis likely miscalibrated.  Though there is no comparative basis, 2WP sidechains are something that just requires non-broken smart contracts, it's not something that needs a hard-fork (and the centralized fedpeg sidechain stuff is indistinguishable, uncensorable, and unblockable: you can't prevent people from using it no matter how much you think you should be able to tell them that they can manage their funds).

Considering how often cypherdoc brags about his thread here being filled with economic wisdom, it's surprising to see views like "changing a constant simple and safe", after all 21 million bitcoins is merely a constant (and, pedantically, one the system didn't originally enforce....).  Try another strawman. Smiley
 
can you really not tell the difference between the money supply guarentee and a transaction rate limit?
cypherdoc (OP)
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June 13, 2015, 12:53:17 AM
 #26369

I hate the fact that politics must be played.  But after this debacle, sidechains had better be more awesome than the second coming of Satoshi if they want to make mods that are so much more complicated than changing a constant that there is simply no comparative basis.

My guess is that they want to delay blocksize so they can cram sidechain mods into the same fork as a negotiated compromise.  But this is turning into a huge mistake.  They are burning all the goodwill they had, and making us suspect them of not wanting what's best for bitcoin.  This reputation is going to badly affect their ability to get consensus in the future.

Greg is hugely disappointed that the Elements thread is off the first pg of Reddit.  and rightfully so, it's a bad sign that's theres not more interest.  apparently the initial software is very buggy; not unexpected.  it's early, i know.  but i totally agree they've burned almost all their goodwill by being so obstinate and unforgiving in this debate.  unfortunately in finances and investing, the best deals are made on golf courses btwn friends and ppl you can trust.  Greg et al may the best cryptographers in the world but if no one trust their motivations on simple issues like Core code, how can they be trusted in deeply complex issues like SC Elements?  and i'm not talking about the crypto, i'm talking about the economic assumptions behind it and the business models upon which they are laid out and introduced to the community.  i wouldn't want to be investing in BS at this pt.
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June 13, 2015, 12:56:52 AM
 #26370

I hate the fact that politics must be played.  But after this debacle, sidechains had better be more awesome than the second coming of Satoshi if they want to make mods that are so much more complicated than changing a constant that there is simply no comparative basis.

My guess is that they want to delay blocksize so they can cram sidechain mods into the same fork as a negotiated compromise.  But this is turning into a huge mistake.  They are burning all the goodwill they had, and making us suspect them of not wanting what's best for bitcoin.  This reputation is going to badly affect their ability to get consensus in the future.

Greg is hugely disappointed that the Elements thread is off the first pg of Reddit.  and rightfully so, it's a bad sign that's theres not more interest.  apparently the initial software is very buggy; not unexpected.  it's early, i know.  but i totally agree they've burned almost all their goodwill by being so obstinate and unforgiving in this debate.  unfortunately in finances and investing, the best deals are made on golf courses btwn friends and ppl you can trust.  Greg et al may the best cryptographers in the world but if no one trust their motivations on simple issues like Core code, how can they be trusted in deeply complex issues like SC Elements?  and i'm not talking about the crypto, i'm talking about the economic assumptions behind it and the business models upon which they are laid out and introduced to the community.  i wouldn't want to be investing in BS at this pt.
There really should be more interest in Confidential Values. That's a great technique.
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June 13, 2015, 01:00:06 AM
 #26371

I hate the fact that politics must be played.  But after this debacle, sidechains had better be more awesome than the second coming of Satoshi if they want to make mods that are so much more complicated than changing a constant that there is simply no comparative basis.
My guess is that they want to delay blocksize so they can cram sidechain mods into the same fork as a negotiated compromise.  But this is turning into a huge mistake.  They are burning all the goodwill they had, and making us suspect them of not wanting what's best for bitcoin.  This reputation is going to badly affect their ability to get consensus in the future.

The opposition to Gavin's 2000% jump proposal comes unanimously from every active technical contributor to Bitcoin Core who has spoken up. This should suggest to you that your understanding of the comparative basis likely miscalibrated.  Though there is no comparative basis, 2WP sidechains are something that just requires non-broken smart contracts, it's not something that needs a hard-fork (and the centralized fedpeg sidechain stuff is indistinguishable, uncensorable, and unblockable: you can't prevent people from using it no matter how much you think you should be able to tell them that they can manage their funds).

