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  <title>Nostr notes by Jacob Eliosoff [ARCHIVE]</title>
  <author>
    <name>Jacob Eliosoff [ARCHIVE]</name>
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  <entry>
    <id>https://njump.me/nevent1qqsz0rsp4efx3g8zr9xeym864k0l7yt8rc4rgmea2nq420unltezlpqzyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79ykpq0tnr</id>
    
      <title type="html">📅 Original date posted:2022-07-10 📝 Original message:&amp;gt; ...</title>
    
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      In reply to &lt;a href=&#39;/nevent1qqsp9ya036fus2p83qm5vlq9cmtk92s7n772wkkg94fwljeha7crhqsxld2zj&#39;&gt;nevent1q…d2zj&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;_________________________&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;📅 Original date posted:2022-07-10&lt;br/&gt;📝 Original message:&amp;gt; Credit where credit is due: after writing the bulk of this article I&lt;br/&gt;found out&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; that Monero developer [smooth_xmr](&lt;a href=&#34;https://www.reddit.com/user/smooth_xmr/&#34;&gt;https://www.reddit.com/user/smooth_xmr/&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;)&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; also observed that tail emission results in a stable coin supply&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; [a few years ago](&lt;br/&gt;&lt;a href=&#34;https://www.reddit.com/r/Monero/comments/4z0azk/maam_28_monero_ask_anything_monday/d6sixyi/&#34;&gt;https://www.reddit.com/r/Monero/comments/4z0azk/maam_28_monero_ask_anything_monday/d6sixyi/&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;).&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; There&amp;#39;s probably others too: it&amp;#39;s a pretty obvious result.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Fwiw, Joe Lubin, April 2014:  &amp;#34;The expected rate of annual loss and&lt;br/&gt;destruction of ETH will balance the rate of issuance.  Under this dynamic,&lt;br/&gt;a quasi-steady state is reached and the amount of extant ETH no longer&lt;br/&gt;grows.&amp;#34;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;a href=&#34;https://blog.ethereum.org/2014/04/10/the-issuance-model-in-ethereum/&#34;&gt;https://blog.ethereum.org/2014/04/10/the-issuance-model-in-ethereum/&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;As you say, probably an observation various people have made.  (Ethereum&lt;br/&gt;has had some updates to its issuance model since 2014, in particular&lt;br/&gt;EIP-1559 and the block reward reduction coming with PoS.  But they&amp;#39;ve had a&lt;br/&gt;fixed rather than halving block subsidy since launch so the question of&lt;br/&gt;whether it implied infinite supply often came up.)&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;On Sat, Jul 9, 2022, 7:47 AM Peter Todd via bitcoin-dev &amp;lt;&lt;br/&gt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; New blog post:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://petertodd.org/2022/surprisingly-tail-emission-is-not-inflationary&#34;&gt;https://petertodd.org/2022/surprisingly-tail-emission-is-not-inflationary&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; tl;dr: Due to lost coins, a tail emission/fixed reward actually results in&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; a&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; stable money supply. Not an (monetarily) inflationary supply.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; ...and for the purposes of reply/discussion, attached is the article&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; itself in&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; markdown format:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; ---&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; layout: post&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; title:  &amp;#34;Surprisingly, Tail Emission Is Not Inflationary&amp;#34;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; date:   2022-07-09&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; tags:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; - bitcoin&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; - monero&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; ---&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; At present, all notable proof-of-work currencies reward miners with both a&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; block&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; reward, and transaction fees. With most currencies (including Bitcoin)&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; phasing&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; out block rewards over time. However in no currency have transaction fees&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; consistently been more than 5% to 10% of the total mining&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; reward[^fee-in-reward], with the exception of Ethereum, from June 2020 to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Aug 2021.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; To date no proof-of-work currency has ever operated solely on transaction&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; fees[^pow-tweet], and academic analysis has found that in this condition&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; block&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; generation is unstable.[^instability-without-block-reward] To paraphrase&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Andrew&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Poelstra, it&amp;#39;s a scary phase change that no other coin has gone&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; through.[^apoelstra-quote]&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; [^pow-tweet]: [I asked on Twitter](&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://twitter.com/peterktodd/status/1543231264597090304&#34;&gt;https://twitter.com/peterktodd/status/1543231264597090304&lt;/a&gt;) and no-one&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; replied with counter-examples.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; [^fee-in-reward]: [Average Fee Percentage in Total Block Reward](&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://bitinfocharts.com/comparison/fee_to_reward-btc-eth-bch-ltc-doge-xmr-bsv-dash-zec.html#alltime&#34;&gt;https://bitinfocharts.com/comparison/fee_to_reward-btc-eth-bch-ltc-doge-xmr-bsv-dash-zec.html#alltime&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; )&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; [^instability-without-block-reward]: [On the Instability of Bitcoin&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Without the Block Reward](&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://www.cs.princeton.edu/~arvindn/publications/mining_CCS.pdf&#34;&gt;https://www.cs.princeton.edu/~arvindn/publications/mining_CCS.pdf&lt;/a&gt;)&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; [^apoelstra-quote]: [From a panel at TABConf 2021](&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://twitter.com/peterktodd/status/1457066946898317316&#34;&gt;https://twitter.com/peterktodd/status/1457066946898317316&lt;/a&gt;)&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Monero has chosen to implement what they call [tail&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; emission](&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://www.getmonero.org/resources/moneropedia/tail-emission.html&#34;&gt;https://www.getmonero.org/resources/moneropedia/tail-emission.html&lt;/a&gt;):&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; a fixed reward per block that continues indefinitely. Dogecoin also has a&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; fixed&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; reward, which they widely - and incorrectly - refer to as an &amp;#34;abundant&amp;#34;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; supply[^dogecoin-abundant].&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; [^dogecoin-abundant]: Googling &amp;#34;dogecoin abundant&amp;#34; returns dozens of hits.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; This article will show that a fixed block reward does **not** lead to an&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; abundant supply. In fact, due to the inevitability of lost coins, a fixed&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; reward converges to a **stable** monetary supply that is neither&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; inflationary&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; nor deflationary, with the total supply proportional to rate of tail&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; emission&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; and probability of coin loss.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Credit where credit is due: after writing the bulk of this article I found&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; out&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; that Monero developer [smooth_xmr](&lt;a href=&#34;https://www.reddit.com/user/smooth_xmr/&#34;&gt;https://www.reddit.com/user/smooth_xmr/&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; )&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; also observed that tail emission results in a stable coin supply&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; [a few years ago](&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://www.reddit.com/r/Monero/comments/4z0azk/maam_28_monero_ask_anything_monday/d6sixyi/&#34;&gt;https://www.reddit.com/r/Monero/comments/4z0azk/maam_28_monero_ask_anything_monday/d6sixyi/&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; ).&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; There&amp;#39;s probably others too: it&amp;#39;s a pretty obvious result.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;lt;div markdown=&amp;#34;1&amp;#34; class=&amp;#34;post-toc&amp;#34;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; # Contents&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; {:.no_toc}&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; 0. TOC&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; {:toc}&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;lt;/div&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; ## Modeling the Fixed-Reward Monetary Supply&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Since the number of blocks is large, we can model the monetary supply as a&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; continuous function $$N(t)$$, where $$t$$ is a given moment in time. If the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; block reward is fixed we can model the reward as a slope $$k$$ added to an&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; initial supply $$N_0$$:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; $$&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; N(t) = N_0 &#43; kt&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; $$&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Of course, this isn&amp;#39;t realistic as coins are constantly being lost due to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; deaths, forgotten passphrases, boating accidents, etc. These losses are&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; independent: I&amp;#39;m not any more or less likely to forget my passphrase&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; because&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; you recently lost your coins in a boating accident — an accident I probably&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; don&amp;#39;t even know happened. Since the number of individual coins (and their&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; owners) is large — as with the number of blocks — we can model this loss as&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; though it happens continuously.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Since coins can only be lost once, the *rate* of coin loss at time $$t$$ is&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; proportional to the total supply *at that moment* in time. So let&amp;#39;s look&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; at the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; *first derivative* of our fixed-reward coin supply:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; $$&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; \frac{dN(t)}{dt} = k&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; $$&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; ...and subtract from it the lost coins, using $$\lambda$$ as our [coin loss&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; constant](&lt;a href=&#34;https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exponential_decay&#34;&gt;https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exponential_decay&lt;/a&gt;):&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; $$&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; \frac{dN(t)}{dt} = k - \lambda N(t)&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; $$&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; That&amp;#39;s a first-order differential equation, which can be easily solved with&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; separation of variables to get:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; $$&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; N(t) = \frac{k}{\lambda} - Ce^{-\lambda t}&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; $$&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; To remove the integration constant $$C$$, let&amp;#39;s look at $$t = 0$$, where&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; coin supply is $$N_0$$:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; $$&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; \begin{align}&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;     N_0 &amp;amp;= \frac{k}{\lambda} - Ce^{-\lambda 0} = \frac{k}{\lambda} - C \\&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;       C &amp;amp;= \frac{k}{\lambda} - N_0&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; \end{align}&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; $$&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Thus:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; $$&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; \begin{align}&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;     N(t) &amp;amp;= \frac{k}{\lambda} - \left(\frac{k}{\lambda} - N_0&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; \right)e^{-\lambda t} \\&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;          &amp;amp;= \frac{k}{\lambda} &#43; \left(N_0 - \frac{k}{\lambda}&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; \right)e^{-\lambda t}&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; \end{align}&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; $$&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; ## Long Term Coin Supply&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; It&amp;#39;s easy to see that in the long run, the second half of the coin supply&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; equation goes to zero because $$\lim_{t \to \infty} e^{-\lambda t} = 0$$:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; $$&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; \begin{align}&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;     \lim_{t \to \infty} N(t) &amp;amp;= \lim_{t \to \infty} \left[&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; \frac{k}{\lambda} &#43; \left(N_0 - \frac{k}{\lambda} \right)e^{-\lambda t}&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; \right ] = \frac{k}{\lambda} \\&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;                    N(\infty) &amp;amp;= \frac{k}{\lambda}&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; \end{align}&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; $$&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; An intuitive explanation for this result is that in the long run, the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; initial&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; supply $$N_0$$ doesn&amp;#39;t matter, because approximately all of those coins&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; will&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; eventually be lost. Thus in the long run, the coin supply will converge&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; towards&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; $$\frac{k}{\lambda}$$, the point where coins are created just as fast as&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; they&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; are lost.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; ## Short Term Dynamics and Economic Considerations&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Of course, the intuitive explanation for why supply converges to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; $$\frac{k}{\lambda}$$, also tells us that supply must converge fairly&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; slowly:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; if 1% of something is lost per year, after 100 years 37% of the initial&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; supply&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; remains. It&amp;#39;s not clear what the rate of lost coins actually is in a&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; mature,&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; valuable, coin. But 1%/year is likely to be a good guess — quite possibly&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; less.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; In the case of Monero, they&amp;#39;ve introduced tail emission at a point where it&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; represents a 0.9% apparent monetary inflation rate[^p2pool-tail]. Since&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; the number of&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; previously lost coins, and the current rate of coin loss, is&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; unknown[^unknowable] it&amp;#39;s not possible to know exactly what the true&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; monetary&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; inflation rate is right now. But regardless, the rate will only converge&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; towards zero going forward.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; [^unknowable]: Being a privacy coin with [shielded amounts](&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://localmonero.co/blocks/richlist&#34;&gt;https://localmonero.co/blocks/richlist&lt;/a&gt;), it&amp;#39;s not even possible to get an&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; estimate of the total amount of XMR in active circulation.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; [^p2pool-tail]: P2Pool operates [a page with real-time date figures](&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://p2pool.io/tail.html&#34;&gt;https://p2pool.io/tail.html&lt;/a&gt;).&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; If an existing coin decides to implement tail emission as a means to fund&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; security, choosing an appropriate emission rate is simple: decide on the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; maximum amount of inflation you are willing to have in the worst case, and&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; set&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; the tail emission accordingly. In reality monetary inflation will be even&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; lower&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; on day zero due to lost coins, and in the long run, it will converge&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; towards&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; zero.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; The fact is, economic volatility dwarfs the effect of small amounts of&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; inflation. Even a 0.5% inflation rate over 50 years only leads to a 22%&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; drop.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Meanwhile at the time of writing, Bitcoin has dropped 36% in the past&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; year, and&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; gained 993% over the past 5 years. While this discussion is a nice excuse&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; use some mildly interesting math, in the end it&amp;#39;s totally pedantic.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; ## Could Bitcoin Add Tail Emission?&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; ...and why could Monero?&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Adding tail emission to Bitcoin would be a hard fork: a incompatible rule&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; change that existing Bitcoin nodes would reject as invalid. While Monero&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; was&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; able to get sufficiently broad consensus in the community to implement tail&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; emission, it&amp;#39;s unclear at best if it would ever be possible to achieve&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; that for&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; the much larger[^btc-vs-xmr-market-cap] Bitcoin. Additionally, Monero has a&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; culture of frequent hard forks that simply does not exist in Bitcoin.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; [^btc-vs-xmr-market-cap]: [As of writing](&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://web.archive.org/web/20220708143920/https://www.coingecko.com/&#34;&gt;https://web.archive.org/web/20220708143920/https://www.coingecko.com/&lt;/a&gt;),&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; the apparent market cap of Bitcoin is $409 billion, almost 200x larger than&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Monero&amp;#39;s $2.3 billion.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Ultimately, as long as a substantial fraction of the Bitcoin community&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; continue&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; to run full nodes, the only way tail emission could ever be added to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Bitcoin is&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; by convincing that same community that it is a good idea.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; ## Footnotes&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; _______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;-------------- next part --------------&lt;br/&gt;An HTML attachment was scrubbed...&lt;br/&gt;URL: &amp;lt;&lt;a href=&#34;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20220710/1c603cdd/attachment-0001.html&amp;gt&#34;&gt;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20220710/1c603cdd/attachment-0001.html&amp;gt&lt;/a&gt;;
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    <updated>2023-06-07T23:11:32Z</updated>
  </entry>

