Cconvert2G36
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June 28, 2015, 07:15:47 PM |
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Great to here that. Hope you mean it.
But you're ignoring the fact that a vast majority of the community does want an increase now. So why should we just go with your opinion again?
I am for an increase, sooner the better. Not sure how I can say this more clearly. I just don't think that the maxblocksize argument alters the incentives in the mining game, yet. I think you are getting too used to having people badger you in this thread these days. You're starting to see enemies when they are friends.
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thezerg
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June 28, 2015, 07:31:08 PM |
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Many Core developers are risk adverse, it's their way or the highway as they are the gate keepers, they are also the ones who would have to fix any problems so they feel they are better equipped to make this decision. - problem is this has highlighted a conflict in development and that is central controlled policy makers decided for us which brigs into question the whole idea that Bitcoin is decentralized.
In my view If anything we should be planning for Bitcoin growth and working on ways to prevent the existing mechanism from abuse.
Blockstream (i.e. the Core devs) are planning to unleash the freedom for anyone to innovate on BTC pegged value, which is precisely what you are clamoring for. I've got no problem with this. Its nice that most of the value BTC holders have may be preserved. But its pretty disingenuous to deliberately hamstring Bitcoin thereby forcing users into their solution. And if ppl do move to blockstream "sponsored" chains I question the legal/political ramifications of blockchains that have a big corporate target to aim at for censorship, identity tracking ,etc.
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cypherdoc (OP)
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June 28, 2015, 07:37:59 PM |
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Great to here that. Hope you mean it.
But you're ignoring the fact that a vast majority of the community does want an increase now. So why should we just go with your opinion again?
I am for an increase, sooner the better. Not sure how I can say this more clearly. I just don't think that the maxblocksize argument alters the incentives in the mining game, yet. I think you are getting too used to having people badger you in this thread these days. You're starting to see enemies when they are friends. I don't see you as an enemy. I just acknowledged that it is great you want an increase. I simply asked you why we should ignore, right now, a vast majority of the community who wants to see an increase built in now so that we can be ready come January?
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cypherdoc (OP)
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June 28, 2015, 07:50:35 PM |
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Many Core developers are risk adverse, it's their way or the highway as they are the gate keepers, they are also the ones who would have to fix any problems so they feel they are better equipped to make this decision. - problem is this has highlighted a conflict in development and that is central controlled policy makers decided for us which brigs into question the whole idea that Bitcoin is decentralized.
In my view If anything we should be planning for Bitcoin growth and working on ways to prevent the existing mechanism from abuse.
Blockstream (i.e. the Core devs) are planning to unleash the freedom for anyone to innovate on BTC pegged value, which is precisely what you are clamoring for. I've got no problem with this. Its nice that most of the value BTC holders have may be preserved. But its pretty disingenuous to deliberately hamstring Bitcoin thereby forcing users into their solution. And if ppl do move to blockstream "sponsored" chains I question the legal/political ramifications of blockchains that have a big corporate target to aim at for censorship, identity tracking ,etc. I've been meaning to mention this scenario. Big corporate consults with Blockstream to construct a proprietary corporate SC with a significant innovation that Bitcoin proper definitely would want to incorporate. Before any of this success is known to the market, corporate forces Blockstream to sign a non-compete. With Bitcoin Core still controlled by these devs, said innovation can't get back ported to Bitcoin Core because it continually gets blocked by non consensus. A hard fork introduced by anonymous dev can't get off the ground for the same reasons XT might not get off the ground. What then?
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Cconvert2G36
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June 28, 2015, 08:08:12 PM |
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I don't see you as an enemy. I just acknowledged that it is great you want an increase.
I simply asked you why we should ignore, right now, a vast majority of the community who wants to see an increase built in now so that we can be ready come January?
I refuse to argue on behalf of a point I didn't make. Although, now that you mention it... what if a vast majority of the community (ill defined), wanted to increase the block reward? If the "community" = mining nodes and full nodes, this is exactly how changes happen. A majority of hashing power and servicing nodes become a dominant fork, and the losers either join them or have an altcoin with an impossible difficulty. The mining incentive structure is built in, and not terribly reliant on the general user community's opinion. Larger blocks servicing increased tx volume and their accompanying fees is good for miners (to the point of being limited by hardware and bandwidth capacity). Altering the block reward, would probably nuke the coin's value, so there is a sort of MAD incentive against it. Again, I'm for an increase to the limit, and I think miners acting rationally would be too. They would do it because of their own self interest though, not because a poll of reddit users wanted them to.
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Zangelbert Bingledack
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June 28, 2015, 08:22:43 PM |
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The spring appears to be coiling for a massive, long-overdue move. A mere 10x-ing might be too tame this time around; we have a lot of catching up to do. Greece implementing capital controls enforced by a week-long bank holiday, right on cue.
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Cconvert2G36
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June 28, 2015, 08:23:02 PM |
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This would be the final arbiter. But, like the fork in 2013, I think miners would solve it before trading on classic vs new began.