Considering how often cypherdoc brags about his thread here being filled with economic wisdom, it's surprising to see views like "changing a constant simple and safe", after all 21 million bitcoins is merely a constant (and, pedantically, one the system didn't originally enforce....).  Try another strawman. Smiley
 

it's certainly a lot simpler than anything you've proposed; oh wait, maybe not, that'd be nothing. Grin

as for Adam's extension block, bless his heart, i know he's trying but at this pt it is just too complicated.  the other devs think so too.  i read the dev transcript. 
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June 13, 2015, 01:16:31 AM
 #26372

it's certainly a lot simpler than anything you've proposed; oh wait, maybe not, that'd be nothing. Grin
Yes, you cannot be simpler than changing a constant-- but as I pointed out, changing a constant is no measure of safety, correctness, or ethics. There are plenty of one character changes that would utterly destroy the system if adopted.

And contrary to your claim, I've proposed many things--- even going back some time. For example, adjusting the limit to respect the impact on UTXO so that the costs better match the actual costs; adjusting blocks based on the 33rd percentile of miner preferences (similar to Jeff's proposal of 25th percentile), and allowing miners to mine blocks over the limit quadratically with increased effective-difficulty-- so if the network is actually backlogged with fees miners can catch up without being completely unhinged.

And then there is all the separate fundamental scaling work which I originally proposed, like the whole notion of UTXOs as a separately tracked and commutable resource, fraud proofs, etc.

apparently the initial software is very buggy; not unexpected. 
Huh?  Dunno what you're talking about there!  The network has been running flawlessly.  While we're sure there are, no doubt, lots of issues-- as we optimized for adding interesting features instead of QA-- and you really really really shouldn't go create an altcoin out of it (because it will crash and burn and we will laugh)... it works quite well, and I'm not aware of any complaints to the contrary.    Are you unable to exit FUD-everything-gmaxwell-touches mode for even a moment?

There really should be more interest in Confidential Values. That's a great technique.
Thanks. There are a couple of other angles that I think more people will be excited about once they 'click' for them.

Tying the subjects together-- for a given state of technology and amount of extra capacity (be it bandwidth, cpu, etc.) that capacity can be spent in various ways, by taking on increased load, by improving fungibility or privacy, by increasing decentralization. I happen to think we need all of these things. But a simplified understanding that only looks at one dimension isn't going to come up with a good engineering conclusion.  And sure, more X sound great if you consider it in isolation, but perhaps not when you realize it means less Y and never gaining any Z.  One of the reasons I think it's important to be cautious here is so that we can have CT (or a superior successor technology) in the Bitcoin network and not just in a sidechain.

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June 13, 2015, 01:31:35 AM
 #26373

it's certainly a lot simpler than anything you've proposed; oh wait, maybe not, that'd be nothing. Grin
Yes, you cannot be simpler than changing a constant-- but as I pointed out, changing a constant is no measure of safety, correctness, or ethics. There are plenty of one character changes that would utterly destroy the system if adopted.

well, we'll never know unless we try.  Bitcoin needs growth and artificial restriction at 1MB does not match Satoshi's original vision.
Quote

And contrary to your claim, I've proposed many things--- even going back some time. For example, adjusting the limit to respect the impact on UTXO so that the costs better match the actual costs; adjusting blocks based on the 33rd percentile of miner preferences (similar to Jeff's proposal of 25th percentile), and allowing miners to mine blocks over the limit quadratically with increased effective-difficulty-- so if the network is actually backlogged with fees miners can catch up without being completely unhinged.