  <entry>
    <id>https://njump.me/nevent1qqsgklk76j2ak8j7rrw65qmy4ttf8ek0f628z7vw2d2cah6v89rlmrqzyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79yktyjyu9</id>
    
      <title type="html">📅 Original date posted:2019-03-12 📝 Original message:Also, ...</title>
    
    <link rel="alternate" href="https://njump.me/nevent1qqsgklk76j2ak8j7rrw65qmy4ttf8ek0f628z7vw2d2cah6v89rlmrqzyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79yktyjyu9" />
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      In reply to &lt;a href=&#39;/nevent1qqsyuphn8t5j4ntm83gyr4t5cmmymr00a69zxnhztg5gkkzshfpju8sn4q4nn&#39;&gt;nevent1q…q4nn&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;_________________________&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;📅 Original date posted:2019-03-12&lt;br/&gt;📝 Original message:Also, if future disabling isn&amp;#39;t the point of making a tx type like&lt;br/&gt;OP_CODESEPARATOR non-standard - what is?  If we&amp;#39;re committed to indefinite&lt;br/&gt;support of these oddball features, what do we gain by making them hard to&lt;br/&gt;use/mine?&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;I see questions like &amp;#34;Is it possible someone&amp;#39;s existing tx relies on this?&amp;#34;&lt;br/&gt;as overly black-and-white.  We all agree it&amp;#39;s possible: the question is how&lt;br/&gt;likely, vs the harms of continued support - including not just security&lt;br/&gt;risks but friction on other useful changes, safety/correctness analyses,&lt;br/&gt;etc.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;It is so easy to say stuff like this when one&amp;#39;s own money isn&amp;#39;t what is at&lt;br/&gt;risk.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Stepping back for a second here:  I dispute this framing.  My money *is* at&lt;br/&gt;risk, because the value of my bitcoins depends on adoption and feature&lt;br/&gt;growth.  And I&amp;#39;ve long viewed an absolutist, actual-known-user-indifferent&lt;br/&gt;approach to backwards compatibility as the #1 impediment to Bitcoin&amp;#39;s&lt;br/&gt;adoption and growth.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Again, the point being not to throw caution to the wind, but that a case&lt;br/&gt;like this where extensive research unearthed zero users, is taking caution&lt;br/&gt;too far.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;On Tue, Mar 12, 2019, 5:48 PM Matt Corallo via bitcoin-dev &amp;lt;&lt;br/&gt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Note that even your carve-outs for OP_NOP is not sufficient here - if you&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; were using nSequence to tag different pre-signed transactions into&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; categories (roughly as you suggest people may want to do with extra sighash&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bits) then their transactions could very easily have become&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; un-realistically-spendable. The whole point of soft forks is that we&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; invalidate otherwise-unused bits of the protocol. This does not seem&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; inconsistent with the proposal here.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; On Mar 9, 2019, at 13:29, Russell O&amp;#39;Connor &amp;lt;roconnor at blockstream.io&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Bitcoin has *never* made a soft-fork, since the time of Satoishi, that&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; invalidated transactions that send secured inputs to secured outputs&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; (excluding uses of OP_NOP1-OP_NOP10).&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; _______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;-------------- next part --------------&lt;br/&gt;An HTML attachment was scrubbed...&lt;br/&gt;URL: &amp;lt;&lt;a href=&#34;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20190312/a6624dfa/attachment.html&amp;gt&#34;&gt;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20190312/a6624dfa/attachment.html&amp;gt&lt;/a&gt;;
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    <updated>2023-06-07T18:16:48Z</updated>
  </entry>

  <entry>
    <id>https://njump.me/nevent1qqsrcllepz5prps3rts5wmp2a5ehm5q9v892yflgsulq38jnme6zkcczyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79yknrhfru</id>
    
      <title type="html">📅 Original date posted:2019-03-10 📝 Original message:&amp;gt; ...</title>
    