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Zangelbert Bingledack
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June 28, 2015, 08:25:19 PM |
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This would be the final arbiter. But, like the fork in 2013, I think miners would solve it before trading on classic vs new began. Yup. It's the silent ace up investors' sleeves that prevents any funny business by the miners, devs, or other stakeholders.
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Carlton Banks
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June 28, 2015, 08:28:52 PM |
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Again, I'm for an increase to the limit, and I think miners acting rationally would be too. They would do it because of their own self interest though, not because a poll of reddit users wanted them to.
Are you sure miners acting rationally wouldn't consider the block limit as 1 dimension of the potential way to increase transaction capacity? The real question isn't "how/when/to what do we increase the block size", it's "how do we increase transaction capacity in a way that maintains a healthy market for hashes". Anything that centralises towards the miners, or amongst the miners, is bad for the eco system as a whole. BIP 101 would create a trend toward both.
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Vires in numeris
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Cconvert2G36
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June 28, 2015, 08:52:25 PM |
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Again, I'm for an increase to the limit, and I think miners acting rationally would be too. They would do it because of their own self interest though, not because a poll of reddit users wanted them to.
Are you sure miners acting rationally wouldn't consider the block limit as 1 dimension of the potential way to increase transaction capacity? The real question isn't "how/when/to what do we increase the block size", it's "how do we increase transaction capacity in a way that maintains a healthy market for hashes". Anything that centralises towards the miners, or amongst the miners, is bad for the eco system as a whole. BIP 101 would create a trend toward both. Miners create the blocks, so I'm not sure what decentralizing away from miners would even mean. If you mean that smaller miners are dependent on, or even supported by, 1MB blocks, I disagree. It may even be the opposite, smaller mining operations may have access to better bandwidth and speed vs remote industrial mining farms in rural china. Economies of scale encourage, especially since the arrival of ASICs, the relative centralization of mining. This was not a surprise and was predicted from the very beginning. IMO maxblocksize has almost nothing to do with it.
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cypherdoc (OP)
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June 28, 2015, 09:02:10 PM |
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Again, I'm for an increase to the limit, and I think miners acting rationally would be too. They would do it because of their own self interest though, not because a poll of reddit users wanted them to.
Are you sure miners acting rationally wouldn't consider the block limit as 1 dimension of the potential way to increase transaction capacity? The real question isn't "how/when/to what do we increase the block size", it's "how do we increase transaction capacity in a way that maintains a healthy market for hashes". Anything that centralises towards the miners, or amongst the miners, is bad for the eco system as a whole. BIP 101 would create a trend toward both. Miners create the blocks, so I'm not sure what decentralizing away from miners would even mean. If you mean that smaller miners are dependent on, or even supported by, 1MB blocks, I disagree. It may even be the opposite, smaller mining operations may have access to better bandwidth and speed vs remote industrial mining farms in rural china. Economies of scale encourage, especially since the arrival of ASICs, the relative centralization of mining. This was not a surprise and was predicted from the very beginning. IMO maxblocksize has almost nothing to do with it. What a great point. The 5 largest miners in the world already told us they're trapped behinf the GFC with inferior connectivity speeds. And yes, we have to assume the relay network is factored into that statement. It may turn out that a small miner could do the large block better connectivity attack Wiulle was going on about on reddit because of a direct connection to the relay network that causes the Chinese miners to choke.
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cypherdoc (OP)
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June 28, 2015, 09:09:41 PM |
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I don't see you as an enemy. I just acknowledged that it is great you want an increase.
I simply asked you why we should ignore, right now, a vast majority of the community who wants to see an increase built in now so that we can be ready come January?
I refuse to argue on behalf of a point I didn't make. Although, now that you mention it... what if a vast majority of the community (ill defined), wanted to increase the block reward? If the "community" = mining nodes and full nodes, this is exactly how changes happen. A majority of hashing power and servicing nodes become a dominant fork, and the losers either join them or have an altcoin with an impossible difficulty. The mining incentive structure is built in, and not terribly reliant on the general user community's opinion. Larger blocks servicing increased tx volume and their accompanying fees is good for miners (to the point of being limited by hardware and bandwidth capacity). Altering the block reward, would probably nuke the coin's value, so there is a sort of MAD incentive against it. Again, I'm for an increase to the limit, and I think miners acting rationally would be too. They would do it because of their own self interest though, not because a poll of reddit users wanted them to. This argument has come up many times in the last week especially since Matonis brought it up despite him not understanding what's going on. It won't ever happen because the idea has never even come up and not been contested or challenged. Reason being, everyone is here in the first place, whether they know it or not, because the supply is fixed and no one wants to change it, let alone a majority.
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Carlton Banks
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June 28, 2015, 09:14:49 PM |
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Again, I'm for an increase to the limit, and I think miners acting rationally would be too. They would do it because of their own self interest though, not because a poll of reddit users wanted them to.