And then there is all the separate fundamental scaling work which I originally proposed, like the whole notion of UTXOs as a separately tracked and commutable resource, fraud proofs, etc.

at this pt, you'd have to propose a concrete commitment plan and present it to Gavin to prove yourself.  no more talk.
Quote
apparently the initial software is very buggy; not unexpected.
Huh?  Dunno what you're talking about there!  The network has been running flawlessly.  While we're sure there are, no doubt, lots of issues-- as we optimized for adding interesting features instead of QA-- and you really really really shouldn't go create an altcoin out of it (because it will crash and burn and we will laugh)... it works quite well, and I'm not aware of any complaints to the contrary.    Are you unable to exit FUD-everything-gmaxwell-touches mode for even a moment?

i said it was expected.  you know there was thread on Reddit yesterday where some of the guys were talking about having problems.  it got shoved so far down that my just now search 3 full pages deep can't find it.  it's not a criticism, just interesting given your disappointment that the Elements announcement thread is now gone too.
Quote

There really should be more interest in Confidential Values. That's a great technique.
Thanks. There are a couple of other angles that I think more people will be excited about once they 'click' for them.

Tying the subjects together-- for a given state of technology and amount of extra capacity (be it bandwidth, cpu, etc.) that capacity can be spent in various ways, by taking on increased load, by improving fungibility or privacy, by increasing decentralization. I happen to think we need all of these things. But a simplified understanding that only looks at one dimension isn't going to come up with a good engineering conclusion.  And sure, more X sound great if you consider it in isolation, but perhaps not when you realize it means less Y and never gaining any Z.  One of the reasons I think it's important to be cautious here is so that we can have CT (or a superior successor technology) in the Bitcoin network and not just in a sidechain.



btw, i haven't heard your thoughts on Jeff's proposal.
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June 13, 2015, 01:54:27 AM
 #26374

at this pt, you'd have to propose a concrete commitment plan and present it to Gavin to prove yourself.  no more talk.
LOL. Present it to Gavin?  You realize that Gavin hasn't actually tendered a specific proposal-- it's all talk and political maneuvering with the general public, right?  No BIP draft, no pull request, no development thread (except for the one created days after by opponents of his move in shock by the approach). As far as I can tell the whole situation was specifically constructed to be a big show and justify a "governance" crisis and land-grab (a belief also supported by the emails Mike was sending the gmx account a year ago). That noise about the XT hardfork?  No commits on the repository for months, and except for two patches even the months old stuff is just copying Bitcoin Core-- the work of all these other people who are so easily disrespected now. Sound and fury, signifying nothing. Meanwhile, beyond making proposals, creating simulations, oh yea and developing bunch of highly useful new free software for Bitcoin, the rest of the people who actually do the work continuing to truck on.  In any case-- these things have been proposed in the usual forums. Gavin seems unwilling to consider anything other than a massive uncontrolled jump in blocksize as far as I can tell, fortunately Jeff isn't interested in the same kind of purely political end run.

And here again we find that you say something untrue (that I hadn't made proposals related to block size), it's corrected (no, in fact I've tried several specific proposals), then the bar moves.
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June 13, 2015, 02:00:16 AM
 #26375

hadn't seen this simulation from the btcd folks before.  looks promising:

Conclusions

Aside from the obvious network and storage constraints of running a full Bitcoin node at large block sizes, it appears the Bitcoin network is capable of handling a substantially higher transaction volume than it does currently. The CPU time being dominated by ECDSA signature checks at high transaction rates suggests a clustered full node architecture could process credit-card-like transaction rates by using a load balancing / offload approach to ECDSA signature checking, e.g. a full node with a 10 machine cluster would top out at >2,000 tps.

The resources and know-how required to run a clustered node like this may impose a significant centralizing force on Bitcoin. Backpressure against the centralization of Bitcoin may well drive alternative solutions to having all transactions on-chain. Alternatively, it may end up that Bitcoin adoption grows slowly enough that the computing power of a single node grows quickly enough to avoid requiring a clustered full node architecture.

Do note that btcsim does nothing to address the current issues with block propagation time and block size. These are serious issues that are already being addressed by Gavin and the other Core developers.