    <link rel="alternate" href="https://njump.me/nevent1qqsrcllepz5prps3rts5wmp2a5ehm5q9v892yflgsulq38jnme6zkcczyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79yknrhfru" />
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      In reply to &lt;a href=&#39;/nevent1qqs9dh6jx0e8wnd9ex2xla772x3kp4vnn38p9teuh5pa7p8dd40954s72myz9&#39;&gt;nevent1q…myz9&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;_________________________&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;📅 Original date posted:2019-03-10&lt;br/&gt;📝 Original message:&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Instead, it is this soft-fork proposal that is unprecedented. Let me&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; reiterate what I posted in another thread:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Bitcoin has *never* made a soft-fork, since the time of Satoishi, that&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; invalidated transactions that send secured inputs to secured outputs&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; (excluding uses of OP_NOP1-OP_NOP10).&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;This principle was only ever a rule of thumb to protect users, not a&lt;br/&gt;commandment from God.  It shouldn&amp;#39;t be violated lightly, but that&amp;#39;s why&lt;br/&gt;Matt did the legwork to show that the tradeoffs around OP_CODESEPARATOR&lt;br/&gt;justify removing it.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Huh?! The whole point of non-standardness in this context is to (a) make&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; soft-forking something out safer by derisking miners not upgrading right&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; away and (b) signal something that may be a candidate for soft-forking&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; out so that we get feedback. Who is getting things disabled who isn&amp;#39;t&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; bothering to *tell* people that their use-case is being hurt?!&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; People have told me that they are hurt by some other non-standardness&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; changes and I understand that they have been sitting on those funds for&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; years.  Maybe they don&amp;#39;t realize their is some place to complain or maybe&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; they think there must be a good reason why they are not allowed to do what&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; they were previously allowed to do.  Perhaps others don&amp;#39;t want to risk&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; blowing their pseudonymity.  Perhaps they think that attempting to undo&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; some of these non-standardness changes is futile.  I can bring up the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; specific cases I&amp;#39;ve encountered in a new thread if you think it is&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; worthwhile.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Like Matt, I understand non-standardness to be specifically for making a&lt;br/&gt;transaction type more difficult to set the stage for a future disabling.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;If anyone is actually harmed by this change, let them at least speak up&lt;br/&gt;pseudonymously as others have before.  Backwards compatibility shouldn&amp;#39;t&lt;br/&gt;mean letting imaginary implausible cases veto net-beneficial changes.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;On Sat, Mar 9, 2019 at 5:21 PM Russell O&amp;#39;Connor via bitcoin-dev &amp;lt;&lt;br/&gt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Hi Matt,&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; On Fri, Mar 8, 2019 at 1:35 PM Matt Corallo &amp;lt;lf-lists at mattcorallo.com&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Replies inline.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; On 3/8/19 3:57 PM, Russell O&amp;#39;Connor wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; On Thu, Mar 7, 2019 at 2:50 PM Matt Corallo &amp;lt;lf-lists at mattcorallo.com&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &amp;lt;mailto:lf-lists at mattcorallo.com&amp;gt;&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; It&amp;#39;s very easy to construct a practical script using OP_CODESEPARATOR.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; IF &amp;lt;2&amp;gt; &amp;lt;ALICEPUBKEY&amp;gt; &amp;lt;BOBPUBKEY&amp;gt; &amp;lt;2&amp;gt; CHECKMULTISIGVERIFY ELSE&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; CODESEPARATOR &amp;lt;ALICEPUBKEY&amp;gt; CHECKSIGVERFY ENDIF&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Now when someone hands Alice, the CFO of XYZ corp., some transaction,&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; she has the option of either signing it unilaterally herself, or&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; creating a partial signature such that the transaction additionally&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; needs Bob, the CEOs signature as well, and Alice&amp;#39;s choice is committed&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; to the blockchain for auditing purposes later.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Now, there are many things you might object about this scheme, but my&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; point is that (A) regardless of what you think about this scheme, it,&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; or&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; similar schemes, may have been devised by users, and (B) users may have&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; already committed funds to such schemes, and due to P2SH you cannot&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; know&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; that this is not the case.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; The common way to set that up is to have a separate key, but, ok, fair&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; enough. That said, the argument that &amp;#34;it may be hidden by P2SH!&amp;#34; isn&amp;#39;t&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; sufficient here. It has to *both* be hidden by P2SH and have never been&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; spent from (either on mainnet or testnet) or be lock-timed a year in the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; future. I&amp;#39;m seriously skeptical that someone is using a highly esoteric&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; scheme and has just been pouring money into it without ever having&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; tested it or having withdrawn any money from it whatsoever. This is just&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; a weird argument.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; No one is required to test their Scripts on a public testnet; they can use&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; regtest. Because these transactions are non-standard on mainnet, it could&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; take years to arrange for these funds to be recovered by having their&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; transactions mined directly, or take years to become valuable enough to be&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; worth bothering having them directly mined.  As I have noted elsewhere, you&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; cannot first make transactions non-standard and then use the fact that you&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; don&amp;#39;t see them being used on mainnet to justify a soft-fork.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; My argument isn&amp;#39;t weird; it is principled.  You are skeptical that any&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; uses of OP_CODESEPARATOR have P2SH commitments.  I am also skeptical, and&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; so is everyone reading this mailing list.  But none of us know this with&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; certainty, and it is /wrong/ for any of us to gamble with other people&amp;#39;s&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; money that our assumptions are true.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Instead, it is this soft-fork proposal that is unprecedented. Let me&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; reiterate what I posted in another thread:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Bitcoin has *never* made a soft-fork, since the time of Satoishi, that&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; invalidated transactions that send secured inputs to secured outputs&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; (excluding uses of OP_NOP1-OP_NOP10).&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; The fact that Bitcoin has stuck to this principle gives me and everyone&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; else confidence in the protocol; that anyone can secure their funds by&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; whatever scheme they dream up, and deploy it without needing permission or&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; anyone else to vet their Scripts. So long as they are not impairing the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Bitcoin protocol itself, the most that Bitcoin Core will do is stop&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; relaying their transactions by default.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Undermining this principle means undermining what provides Bitcoin&amp;#39;s value&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; in the first place.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; The problem in this particular case is that there exist valid secure&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; transactions that make use OP_CODESEPARATOR such that these transactions&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; themselves impair the Bitcoin protocol (through excessive validation costs)&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; in a way that, AFAIU, is fundamental to the nature of such transactions (in&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; particular, it isn&amp;#39;t just due to an implementation detail of Bitcoin&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Core).  Thus to fix this vulnerability we must necessarily violate the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; principle of not invalidating, secure transactions.  However, this fact&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; isn&amp;#39;t license to freely invalidate any transactions we want.  We ought to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; strive to minimize the scope of violation of this principle.  Alice and Bob&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; from XYZ. corp should be able to keep their benign transaction illustrated&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; above, and we only eliminate those transactions that actually impair the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Bitcoin protocol.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; This is the perfect opportunity to show the world that Bitcoin Core simply&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; doesn&amp;#39;t take chances when it comes to other people money.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Please don&amp;#39;t strawman my position.  I am not suggesting we don&amp;#39;t fix a&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; vulnerability in Bitcoin.  I am suggesting we find another way.  One&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; that limits the of risk destroying other people&amp;#39;s money.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Here is a more concrete proposal:  No matter how bad OP_CODESEPARATOR&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; is, it cannot be worse than instead including another input that spends&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; another identically sized UTXO.  So how about we soft-fork in a rule&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; that says that an input&amp;#39;s weight is increased by an amount equal to the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; number of OP_CODESEPARATORs executed times the sum of weight of the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; UTXO&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; being spent and 40 bytes, the weight of a stripped input. The risk of&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; destroying other people&amp;#39;s money is limited and AFAIU it would&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; completely&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; address the vulnerabilities caused by OP_CODESEPARATOR.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; You&amp;#39;re already arguing that someone has such an esoteric use of script,&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; suggesting they aren&amp;#39;t *also* creating pre-signed, long-locktimed&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; transactions with many inputs isn&amp;#39;t much of a further stretch&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; (especially since this may result in the fee being non-standardly low if&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; you artificially increase its weight).&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; There is no consensus rule about minimum fees, and CPFP could add the more&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; fees. But yes, I am saying that Alice and Bob could be building on their&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; transaction illustrated above, but not creating a many input tx that&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; wouldn&amp;#39;t fit into a block with my proposed added weight, because if their&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; transaction won&amp;#39;t fit into a block with the added weight then it was a&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; malicious transaction to begin with.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Do you not recognize the material difference between a soft-fork that&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; doubles the cost of a transaction like Alice and Bob&amp;#39;s versus making their&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; transaction entirely illegal?&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Note that &amp;#34;just limit number of OP_CODESEPARATOR calls&amp;#34; results in a ton&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; of complexity and reduces the simple analysis that fees (almost) have&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; today vs just removing it allows us to also remove a ton of code.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Further note that if you don&amp;#39;t remove it getting the efficiency wins&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; right is even harder because instead of being able to cache sighashes&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; you now have to (at a minimum) wipe the cache between each&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; OP_CODESEPARATOR call, which results in a ton of additional&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; implementation complexity.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; How can this be &amp;#34;additional&amp;#34; complexity when this is how the protocol&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; works today?  All you have to do is not change the semantics of&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; OP_CODESEPARATOR.  It is literally no work.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Regarding the efficiency wins, let me repeat myself: The performance costs&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; of wiping the cached sighashs is not worse than what the performance costs&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; would be if the transaction had an additional input spending an equally&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; sized UTXO.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;      &amp;gt; I suggest an alternative whereby the execution of&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; OP_CODESEPARATOR&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;      &amp;gt; increases the transactions weight suitably as to temper the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;      &amp;gt; vulnerability caused by it.  Alternatively there could be some&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;     sort of&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;      &amp;gt; limit (maybe 1) on the maximum number of OP_CODESEPARATORs&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;     allowed to be&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;      &amp;gt; executed per script, but that would require an argument as to why&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;      &amp;gt; exceeding that limit isn&amp;#39;t reasonable.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;     You could equally argue, however, that any such limit could render&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; some&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;     moderately-large transaction unspendable, so I&amp;#39;m somewhat skeptical&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; of&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;     this argument. Note that OP_CODESEPARATOR is non-standard, so&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; getting&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;     them mined is rather difficult in any case.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; I already know of people who&amp;#39;s funds are tied up due to in other&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; changes&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; to Bitcoin Core&amp;#39;s default relay policy.  Non-standardness is not an&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; excuse to take other people&amp;#39;s tied up funds and destroy them&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; permanently.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Huh?! The whole point of non-standardness in this context is to (a) make&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; soft-forking something out safer by derisking miners not upgrading right&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; away and (b) signal something that may be a candidate for soft-forking&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; out so that we get feedback. Who is getting things disabled who isn&amp;#39;t&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; bothering to *tell* people that their use-case is being hurt?!&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; People have told me that they are hurt by some other non-standardness&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; changes and I understand that they have been sitting on those funds for&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; years.  Maybe they don&amp;#39;t realize their is some place to complain or maybe&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; they think there must be a good reason why they are not allowed to do what&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; they were previously allowed to do.  Perhaps others don&amp;#39;t want to risk&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; blowing their pseudonymity.  Perhaps they think that attempting to undo&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; some of these non-standardness changes is futile.  I can bring up the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; specific cases I&amp;#39;ve encountered in a new thread if you think it is&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; worthwhile.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Regarding OP_CODESEAPRATOR specifically, disabling the rely of such&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; transactions partially mitigates the vulnerability.  Once the vulnerability&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; is properly patched, for example by suitably increasing the weight of the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; operation or opcode, we could drop the prohibition on relaying such&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; transactions.  Non-standardness is not necessarily a path to a new&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; consensus rule. We have several non-standardness rules in place that are&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; never intended to become new consensus rules.  Sometimes non-standardness&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; is a temporary mitigation.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; _______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;-------------- next part --------------&lt;br/&gt;An HTML attachment was scrubbed...&lt;br/&gt;URL: &amp;lt;&lt;a href=&#34;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20190309/900b7770/attachment-0001.html&amp;gt&#34;&gt;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20190309/900b7770/attachment-0001.html&amp;gt&lt;/a&gt;;
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    <updated>2023-06-07T18:16:47Z</updated>
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  <entry>
    <id>https://njump.me/nevent1qqsr2nvggp59h7jxufpxqtlrrf5tepuwjksv3pss258tv30h3yreppszyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79ykzj25rx</id>
    