Are you sure miners acting rationally wouldn't consider the block limit as 1 dimension of the potential way to increase transaction capacity? The real question isn't "how/when/to what do we increase the block size", it's "how do we increase transaction capacity in a way that maintains a healthy market for hashes". Anything that centralises towards the miners, or amongst the miners, is bad for the eco system as a whole. BIP 101 would create a trend toward both. Miners create the blocks, so I'm not sure what decentralizing away from miners would even mean. If you mean that smaller miners are dependent on, or even supported by, 1MB blocks, I disagree. It may even be the opposite, smaller mining operations may have access to better bandwidth and speed vs remote industrial mining farms in rural china. Economies of scale encourage, especially since the arrival of ASICs, the relative centralization of mining. This was not a surprise and was predicted from the very beginning. IMO maxblocksize has almost nothing to do with it. Sorry, no, I didn't mean any of that. By "centralising towards miners" I mean miners being the majority/only nodes (which we already have to an extent), and by "centralising amongst miners", I mean large miners consolidating market share (which we also already have to a.... well you've already acknowledged it). BIP 101 accelerates both trends.
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Vires in numeris
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Odalv
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June 28, 2015, 09:17:24 PM |
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To any mining pool operators out there reading,
next year July your mining pool income will be cut in half by the block halving. you must supplement that income by onboarding as many tx paying fees into the main Bitcoin blockchain if you want to survive long term. offboarding those tx paying fees into centralized services like Coinbase or Bitpay will not help you. what this means is that you indirectly need to grow the userbase that generates these tx paying fees.
you have no choice but to increase block size limits, and soon, otherwise unconfirmed tx's and unaffordable tx fees will drive new and even existing users away and you will forever be dependent on a small community of geeks and developers for business profits. not a sustainable situation.
Supply is halving every 4 years. And I think that doubling block size every 4 years is enough to compensate.
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cypherdoc (OP)
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June 28, 2015, 09:27:11 PM |
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To any mining pool operators out there reading,
next year July your mining pool income will be cut in half by the block halving. you must supplement that income by onboarding as many tx paying fees into the main Bitcoin blockchain if you want to survive long term. offboarding those tx paying fees into centralized services like Coinbase or Bitpay will not help you. what this means is that you indirectly need to grow the userbase that generates these tx paying fees.
you have no choice but to increase block size limits, and soon, otherwise unconfirmed tx's and unaffordable tx fees will drive new and even existing users away and you will forever be dependent on a small community of geeks and developers for business profits. not a sustainable situation.
Supply is halving every 4 years. And I think that doubling block size every 4 years is enough to compensate. Sounds symmetric.
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Odalv
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June 28, 2015, 10:04:48 PM |
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To any mining pool operators out there reading,
next year July your mining pool income will be cut in half by the block halving. you must supplement that income by onboarding as many tx paying fees into the main Bitcoin blockchain if you want to survive long term. offboarding those tx paying fees into centralized services like Coinbase or Bitpay will not help you. what this means is that you indirectly need to grow the userbase that generates these tx paying fees.
you have no choice but to increase block size limits, and soon, otherwise unconfirmed tx's and unaffordable tx fees will drive new and even existing users away and you will forever be dependent on a small community of geeks and developers for business profits. not a sustainable situation.
Supply is halving every 4 years. And I think that doubling block size every 4 years is enough to compensate. Sounds symmetric. And maybe it would be fine to double block size in the middle of halving period. 2012 halving supply 2014 doubling block size 2016 halving supply 2018 doubling block size ... and so on :-)
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hdbuck
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June 28, 2015, 10:19:06 PM |
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To any mining pool operators out there reading,
next year July your mining pool income will be cut in half by the block halving. you must supplement that income by onboarding as many tx paying fees into the main Bitcoin blockchain if you want to survive long term. offboarding those tx paying fees into centralized services like Coinbase or Bitpay will not help you. what this means is that you indirectly need to grow the userbase that generates these tx paying fees.
you have no choice but to increase block size limits, and soon, otherwise unconfirmed tx's and unaffordable tx fees will drive new and even existing users away and you will forever be dependent on a small community of geeks and developers for business profits. not a sustainable situation.
Supply is halving every 4 years. And I think that doubling block size every 4 years is enough to compensate. Sounds symmetric. And maybe it would be fine to double block size in the middle of halving period. 2012 halving supply 2014 doubling block size 2016 halving supply 2018 doubling block size ... and so on :-) ...raising 21M bitcoin limit..
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Odalv
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June 28, 2015, 10:22:54 PM |
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To any mining pool operators out there reading,
next year July your mining pool income will be cut in half by the block halving. you must supplement that income by onboarding as many tx paying fees into the main Bitcoin blockchain if you want to survive long term. offboarding those tx paying fees into centralized services like Coinbase or Bitpay will not help you. what this means is that you indirectly need to grow the userbase that generates these tx paying fees.
you have no choice but to increase block size limits, and soon, otherwise unconfirmed tx's and unaffordable tx fees will drive new and even existing users away and you will forever be dependent on a small community of geeks and developers for business profits. not a sustainable situation.
Supply is halving every 4 years. And I think that doubling block size every 4 years is enough to compensate. Sounds symmetric. And maybe it would be fine to double block size in the middle of halving period. 2012 halving supply 2014 doubling block size 2016 halving supply 2018 doubling block size ... and so on :-) ...raising 21M bitcoin limit.. ...and removing SHA-256 and RIPEMD-160 from protocol...
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