https://blog.conformal.com/btcsim-simulating-the-rise-of-bitcoin/

maybe offchain for profit companies are pursuing the wrong strategy by limiting block sizes on MC if they truly want to push tx's to their products?  Grin

the important part of their conclusion is that they acknowledge that organic growth of tx volume doesn't necessarily immediately ramp to the block limit; it is in fact controlled by market forces and adoption by users.  even if tx volume did ramp to the max i actually wouldn't be afraid of a scenario like this.  that's b/c i'd bet dollars to donuts that exchange price would ramp with it thus allowing me personally to have some extra fun running a "supernode".
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June 13, 2015, 02:04:56 AM
 #26376

at this pt, you'd have to propose a concrete commitment plan and present it to Gavin to prove yourself.  no more talk.
LOL. Present it to Gavin?  You realize that Gavin hasn't actually tendered a specific proposal-- it's all talk and political maneuvering with the general public, right?  No BIP draft, no pull request, no development thread (except for the one created days after by opponents of his move in shock by the approach). As far as I can tell the whole situation was specifically constructed to be a big show and justify a "governance" crisis and land-grab (a belief also supported by the emails Mike was sending the gmx account a year ago). That noise about the XT hardfork?  No commits on the repository for months, and except for two patches even the months old stuff is just copying Bitcoin Core-- the work of all these other people who are so easily disrespected now. Sound and fury, signifying nothing. Meanwhile, beyond making proposals, creating simulations, oh yea and developing bunch of highly useful new free software for Bitcoin, the rest of the people who actually do the work continuing to truck on.  In any case-- these things have been proposed in the usual forums. Gavin seems unwilling to consider anything other than a massive uncontrolled jump in blocksize as far as I can tell, fortunately Jeff isn't interested in the same kind of purely political end run.

And here again we find that you say something untrue (that I hadn't made proposals related to block size), it's corrected (no, in fact I've tried several specific proposals), then the bar moves.

so it sounds to me that you aren't willing to even talk to Gavin on this issue, is that right?

Greg, would you want to be lead core dev?
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June 13, 2015, 02:07:12 AM
Last edit: June 13, 2015, 02:25:16 AM by gmaxwell
 #26377

so it sounds to me that you aren't willing to even talk to Gavin on this issue, is that right?
In public, sure and I have.

It's just that I think there is unlikely to be an agreement there. As far as I can tell Gavin and Mike have a vision of a future where Bitcoin is "decenterlized" in the way the existing central banking system is-- rather than being secured by a decenteralized proof of work consensus (or similar) where the rules dominate the system instead of politics; or at a lest that its okay to become that way now and then maybe worry about it later if we don't like it.  It's not a view I share, and with such different objectives its difficult to agree on the the foundations needed for agreement when a true trade-off must be made.  Mike thinks that transactions should be completely free forever and that the system has failed if they're not.. well you can see the perspective differences outlined here, probably better than I am going to explain it right now: https://medium.com/@allenpiscitello/what-is-bitcoin-s-value-proposition-b7309be442e3

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Greg, would you want to be lead core dev?
No, among other reasons, it would be foolish as a US person..., and incidentally, I think the lead on Bitcoin Core-- Wladimir--  has done and continues to do an absolutely tremendous job. Though I suspect you read too much into lead-- it doesn't mean leader except in a person who helps people organize efforts sense. In Bitcoin another term for the world "leader" in the traditional top down governance sense, is "single point of failure"-- the part you compromise to undermine the whole thing. By Bitcoin's design and nature it can't have one of those, for better or worse.

the important part of their conclusion is that they acknowledge that organic growth of tx volume doesn't necessarily immediately ramp to the block limit; it is in fact controlled by market forces and adoption by users.  even if tx volume did ramp to the max i actually wouldn't be afraid of a scenario like this.  that's b/c i'd bet dollars to donuts that exchange price would ramp with it thus allowing me personally to have some extra fun running a "supernode".
As Jeff pointed out in his writeup, blocks have long been '100% full' relative to to whatever limit is being applied. If there is excess space, there is someone somewhere who will try to use it to store their data... be it some outlawed pornography they want to try to make censorship resistant or just 0 BTC  payments to advertise to people. A single while loop is an effectively infinite capacity demand, and a price of zero thats what we would have.  There have been a half dozen attempted companies trying to do "data archival in the blockchain", yadda yadda-- turns out globally replicated storage that other people pay for is pretty attractive!.   Though the traditional hard limit isn't necessary to block out crap like the unsolicited commercial advertising, but I'm personally very uncomfortable with putting ourselves in the position where the health of the network depends on miners censoring transactions-- I much prefer the politically neutral economics of competing for the available resources with fees.
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June 13, 2015, 02:17:47 AM
 #26378

I hate the fact that politics must be played.  But after this debacle, sidechains had better be more awesome than the second coming of Satoshi if they want to make mods that are so much more complicated than changing a constant that there is simply no comparative basis.
My guess is that they want to delay blocksize so they can cram sidechain mods into the same fork as a negotiated compromise.  But this is turning into a huge mistake.  They are burning all the goodwill they had, and making us suspect them of not wanting what's best for bitcoin.  This reputation is going to badly affect their ability to get consensus in the future.