      <title type="html">📅 Original date posted:2017-11-09 📝 Original message:OK, I ...</title>
    
    <link rel="alternate" href="https://njump.me/nevent1qqsr2nvggp59h7jxufpxqtlrrf5tepuwjksv3pss258tv30h3yreppszyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79ykzj25rx" />
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      In reply to &lt;a href=&#39;/nevent1qqsqfwkjc8593j8sacmmj9d0je5wu9v3nq86hhuh9u8nglsn9tw363qhw74y4&#39;&gt;nevent1q…74y4&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;_________________________&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;📅 Original date posted:2017-11-09&lt;br/&gt;📝 Original message:OK, I see.  On the whole this is the best replay protection solution I&amp;#39;ve&lt;br/&gt;seen.  In particular, I hope developers of Bech32 and other new address&lt;br/&gt;formats will take a close look at incorporating a fork ID this way.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;As I understand you, a private key in cold storage would (of course) remain&lt;br/&gt;valid across HFs, but an *address* would be valid only for the nForkId it&lt;br/&gt;was generated for.  There may be cold-storage-type cases where it&amp;#39;s&lt;br/&gt;important for an address to be valid across all chains, ie, to&lt;br/&gt;intentionally allow replay?  But I guess this could just be a special&lt;br/&gt;nForkId value, say -1?&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;On Nov 8, 2017 9:45 AM, &amp;#34;Mats Jerratsch&amp;#34; &amp;lt;mats at blockchain.com&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Hey Jacob!&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Take the specific and common case of non-upgraded wallet software.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Suppose a HF happens, and becomes the network used by 90% of users.  Will&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; old wallets still default to the old nForkId (10% legacy chain)?  If so,&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; I&amp;#39;d expect a lot of accidental mis-sends on that chain.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; With this proposal implemented, a &amp;#39;mis-send&amp;#39; is fundamentally impossible.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; The address contains the identifier of the token that should be sent.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; If anything, it&amp;#39;s possible to &amp;#39;mis-receive&amp;#39;.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; That is, the receiving wallet was not aware of a newer chain, and the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; receiver actually wanted to receive the newer token, but instead his wallet&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; created an address for the old token. It is the responsibility of the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; receiver to write a correct invoice. This is the case everywhere else in&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; the world too, so this seems like a reasonable trade-off.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; I would even argue that this should hold in a legal case, where the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; receiver cannot claim that he was expecting a payment in another token&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; (contrary to how it is today, like when users send BTC to a BCH address,&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; losing their funds with potentially no legal right for reimbursement). If I&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; sent someone an invoice over 100€, I cannot later proclaim that I actually&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; expected $100.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; With this proposal, wallets are finally able to distinguish between&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; different tokens. With this ability, I expect to see different&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; implementations, some wallets which advertise staying conservative,&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; following a strict ruleset, and other wallets being more experimental,&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; following hashing rate or other metrics.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;-------------- next part --------------&lt;br/&gt;An HTML attachment was scrubbed...&lt;br/&gt;URL: &amp;lt;&lt;a href=&#34;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20171109/b20d9108/attachment.html&amp;gt&#34;&gt;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20171109/b20d9108/attachment.html&amp;gt&lt;/a&gt;;
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    <updated>2023-06-07T18:07:35Z</updated>
  </entry>

  <entry>
    <id>https://njump.me/nevent1qqsg2deees8az0q9w2cr8urxgcvk7ee967p9xaqfpg0ayyhjtgn56dczyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79ykelxxdw</id>
    
      <title type="html">📅 Original date posted:2017-11-06 📝 Original message:Thanks ...</title>
    
    <link rel="alternate" href="https://njump.me/nevent1qqsg2deees8az0q9w2cr8urxgcvk7ee967p9xaqfpg0ayyhjtgn56dczyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79ykelxxdw" />
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      In reply to &lt;a href=&#39;/nevent1qqsfayt8srcnvmdc8tng3cand73y6sj47wd8n9fdmz54a45ywwyxphs7m7dek&#39;&gt;nevent1q…7dek&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;_________________________&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;📅 Original date posted:2017-11-06&lt;br/&gt;📝 Original message:Thanks Mats, this proposal makes sense to me (especially the idea of&lt;br/&gt;fork-specific addresses).  It prevents replay across forks, and makes it&lt;br/&gt;easy for client software, and thus potentially users, to specify which fork&lt;br/&gt;a tx is for.  But, like other (rougher) past proposals I&amp;#39;ve seen, it does&lt;br/&gt;little to prevent users from accidentally sending on the wrong fork.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Take the specific and common case of non-upgraded wallet software.  Suppose&lt;br/&gt;a HF happens, and becomes the network used by 90% of users.  Will old&lt;br/&gt;wallets still default to the old nForkId (10% legacy chain)?  If so, I&amp;#39;d&lt;br/&gt;expect a lot of accidental mis-sends on that chain.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;This is just a gap in your proposal, not a flaw, but it&amp;#39;s worth thinking&lt;br/&gt;about less hazard-prone ways wallets could default nForkId.  Perhaps they&lt;br/&gt;could listen to all forks, and default to the one whose last (recent) block&lt;br/&gt;had the highest difficulty?  Or just check those blocks to see if multiple&lt;br/&gt;forks are (nontrivially) active, and if so warn the user and force them to&lt;br/&gt;confirm?  Something like that.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;On Nov 6, 2017 7:05 AM, &amp;#34;Mats Jerratsch via bitcoin-dev&amp;#34; &amp;lt;&lt;br/&gt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Presented is a generalised way of providing replay protection for future&lt;br/&gt;hard forks. On top of replay protection, this schema also allows for&lt;br/&gt;fork-distinct addresses and potentially a way to opt-out of replay&lt;br/&gt;protection of any fork, where deemed necessary (can be beneficial for some&lt;br/&gt;L2 applications).&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;## Rationale&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Currently when a hard fork happens, there is ad-hoc replay protection built&lt;br/&gt;within days with little review at best, or no replay protection at all.&lt;br/&gt;Often this is either resource problem, where not enough time and developers&lt;br/&gt;are available to sufficiently address replay protection, or the idea that&lt;br/&gt;not breaking compatibility is favourable. Furthermore, this is potentially&lt;br/&gt;a recurring problem with no generally accepted solution yet. Services that&lt;br/&gt;want to deal in multiple forks are expected to closely follow all projects.&lt;br/&gt;Since there is no standard, the solutions differ for each project,&lt;br/&gt;requiring custom code for every fork. By integrating replay protection into&lt;br/&gt;the protocol, we advocate the notion of non-hostile forks.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Users are protected against accidentally sending coins on the wrong chain&lt;br/&gt;through the introduction of a fork-specific incompatible address space. The&lt;br/&gt;coin/token type is encoded in the address itself, removing some of the&lt;br/&gt;importance around the question _What is Bitcoin?_. By giving someone an&lt;br/&gt;address, it is explicitly stated _I will only honour a payment of token X_,&lt;br/&gt;enforcing the idea of validating the payment under the rules chosen by the&lt;br/&gt;payee.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;## Iterative Forks&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;In this schema, any hard fork is given an incremented id, `nForkId`.&lt;br/&gt;`nForkId` starts at `1`, with `0` being reserved as a wildcard. When&lt;br/&gt;project X decides to make an incompatible change to the protocol, it will&lt;br/&gt;get assigned a new unique `nForkId` for this fork. A similar approach like&lt;br/&gt;for BIP43 can be taken here. Potentially `nForkId` can be reused if a&lt;br/&gt;project has not gained any amount of traction.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;When preparing the transaction for signing or validation, `nForkId` is&lt;br/&gt;appended to the final template as a 4B integer (similar to [1]). Amending&lt;br/&gt;BIP143, this would result in&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;```&lt;br/&gt;Double SHA256 of the serialization of:&lt;br/&gt;    1. nVersion of the transaction (4-byte little endian)&lt;br/&gt;    2. hashPrevouts (32-byte hash)&lt;br/&gt;    3. hashSequence (32-byte hash)&lt;br/&gt;    4. outpoint (32-byte hash &#43; 4-byte little endian)&lt;br/&gt;    5. scriptCode of the input (serialized as scripts inside CTxOuts)&lt;br/&gt;    6. value of the output spent by this input (8-byte little endian)&lt;br/&gt;    7. nSequence of the input (4-byte little endian)&lt;br/&gt;    8. hashOutputs (32-byte hash)&lt;br/&gt;    9. nLocktime of the transaction (4-byte little endian)&lt;br/&gt;   10. sighash type of the signature (4-byte little endian)&lt;br/&gt;   11. nForkId (4-byte little endian)&lt;br/&gt;```&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;For `nForkId=0` this step is ommitted. This will immediately invalidate&lt;br/&gt;signatures for any other branch of the blockchain than this specific fork.&lt;br/&gt;To distinguish between `nForkId=0` and `nForkId` hardcoded into the&lt;br/&gt;software, another bit has to be set in the 1B SigHashId present at the end&lt;br/&gt;of signatures.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;To make this approach more generic, payment addresses will contain the fork&lt;br/&gt;id, depending on which tokens a payee expects payments in. This would&lt;br/&gt;require a change on bech32 addresses, maybe to use a similar format used in&lt;br/&gt;lightning-rfc [2]. A wallet will parse the address, it will extract&lt;br/&gt;`nForkId`, and it displays which token the user is about to spend. When&lt;br/&gt;signing the transaction, it will use `nForkId`, such that the transaction&lt;br/&gt;is only valid for this specific token. This can be generalised in software&lt;br/&gt;to the point where replay protection *and* a new address space can be&lt;br/&gt;introduced for forks without breaking existing clients.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;For light clients, this can be extended by enforcing the coinbase/block&lt;br/&gt;header to contain the `nForkId` of the block. Then the client can&lt;br/&gt;distinguish between different chains and tokens it received on each.&lt;br/&gt;Alternatively, a new P2P message type for sending transactions could be&lt;br/&gt;introduced, where prevOut and `nForkId` is transmitted, such that the lite&lt;br/&gt;client can check for himself, which token he received.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Allowing signatures with `nForkId=1` can be achieved with a soft fork by&lt;br/&gt;incrementing the script version of SegWit, making this a fully backwards&lt;br/&gt;compatible change.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;[1]&lt;br/&gt;&lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;2017-February/013542.html&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;[2]&lt;br/&gt;&lt;a href=&#34;https://github.com/lightningnetwork/lightning-rfc/blob/master/11-payment-&#34;&gt;https://github.com/lightningnetwork/lightning-rfc/blob/master/11-payment-&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;encoding.md&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;_______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;-------------- next part --------------&lt;br/&gt;An HTML attachment was scrubbed...&lt;br/&gt;URL: &amp;lt;&lt;a href=&#34;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20171106/91e3799f/attachment.html&amp;gt&#34;&gt;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20171106/91e3799f/attachment.html&amp;gt&lt;/a&gt;;
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    <updated>2023-06-07T18:07:34Z</updated>
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  <entry>
    <id>https://njump.me/nevent1qqsw5z30cve5cf23ydj9ahup2km4ze6wnanl4e3hwq55skpe6yh2xhgzyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79yk2se4xq</id>
    
