Why Nostr? What is Njump?
2023-12-10 13:23:25

OceanSlim on Nostr: Can I ask what would happen if we changed it to zero? It's just a configuration ...

Can I ask what would happen if we changed it to zero? It's just a configuration right? Surely only changing a configuration doesn't change Bitcoin right? Or it will "filter" all transactions? The US Government can just spin up their nodes and change to zero. They would like to make empty blocks and destroy Bitcoin. Don't tell them how to use Bitcoin you ideologues. /s

Obviously I'm making a point that you can't just hide behind "it's just a config" spam is subjective and you lied about it being an exploit to further your own personal objective. Bitcoin is not yours, it everyones. There should be a broad discussion on what it should be and bitcoin blocks are hardly ever full with data to Begin with. Even with ordinals. Just go look. Data limit of 4mb is almost never an issue. You just don't like that someone what wants to use the chain in a certain way.
The OP_RETURN discussion is not new and dates back to 2014 when Bitcoin Core 0.9.0 was released with the OP_RETURN policy included which was intended to discourage more egregious forms of spam. At that time, 40 bytes was the default max datacarriersize limit across all node implementations; this was and still is sufficiently large for tying data to a transaction (32 bytes for a hash and 8 bytes for a unique identifier). Core subsequently increasing the default to 80 bytes was an entirely voluntary decision and in no way contradicts the design objective that OP_RETURN creates a provably-prunable output to minimise damage caused by data storage schemes, which have always been discouraged as abusive. There are also other good technical reasons which I have chosen to retain the lower default in Bitcoin Knots, and no justification for increasing it.

It is not my intention, nor that of my team at
, to filter coinjoins. These present an innovative tool for increasing Bitcoin’s privacy and, when constructed properly, coinjoins can easily stay within the OP_RETURN limit (indeed, there is no reason for them to have *any* OP_RETURN data at all). I have some ideas on how to alleviate the recent issue where some coinjoin transactions were flagged as spam from Knots v25, and I am willing, with the full resources of my team, to work collaboratively on a solution in good faith.

Bitcoin does and always has allowed nodes to set filters based on multiple sets of criteria and Knots v25’s defaults are IMO what is best for Bitcoin at this time. Others may disagree and that is ok. They are free to (and should) run their own nodes - it is good for Bitcoin to have more people running nodes, including miners, and there should be a natural diversity in node policies. As was stated before, OCEAN is on a path to decentralization and very soon we are going to be in a position where hashers will be able to fully participate as miners and perform the intelligent parts of mining such as deciding which version of node software to run and what filters or other policies to apply to block template construction.
Author Public Key
npub1zmc6qyqdfnllhnzzxr5wpepfpnzcf8q6m3jdveflmgruqvd3qa9sjv7f60