The opposition to Gavin's 2000% jump proposal comes unanimously from every active technical contributor to Bitcoin Core who has spoken up. This should suggest to you that your understanding of the comparative basis likely miscalibrated.  Though there is no comparative basis, 2WP sidechains are something that just requires non-broken smart contracts, it's not something that needs a hard-fork (and the centralized fedpeg sidechain stuff is indistinguishable, uncensorable, and unblockable: you can't prevent people from using it no matter how much you think you should be able to tell them that they can manage their funds).

Considering how often cypherdoc brags about his thread here being filled with economic wisdom, it's surprising to see views like "changing a constant simple and safe", after all 21 million bitcoins is merely a constant (and, pedantically, one the system didn't originally enforce....).  Try another strawman. Smiley
 

MV = PT

A hard cap on the supply "M" was always the intent.
During my time spent immersed in Bitcoin never was the intent to limit Velocity or Transactions too be enforced by the Bitcoin protocol.

The idea of limiting Velocity or Transactions is a radical one, M is intentionally limited in the Bitcoin experiment, not V or T. Thinking it's OK to move Bitcoins V or T to a shidechain that is managed by the same incentives scheme that preserves the Bitcoin protocol is as radical as increasing "M" in the Bitcoin experiment.  

and to think there is no difference between "2WP sidechains are something that just requires non-broken smart contracts" in effect Sidechain Elements, a fantastic achievement by the way, and doing the same thing without a trust or a distributed server enforced by Bitcoin protocol to manipulate V or T  off the Bitcoin blockchain is an expression of macro economic ignorance.  

Thank me in Bits 12MwnzxtprG2mHm3rKdgi7NmJKCypsMMQw
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June 13, 2015, 02:27:07 AM
 #26379

As Jeff pointed out in his writeup, blocks have long been '100% full' relative to to whatever limit is being applied. If there is excess space, there is someone somewhere who will try to use it to store their data... be it some outlawed pornography they want to try to make censorship resistant or just 0 BTC  payments to advertise to people. A single while loop is an effectively infinite capacity demand, and a price of zero thats what we would have.  There have been a half dozen attempted companies trying to do "data archival in the blockchain", yadda yadda-- turns out globally replicated storage that other people pay for is pretty attractive!.   Though the traditional hard limit isn't necessary to block out crap like the unsolicited commercial advertising, but I'm personally very uncomfortable with putting ourselves in the position where the health of the network depends on miners censoring transactions-- I much prefer the politically neutral economics of competing for the available resources with fees.

all valid concerns and points, too bad all the pro-forkers see is unwarranted noise between them and mass adoption™, people pushing for hard-forks right now look very retarded and desperate, look at the derpness:



coffee-heads are going to destroy Bitcoin and I'll love to watch the show.

now contrast with some wisdom:

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June 13, 2015, 02:43:18 AM
 #26380

If there is excess space, there is someone somewhere who will try to use it to store their data... be it some outlawed pornography they want to try to make censorship resistant or just 0 BTC  payments to advertise to people. A single while loop is an effectively infinite capacity demand, and a price of zero thats what we would have.

aren't these non std tx's?
Quote

  There have been a half dozen attempted companies trying to do "data archival in the blockchain", yadda yadda-- turns out globally replicated storage that other people pay for is pretty attractive!.   Though the traditional hard limit isn't necessary to block out crap like the unsolicited commercial advertising, but I'm personally very uncomfortable with putting ourselves in the position where the health of the network depends on miners censoring transactions-- I much prefer the politically neutral economics of competing for the available resources with fees.


i disagree with this.  in a perfect world, the miners and users should be negotiating fees btwn them with you as core dev leaving any fee manipulating mechanisms (speed limits) out of the protocol.  that is what Jeff brought up in his BIP and represents insight you should consider.
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