      <title type="html">📅 Original date posted:2017-11-04 📝 Original ...</title>
    
    <link rel="alternate" href="https://njump.me/nevent1qqsw5z30cve5cf23ydj9ahup2km4ze6wnanl4e3hwq55skpe6yh2xhgzyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79yk2se4xq" />
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      In reply to &lt;a href=&#39;/nevent1qqsp4r6jqedvn4ulve8x3h3khpj4uswf9nrk2gwwen499a09czg94mgwths9s&#39;&gt;nevent1q…hs9s&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;_________________________&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;📅 Original date posted:2017-11-04&lt;br/&gt;📝 Original message:I&amp;#39;m no BCH fan, but I agree with Scott that changes to the DAA may be of&lt;br/&gt;more than purely theoretical interest for BTC.  Anyway just for those&lt;br/&gt;interested, below is an algo I&amp;#39;ve been playing with that adjusts difficulty&lt;br/&gt;every block, based only on the previous block&amp;#39;s time and difficulty.  I&lt;br/&gt;tested it a bit and it seems to adapt to hashrate swings pretty well.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;weight_n = 1 - e^-(blocktime_n / 1 hr)    # 1 hr = exp moving avg window -&lt;br/&gt;too short?&lt;br/&gt;adj_n = (10 min / blocktime_n) - 1&lt;br/&gt;difficulty_(n&#43;1) = difficulty_n * (1 &#43; weight_n * adj_n)&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;It could also be tweaked to make the *historical* avg block time ~exactly&lt;br/&gt;10 minutes, ie, to target &amp;gt; 10 min if past blocks were &amp;lt; 10 min.  This&lt;br/&gt;would, eg, make mapping future block numbers to calendar times much more&lt;br/&gt;exact.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;On Nov 3, 2017 7:24 AM, &amp;#34;Scott Roberts via bitcoin-dev&amp;#34; &amp;lt;&lt;br/&gt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; The current DA is only sufficient if the coin has the highest&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; hashpower. It&amp;#39;s also just really slow.  If miners somehow stick with&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; SegWit2x despite the higher rewards in defecting back to bitcoin, then&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin will have long block delays. High transaction fees will&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; probably help them defect back to us. But if SegWit2x manages to be&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; more comparable in price than BCH (despite the futures), hashpower&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; could very well oscillate back and forth between the two coins,&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; causing delays in both of them. The first one to hard fork to fix the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; difficulty problem will have a large advantage, as evidenced by what&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; happens in alts.   In any event someday BTC may not be the biggest kid&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; on the block and will need a difficulty algorithm that alts would find&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; acceptable. Few alts use anything like BTC&amp;#39;s because they are not able&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; to survive the resulting long delays.   I am recommending BTC&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; developers watch what happens as BCH goes live with a much better&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; algorithm, in case BTC needs to hard fork for the same reason and&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; needs a similar fix. Ignore the trolls.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; On Thu, Nov 2, 2017 at 7:39 PM, CryptAxe &amp;lt;cryptaxe at gmail.com&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Is there an issue with the current difficulty adjustment algorithm? It&amp;#39;s&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; worked very well as far as I can tell. Introducing a new one seems pretty&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; risky, what would the benefit be?&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; On Nov 2, 2017 4:34 PM, &amp;#34;Scott Roberts via bitcoin-dev&amp;#34;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &amp;lt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; Bitcoin cash will hard fork on Nov 13 to implement a new difficulty&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; algorithm.  Bitcoin itself might need to hard fork to employ a similar&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; algorithm. It&amp;#39;s about as good as they come because it followed the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;#34;simplest is best&amp;#34; route. Their averaging window is probably&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; significantly too long (N=144). It&amp;#39;s:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; next_D = sum (past 144 D&amp;#39;s) * T / sum(past 144 solvetimes)&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; They correctly did not use max(timestamp) - min(timestamp) in the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; denominator like others do.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; They&amp;#39;ve written the code and they&amp;#39;re about to use it live, so Bitcoin&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; will have a clear, simple, and tested path if it suddenly needs to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; hard fork due to having 20x delays for the next 2000 blocks (taking it&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; a year to get unstuck).&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; Details on it and the decision process:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://www.bitcoinabc.org/november&#34;&gt;https://www.bitcoinabc.org/november&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; It uses a nice median of 3 for the beginning and end of the window to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; help alleviate bad timestamp problems. It&amp;#39;s nice, helps a little, but&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; will also slow its response by 1 block.  They also have 2x and 1/2&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; limits on the adjustment per block, which is a lot more than they will&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; ever need.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; I recommend bitcoin consider using it and making it N=50 instead of 144.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; I have seen that any attempts to modify the above with things like a&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; low pass filter, starting the window at MTP, or preventing negative&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; timestamps will only reduce its effectiveness. Bitcoin&amp;#39;s &#43;12 and -6&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; limits on the timestamps are sufficient and well chosen, although&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; something a bit smaller than the &#43;12 might have been better.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; One of the contenders to the above is new and actually better, devised&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; by Degnr8 and they call it D622 or wt-144.It&amp;#39;s a little better than&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; they realize. It&amp;#39;s the only real improvement in difficulty algorithms&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; since the rolling average.  It gives a linearly higher weight to the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; more recent timestamps. Otherwise it is the same. Others have probably&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; come across it, but there is too much noise in difficulty algorithms&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; to find the good ones.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; # Degnr8&amp;#39;s D622 difficulty algorithm&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; # T=TargetTime, S=Solvetime&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; # modified by zawy&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; for i = 1 to N  (from oldest to most recent block)&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;     t &#43;= T[i] / D[i] * i&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;     j &#43;= i&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; next i&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; next_D = j / t * T&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; I believe any modification to the above strict mathematical weighted&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; average will reduce it&amp;#39;s effectiveness. It does not oscillate anymore&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; than regular algos and rises faster and drops faster, when needed.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; _______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; _______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;-------------- next part --------------&lt;br/&gt;An HTML attachment was scrubbed...&lt;br/&gt;URL: &amp;lt;&lt;a href=&#34;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20171103/2e7123e2/attachment.html&amp;gt&#34;&gt;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20171103/2e7123e2/attachment.html&amp;gt&lt;/a&gt;;
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    <updated>2023-06-07T18:07:32Z</updated>
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  <entry>
    <id>https://njump.me/nevent1qqs88na5rjwa38xeqj82ry0cldughcmj00slmwg7uq4t3yullx0350czyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79yk5rt7l6</id>
    
      <title type="html">📅 Original date posted:2017-07-12 📝 Original message:Just a ...</title>
    
    <link rel="alternate" href="https://njump.me/nevent1qqs88na5rjwa38xeqj82ry0cldughcmj00slmwg7uq4t3yullx0350czyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79yk5rt7l6" />
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      In reply to &lt;a href=&#39;/nevent1qqs88h6ktw89qsund4f5lsnfjplspquluyw57awftppcsthm92yhh2capgq4e&#39;&gt;nevent1q…gq4e&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;_________________________&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;📅 Original date posted:2017-07-12&lt;br/&gt;📝 Original message:Just a quick note in favor of an updated roadmap (some may object to that&lt;br/&gt;label, but I think it&amp;#39;s fine).  When you and your friends are planning your&lt;br/&gt;weekly movie outing, it&amp;#39;s very helpful to have someone who knows the group,&lt;br/&gt;knows what films are playing, checks people&amp;#39;s preferences, mails around&lt;br/&gt;proposals, updates with corrections, keeps a list of choices for future&lt;br/&gt;weeks, etc.  (Certainly not the same as imposing an agenda, except when the&lt;br/&gt;coordinator gets pushy.)&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Core veterans like those on this thread are well placed to compile (not&lt;br/&gt;decree) such a document - basically an informed view of what looks likely&lt;br/&gt;to get rough consensus, and in what order.  *Of course* some will dispute&lt;br/&gt;the priorities etc, but it&amp;#39;s my experience that if everyone virtuously&lt;br/&gt;refrains from this kind of coordination effort, often the weekend rolls by&lt;br/&gt;without a film.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Agreed that specific deadlines often create more problems than they solve,&lt;br/&gt;but even without dates, clarifying priorities (eg, segwit before HF) is&lt;br/&gt;still useful.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;All this is aside from the fact that I have many criticisms of the &amp;#34;movies&lt;br/&gt;chosen&amp;#34; so far and the criteria used to choose them - another thread&lt;br/&gt;(basically, I support an interpretation of &amp;#34;consensus&amp;#34; that takes more note&lt;br/&gt;of non-dev constituents).  The consensus-marshaling effort is still&lt;br/&gt;important, and appreciated.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;On Tue, Jul 11, 2017 at 8:21 PM, Paul Sztorc via bitcoin-dev &amp;lt;&lt;br/&gt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; And please try to avoid going off-topic -- this is supposed to be about&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; the idea of a new roadmap.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Paul&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; _______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;-------------- next part --------------&lt;br/&gt;An HTML attachment was scrubbed...&lt;br/&gt;URL: &amp;lt;&lt;a href=&#34;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20170712/516ee858/attachment.html&amp;gt&#34;&gt;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20170712/516ee858/attachment.html&amp;gt&lt;/a&gt;;
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    <updated>2023-06-07T18:04:24Z</updated>
  </entry>

  <entry>
    <id>https://njump.me/nevent1qqsx2xnzje5xvpmnrzmdcnkczy7hxgh0j35f682hk32pgtejcczpjwczyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79yk80xd7d</id>
    
      <title type="html">📅 Original date posted:2017-06-21 📝 Original message:Well, ...</title>
    
    <link rel="alternate" href="https://njump.me/nevent1qqsx2xnzje5xvpmnrzmdcnkczy7hxgh0j35f682hk32pgtejcczpjwczyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79yk80xd7d" />
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      In reply to &lt;a href=&#39;/nevent1qqsypqrc8fa9wx73wkgz7kycvcduef590gf574jnda3vwgtt9ywykjg6z2ljm&#39;&gt;nevent1q…2ljm&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;_________________________&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;📅 Original date posted:2017-06-21&lt;br/&gt;📝 Original message:Well, this Saturday&amp;#39;s &amp;#34;Chinese roundtable&amp;#34; statement from a bunch of&lt;br/&gt;miners (&lt;a href=&#34;https://pastebin.com/b3St9VCF&#34;&gt;https://pastebin.com/b3St9VCF&lt;/a&gt;) says they intend &amp;#34;NYA&amp;#34; in the&lt;br/&gt;coinbase as support for &amp;#34;the New York consensus SegWit2x program btc1 (&lt;br/&gt;&lt;a href=&#34;https://github.com/btc1&#34;&gt;https://github.com/btc1&lt;/a&gt;)&amp;#34;, whose code includes the (accelerated 336-block)&lt;br/&gt;BIP 91 change.  So, other facts or interpretations could come to light, but&lt;br/&gt;until they do we should probably assume that&amp;#39;s what the &amp;#34;NYA&amp;#34; (which just&lt;br/&gt;broke 80% over the last 24h) means.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;On Tue, Jun 20, 2017 at 10:11 PM, Mark Friedenbach &amp;lt;mark at friedenbach.org&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; 80% have set &amp;#34;NYA&amp;#34; in their coinbase string. We have no idea what that&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; means. People are equating it to BIP 91 -- but BIP 91 did not exist at&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; the time of the New York agreement, and differs from the actual text&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; of the NYA in substantive ways. The &amp;#34;Segwit2MB&amp;#34; that existed at the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; time of the NYA, and which was explicitly referenced by the text is&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; the proposal by Sergio Demian Lerner that was made to this mailing&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; list on 31 March. The text of the NYA grants no authority for&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; upgrading this proposal while remaining compliant with the agreement.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; This is without even considering the fact that in the days after the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; NYA there was disagreement among those who signed it as to what it&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; meant.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; I feel it is a very dangerous and unwarranted assumption people are&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; making that what we are seeing now is either 80% support for BIP-91 or&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; for the code in the btc1 repo.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; On Tue, Jun 20, 2017 at 6:36 PM, Erik Aronesty &amp;lt;erik at q32.com&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; # Jacob Eliosoff:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;  will start orphaning non-bit-1 blocks before Aug 1, and we avoid a&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; split.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Correct.  There are 2 short activation periods in BIP91 either of which&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; would avoid a split.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; # Gregory Maxwell:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; unclear to me _exactly_ what it would need to implement to be&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; consistent.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; This is the relevant pull req to core:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/10444&#34;&gt;https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/10444&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Seems OK.  It&amp;#39;s technically running now on testnet5.   I think it (or a&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; -bip148 option) should be merged as soon as feasible.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; previously debunked &amp;#34;XT&amp;#34; and &amp;#34;Classic&amp;#34; hysteria.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; apples vs oranges, imo.   segwit is not a contentious feature.   the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &amp;#34;bundling&amp;#34; in segwit2x is, but that&amp;#39;s not the issue here.   the issue is&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; we&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; are indirectly requiring miners that strongly support segwit to install&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; consensus protocol changes outside of bitcoin&amp;#39;s standard reference.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;  80% of&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; them have signaled they will do so.   these are uncharted waters.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; On Tue, Jun 20, 2017 at 6:57 PM, Jacob Eliosoff via bitcoin-dev&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &amp;lt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; I could be wrong, but the latest BIP91 implementation (also included in&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; Segwit2x) cuts the activation period to 336 blocks (2.33 days).  (This&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; has&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; been updated at&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0091.mediawiki&#34;&gt;https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0091.mediawiki&lt;/a&gt;.)  So&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; if 80%&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; of hashpower is actually running that code and signaling on bit 4 by&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; July 25&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; or so, then those 80&#43;% will start orphaning non-bit-1 blocks before Aug&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; 1,&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; and we avoid a split.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; There may still be a few non-bit-1 blocks that get orphaned after Aug 1,&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; because they&amp;#39;re mined by old BIP141 nodes.  But it seems like very few&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; miners won&amp;#39;t be signaling either Segwit2x *or* BIP141 by then...&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; Make sense?&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; On Tue, Jun 20, 2017 at 6:48 PM, Mark Friedenbach &amp;lt;mark at friedenbach.org&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Why do you say activation by August 1st is likely? That would require&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; an&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; entire difficulty adjustment period with &amp;gt;=95% bit1 signaling. That&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; seems a&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; tall order to organize in the scant few weeks remaining.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; On Jun 20, 2017, at 3:29 PM, Jacob Eliosoff via bitcoin-dev&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;lt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; If segwit is activated before Aug 1, as now seems likely, there will be&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; no split that day.  But if activation is via Segwit2x (also likely),&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; and at&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; least some nodes do &amp;amp; some don&amp;#39;t follow through with the HF 3mo later&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; (again, likely), agreed w/ Greg that *then* we&amp;#39;ll see a split -&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; probably in&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Sep/Oct.  How those two chains will match up and how the split will&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; play out&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; is anyone&amp;#39;s guess...&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; On Jun 20, 2017 6:16 PM, &amp;#34;Hampus Sjöberg via bitcoin-dev&amp;#34;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;lt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Ironically, it looks like most of the segwit2x signaling miners are&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; faking it (because they&amp;#39;re not signaling segwit which it requires).&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; It&amp;#39;ll be unfortunate if some aren&amp;#39;t faking it and start orphaning&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; their own blocks because they are failing to signal segwit.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Well, they&amp;#39;re doing some kind of &amp;#34;pre-signaling&amp;#34; in the coinbase at the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; moment, because the segwit2x project is still in alpha-phase according&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; the timeline. They&amp;#39;re just showing commitment.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; I&amp;#39;m sure they will begin signaling on version bit 4/BIP91 as well as&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; actually running a segwit2x node when the time comes.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; As far as prevent a chain split goes, all those things&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; (148/91/segwit2x(per today)) effectively guarantee a chainsplit-- so&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; I&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; don&amp;#39;t think that holds.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Segwit2x/BIP91/BIP148 will orphan miners that do not run a Segwit2x (or&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; BIP148) node, because they wouldn&amp;#39;t have the new consensus rule of&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; requiring&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; all blocks to signal for segwit.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; I don&amp;#39;t believe there would be any long lasting chainsplit though&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; (because of the ~80% hashrate support on segwit2x), perhaps 2-3 blocks&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; if we&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; get unlucky.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Hampus&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; 2017-06-20 23:49 GMT&#43;02:00 Gregory Maxwell via bitcoin-dev&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;lt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt;:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; On Tue, Jun 20, 2017 at 3:44 PM, Erik Aronesty via bitcoin-dev&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;lt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Because a large percentage of miners are indifferent, right now&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; miners&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; have&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; to choose between BIP148 and Segwit2x if they want to activate&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Segwit.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Miners can simply continuing signaling segwit, which will leave them&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; at least soft-fork compatible with BIP148 and BIP91 (and god knows&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; what &amp;#34;segwit2x&amp;#34; is since they keep changing the actual definition and&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; do not have a specification; but last I saw the near-term behavior the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; same as BIP91 but with a radically reduced activation window, so the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; story would be the same there in the near term).&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Ironically, it looks like most of the segwit2x signaling miners are&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; faking it (because they&amp;#39;re not signaling segwit which it requires).&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; It&amp;#39;ll be unfortunate if some aren&amp;#39;t faking it and start orphaning&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; their own blocks because they are failing to signal segwit.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; I don&amp;#39;t think the rejection of segwit2x from Bitcoin&amp;#39;s developers&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; could be any more resolute than what we&amp;#39;ve already seen:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Segwit_support&#34;&gt;https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Segwit_support&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; On Tue, Jun 20, 2017 at 5:22 PM, Mark Friedenbach via bitcoin-dev&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;lt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; I think it is very naïve to assume that any shift would be&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; temporary.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; We have a hard enough time getting miners to proactively upgrade to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; recent versions of the reference bitcoin daemon. If miners interpret&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; the situation as being forced to run non-reference software in order&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; to prevent a chain split because a lack of support from Bitcoin&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Core,&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; that could be a one-way street.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; I think this is somewhat naive and sounds a lot like the repeat of the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; previously debunked &amp;#34;XT&amp;#34; and &amp;#34;Classic&amp;#34; hysteria.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; There is a reason that segwit2x is pretty much unanimously rejected by&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; the technical community.  And just like with XT/Classic/Unlimited&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; you&amp;#39;ll continue to see a strong correlation with people who are&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; unwilling and unable to keep updating the software at an acceptable&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; level of quality-- esp. because the very founding on their fork is&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; predicated on discarding those properties.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; If miners want to go off and create an altcoin-- welp, thats something&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; they can always do,  and nothing about that will force anyone to go&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; along with it.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; As far as prevent a chain split goes, all those things&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; (148/91/segwit2x(per today)) effectively guarantee a chainsplit-- so I&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; don&amp;#39;t think that holds.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; _______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; _______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; _______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; _______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;-------------- next part --------------&lt;br/&gt;An HTML attachment was scrubbed...&lt;br/&gt;URL: &amp;lt;&lt;a href=&#34;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20170621/9b66620b/attachment-0001.html&amp;gt&#34;&gt;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20170621/9b66620b/attachment-0001.html&amp;gt&lt;/a&gt;;
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    <updated>2023-06-07T18:03:30Z</updated>
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  <entry>
    <id>https://njump.me/nevent1qqs9frdryn2plnwvrzkr6amx3lv2z3764e5matx8t84yq5ul5ygqw2gzyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79ykayrykx</id>
    
      <title type="html">📅 Original date posted:2017-06-20 📝 Original message:I ...</title>
    
    <link rel="alternate" href="https://njump.me/nevent1qqs9frdryn2plnwvrzkr6amx3lv2z3764e5matx8t84yq5ul5ygqw2gzyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79ykayrykx" />
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      In reply to &lt;a href=&#39;/nevent1qqsws4cv4auwg9kfy8920cgrenqta893s8md7acm2r5xwlrq30h2vwgm0d4wn&#39;&gt;nevent1q…d4wn&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;_________________________&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;📅 Original date posted:2017-06-20&lt;br/&gt;📝 Original message:I could be wrong, but the latest BIP91 implementation (also included in&lt;br/&gt;Segwit2x) cuts the activation period to 336 blocks (2.33 days).  (This has&lt;br/&gt;been updated at&lt;br/&gt;&lt;a href=&#34;https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0091.mediawiki&#34;&gt;https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0091.mediawiki&lt;/a&gt;.)  So if 80%&lt;br/&gt;of hashpower is actually running that code and signaling on bit 4 by July&lt;br/&gt;25 or so, then those 80&#43;% will start orphaning non-bit-1 blocks before Aug&lt;br/&gt;1, and we avoid a split.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;There may still be a few non-bit-1 blocks that get orphaned after Aug 1,&lt;br/&gt;because they&amp;#39;re mined by old BIP141 nodes.  But it seems like very few&lt;br/&gt;miners won&amp;#39;t be signaling either Segwit2x *or* BIP141 by then...&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Make sense?&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;On Tue, Jun 20, 2017 at 6:48 PM, Mark Friedenbach &amp;lt;mark at friedenbach.org&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Why do you say activation by August 1st is likely? That would require an&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; entire difficulty adjustment period with &amp;gt;=95% bit1 signaling. That seems a&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; tall order to organize in the scant few weeks remaining.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; On Jun 20, 2017, at 3:29 PM, Jacob Eliosoff via bitcoin-dev &amp;lt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; If segwit is activated before Aug 1, as now seems likely, there will be no&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; split that day.  But if activation is via Segwit2x (also likely), and at&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; least some nodes do &amp;amp; some don&amp;#39;t follow through with the HF 3mo later&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; (again, likely), agreed w/ Greg that *then* we&amp;#39;ll see a split - probably in&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Sep/Oct.  How those two chains will match up and how the split will play&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; out is anyone&amp;#39;s guess...&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; On Jun 20, 2017 6:16 PM, &amp;#34;Hampus Sjöberg via bitcoin-dev&amp;#34; &amp;lt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Ironically, it looks like most of the segwit2x signaling miners are&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; faking it (because they&amp;#39;re not signaling segwit which it requires).&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; It&amp;#39;ll be unfortunate if some aren&amp;#39;t faking it and start orphaning&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; their own blocks because they are failing to signal segwit.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Well, they&amp;#39;re doing some kind of &amp;#34;pre-signaling&amp;#34; in the coinbase at the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; moment, because the segwit2x project is still in alpha-phase according to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; the timeline. They&amp;#39;re just showing commitment.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; I&amp;#39;m sure they will begin signaling on version bit 4/BIP91 as well as&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; actually running a segwit2x node when the time comes.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; As far as prevent a chain split goes, all those things&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; (148/91/segwit2x(per today)) effectively guarantee a chainsplit-- so I&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; don&amp;#39;t think that holds.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Segwit2x/BIP91/BIP148 will orphan miners that do not run a Segwit2x (or&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; BIP148) node, because they wouldn&amp;#39;t have the new consensus rule of&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; requiring all blocks to signal for segwit.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; I don&amp;#39;t believe there would be any long lasting chainsplit though (because&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; of the ~80% hashrate support on segwit2x), perhaps 2-3 blocks if we get&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; unlucky.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Hampus&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; 2017-06-20 23:49 GMT&#43;02:00 Gregory Maxwell via bitcoin-dev &amp;lt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt;:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; On Tue, Jun 20, 2017 at 3:44 PM, Erik Aronesty via bitcoin-dev&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;lt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Because a large percentage of miners are indifferent, right now miners&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; have&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; to choose between BIP148 and Segwit2x if they want to activate Segwit.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Miners can simply continuing signaling segwit, which will leave them&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; at least soft-fork compatible with BIP148 and BIP91 (and god knows&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; what &amp;#34;segwit2x&amp;#34; is since they keep changing the actual definition and&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; do not have a specification; but last I saw the near-term behavior the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; same as BIP91 but with a radically reduced activation window, so the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; story would be the same there in the near term).&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Ironically, it looks like most of the segwit2x signaling miners are&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; faking it (because they&amp;#39;re not signaling segwit which it requires).&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; It&amp;#39;ll be unfortunate if some aren&amp;#39;t faking it and start orphaning&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; their own blocks because they are failing to signal segwit.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; I don&amp;#39;t think the rejection of segwit2x from Bitcoin&amp;#39;s developers&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; could be any more resolute than what we&amp;#39;ve already seen:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Segwit_support&#34;&gt;https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Segwit_support&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; On Tue, Jun 20, 2017 at 5:22 PM, Mark Friedenbach via bitcoin-dev&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;lt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; I think it is very naïve to assume that any shift would be temporary.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; We have a hard enough time getting miners to proactively upgrade to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; recent versions of the reference bitcoin daemon. If miners interpret&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; the situation as being forced to run non-reference software in order&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; to prevent a chain split because a lack of support from Bitcoin Core,&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; that could be a one-way street.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; I think this is somewhat naive and sounds a lot like the repeat of the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; previously debunked &amp;#34;XT&amp;#34; and &amp;#34;Classic&amp;#34; hysteria.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; There is a reason that segwit2x is pretty much unanimously rejected by&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; the technical community.  And just like with XT/Classic/Unlimited&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; you&amp;#39;ll continue to see a strong correlation with people who are&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; unwilling and unable to keep updating the software at an acceptable&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; level of quality-- esp. because the very founding on their fork is&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; predicated on discarding those properties.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; If miners want to go off and create an altcoin-- welp, thats something&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; they can always do,  and nothing about that will force anyone to go&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; along with it.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; As far as prevent a chain split goes, all those things&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; (148/91/segwit2x(per today)) effectively guarantee a chainsplit-- so I&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; don&amp;#39;t think that holds.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; _______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; _______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; _______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;-------------- next part --------------&lt;br/&gt;An HTML attachment was scrubbed...&lt;br/&gt;URL: &amp;lt;&lt;a href=&#34;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20170620/a7a99037/attachment-0001.html&amp;gt&#34;&gt;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20170620/a7a99037/attachment-0001.html&amp;gt&lt;/a&gt;;
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    <updated>2023-06-07T18:03:28Z</updated>
  </entry>

  <entry>
    <id>https://njump.me/nevent1qqsp73jh3n2mpjyw4nlmm3z3ayzpst86859w02uvy8y7dex79npzk4szyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79yka3y8m5</id>
    
      <title type="html">📅 Original date posted:2017-06-20 📝 Original message:(That ...</title>
    
    <link rel="alternate" href="https://njump.me/nevent1qqsp73jh3n2mpjyw4nlmm3z3ayzpst86859w02uvy8y7dex79npzk4szyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79yka3y8m5" />
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      In reply to &lt;a href=&#39;/nevent1qqs9frdryn2plnwvrzkr6amx3lv2z3764e5matx8t84yq5ul5ygqw2gjcwumg&#39;&gt;nevent1q…wumg&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;_________________________&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;📅 Original date posted:2017-06-20&lt;br/&gt;📝 Original message:(That is: &amp;#34;...because they&amp;#39;re mined by old non-Segwit2x nodes that *aren&amp;#39;t&lt;br/&gt;signaling bit 1 support*&amp;#34;, ie, that support neither Segwit2x nor old segwit)&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;On Tue, Jun 20, 2017 at 6:57 PM, Jacob Eliosoff &amp;lt;jacob.eliosoff at gmail.com&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; I could be wrong, but the latest BIP91 implementation (also included in&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Segwit2x) cuts the activation period to 336 blocks (2.33 days).  (This has&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; been updated at &lt;a href=&#34;https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0091&#34;&gt;https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0091&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; mediawiki.)  So if 80% of hashpower is actually running that code and&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; signaling on bit 4 by July 25 or so, then those 80&#43;% will start orphaning&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; non-bit-1 blocks before Aug 1, and we avoid a split.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; There may still be a few non-bit-1 blocks that get orphaned after Aug 1,&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; because they&amp;#39;re mined by old BIP141 nodes.  But it seems like very few&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; miners won&amp;#39;t be signaling either Segwit2x *or* BIP141 by then...&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Make sense?&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; On Tue, Jun 20, 2017 at 6:48 PM, Mark Friedenbach &amp;lt;mark at friedenbach.org&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Why do you say activation by August 1st is likely? That would require an&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; entire difficulty adjustment period with &amp;gt;=95% bit1 signaling. That seems a&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; tall order to organize in the scant few weeks remaining.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; On Jun 20, 2017, at 3:29 PM, Jacob Eliosoff via bitcoin-dev &amp;lt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; If segwit is activated before Aug 1, as now seems likely, there will be&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; no split that day.  But if activation is via Segwit2x (also likely), and at&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; least some nodes do &amp;amp; some don&amp;#39;t follow through with the HF 3mo later&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; (again, likely), agreed w/ Greg that *then* we&amp;#39;ll see a split - probably in&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Sep/Oct.  How those two chains will match up and how the split will play&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; out is anyone&amp;#39;s guess...&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; On Jun 20, 2017 6:16 PM, &amp;#34;Hampus Sjöberg via bitcoin-dev&amp;#34; &amp;lt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Ironically, it looks like most of the segwit2x signaling miners are&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; faking it (because they&amp;#39;re not signaling segwit which it requires).&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; It&amp;#39;ll be unfortunate if some aren&amp;#39;t faking it and start orphaning&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; their own blocks because they are failing to signal segwit.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Well, they&amp;#39;re doing some kind of &amp;#34;pre-signaling&amp;#34; in the coinbase at the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; moment, because the segwit2x project is still in alpha-phase according to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; the timeline. They&amp;#39;re just showing commitment.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; I&amp;#39;m sure they will begin signaling on version bit 4/BIP91 as well as&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; actually running a segwit2x node when the time comes.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; As far as prevent a chain split goes, all those things&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; (148/91/segwit2x(per today)) effectively guarantee a chainsplit-- so I&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; don&amp;#39;t think that holds.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Segwit2x/BIP91/BIP148 will orphan miners that do not run a Segwit2x (or&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; BIP148) node, because they wouldn&amp;#39;t have the new consensus rule of&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; requiring all blocks to signal for segwit.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; I don&amp;#39;t believe there would be any long lasting chainsplit though&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; (because of the ~80% hashrate support on segwit2x), perhaps 2-3 blocks if&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; we get unlucky.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Hampus&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; 2017-06-20 23:49 GMT&#43;02:00 Gregory Maxwell via bitcoin-dev &amp;lt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt;:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; On Tue, Jun 20, 2017 at 3:44 PM, Erik Aronesty via bitcoin-dev&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;lt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Because a large percentage of miners are indifferent, right now miners&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; have&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; to choose between BIP148 and Segwit2x if they want to activate Segwit.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Miners can simply continuing signaling segwit, which will leave them&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; at least soft-fork compatible with BIP148 and BIP91 (and god knows&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; what &amp;#34;segwit2x&amp;#34; is since they keep changing the actual definition and&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; do not have a specification; but last I saw the near-term behavior the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; same as BIP91 but with a radically reduced activation window, so the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; story would be the same there in the near term).&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Ironically, it looks like most of the segwit2x signaling miners are&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; faking it (because they&amp;#39;re not signaling segwit which it requires).&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; It&amp;#39;ll be unfortunate if some aren&amp;#39;t faking it and start orphaning&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; their own blocks because they are failing to signal segwit.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; I don&amp;#39;t think the rejection of segwit2x from Bitcoin&amp;#39;s developers&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; could be any more resolute than what we&amp;#39;ve already seen:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Segwit_support&#34;&gt;https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Segwit_support&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; On Tue, Jun 20, 2017 at 5:22 PM, Mark Friedenbach via bitcoin-dev&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;lt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; I think it is very naïve to assume that any shift would be temporary.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; We have a hard enough time getting miners to proactively upgrade to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; recent versions of the reference bitcoin daemon. If miners interpret&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; the situation as being forced to run non-reference software in order&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; to prevent a chain split because a lack of support from Bitcoin Core,&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; that could be a one-way street.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; I think this is somewhat naive and sounds a lot like the repeat of the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; previously debunked &amp;#34;XT&amp;#34; and &amp;#34;Classic&amp;#34; hysteria.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; There is a reason that segwit2x is pretty much unanimously rejected by&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; the technical community.  And just like with XT/Classic/Unlimited&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; you&amp;#39;ll continue to see a strong correlation with people who are&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; unwilling and unable to keep updating the software at an acceptable&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; level of quality-- esp. because the very founding on their fork is&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; predicated on discarding those properties.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; If miners want to go off and create an altcoin-- welp, thats something&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; they can always do,  and nothing about that will force anyone to go&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; along with it.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; As far as prevent a chain split goes, all those things&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; (148/91/segwit2x(per today)) effectively guarantee a chainsplit-- so I&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; don&amp;#39;t think that holds.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; _______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; _______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; _______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;-------------- next part --------------&lt;br/&gt;An HTML attachment was scrubbed...&lt;br/&gt;URL: &amp;lt;&lt;a href=&#34;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20170620/ee28dc3b/attachment.html&amp;gt&#34;&gt;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20170620/ee28dc3b/attachment.html&amp;gt&lt;/a&gt;;
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    <updated>2023-06-07T18:03:28Z</updated>
  </entry>

  <entry>
    <id>https://njump.me/nevent1qqsy3mp6yq269kw3v9xskxgtp0plwvh42yt433f84ykwlkct8mgu2gczyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79ykeafgql</id>
    
      <title type="html">📅 Original date posted:2017-06-20 📝 Original message:If ...</title>
    
    <link rel="alternate" href="https://njump.me/nevent1qqsy3mp6yq269kw3v9xskxgtp0plwvh42yt433f84ykwlkct8mgu2gczyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79ykeafgql" />
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      In reply to &lt;a href=&#39;/nevent1qqsxrtcdmzannwfgcrg5le8vx8vuawjepnxxf7mc6jqw6mftn0xag3ga0ksu2&#39;&gt;nevent1q…ksu2&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;_________________________&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;📅 Original date posted:2017-06-20&lt;br/&gt;📝 Original message:If segwit is activated before Aug 1, as now seems likely, there will be no&lt;br/&gt;split that day.  But if activation is via Segwit2x (also likely), and at&lt;br/&gt;least some nodes do &amp;amp; some don&amp;#39;t follow through with the HF 3mo later&lt;br/&gt;(again, likely), agreed w/ Greg that *then* we&amp;#39;ll see a split - probably in&lt;br/&gt;Sep/Oct.  How those two chains will match up and how the split will play&lt;br/&gt;out is anyone&amp;#39;s guess...&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;On Jun 20, 2017 6:16 PM, &amp;#34;Hampus Sjöberg via bitcoin-dev&amp;#34; &amp;lt;&lt;br/&gt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Ironically, it looks like most of the segwit2x signaling miners are&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; faking it (because they&amp;#39;re not signaling segwit which it requires).&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; It&amp;#39;ll be unfortunate if some aren&amp;#39;t faking it and start orphaning&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; their own blocks because they are failing to signal segwit.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Well, they&amp;#39;re doing some kind of &amp;#34;pre-signaling&amp;#34; in the coinbase at the&lt;br/&gt;moment, because the segwit2x project is still in alpha-phase according to&lt;br/&gt;the timeline. They&amp;#39;re just showing commitment.&lt;br/&gt;I&amp;#39;m sure they will begin signaling on version bit 4/BIP91 as well as&lt;br/&gt;actually running a segwit2x node when the time comes.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; As far as prevent a chain split goes, all those things&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; (148/91/segwit2x(per today)) effectively guarantee a chainsplit-- so I&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; don&amp;#39;t think that holds.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Segwit2x/BIP91/BIP148 will orphan miners that do not run a Segwit2x (or&lt;br/&gt;BIP148) node, because they wouldn&amp;#39;t have the new consensus rule of&lt;br/&gt;requiring all blocks to signal for segwit.&lt;br/&gt;I don&amp;#39;t believe there would be any long lasting chainsplit though (because&lt;br/&gt;of the ~80% hashrate support on segwit2x), perhaps 2-3 blocks if we get&lt;br/&gt;unlucky.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Hampus&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;2017-06-20 23:49 GMT&#43;02:00 Gregory Maxwell via bitcoin-dev &amp;lt;&lt;br/&gt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt;:&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; On Tue, Jun 20, 2017 at 3:44 PM, Erik Aronesty via bitcoin-dev&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;lt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Because a large percentage of miners are indifferent, right now miners&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; have&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; to choose between BIP148 and Segwit2x if they want to activate Segwit.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Miners can simply continuing signaling segwit, which will leave them&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; at least soft-fork compatible with BIP148 and BIP91 (and god knows&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; what &amp;#34;segwit2x&amp;#34; is since they keep changing the actual definition and&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; do not have a specification; but last I saw the near-term behavior the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; same as BIP91 but with a radically reduced activation window, so the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; story would be the same there in the near term).&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Ironically, it looks like most of the segwit2x signaling miners are&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; faking it (because they&amp;#39;re not signaling segwit which it requires).&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; It&amp;#39;ll be unfortunate if some aren&amp;#39;t faking it and start orphaning&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; their own blocks because they are failing to signal segwit.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; I don&amp;#39;t think the rejection of segwit2x from Bitcoin&amp;#39;s developers&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; could be any more resolute than what we&amp;#39;ve already seen:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Segwit_support&#34;&gt;https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Segwit_support&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; On Tue, Jun 20, 2017 at 5:22 PM, Mark Friedenbach via bitcoin-dev&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;lt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; I think it is very naïve to assume that any shift would be temporary.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; We have a hard enough time getting miners to proactively upgrade to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; recent versions of the reference bitcoin daemon. If miners interpret&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; the situation as being forced to run non-reference software in order&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; to prevent a chain split because a lack of support from Bitcoin Core,&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; that could be a one-way street.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; I think this is somewhat naive and sounds a lot like the repeat of the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; previously debunked &amp;#34;XT&amp;#34; and &amp;#34;Classic&amp;#34; hysteria.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; There is a reason that segwit2x is pretty much unanimously rejected by&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; the technical community.  And just like with XT/Classic/Unlimited&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; you&amp;#39;ll continue to see a strong correlation with people who are&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; unwilling and unable to keep updating the software at an acceptable&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; level of quality-- esp. because the very founding on their fork is&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; predicated on discarding those properties.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; If miners want to go off and create an altcoin-- welp, thats something&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; they can always do,  and nothing about that will force anyone to go&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; along with it.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; As far as prevent a chain split goes, all those things&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; (148/91/segwit2x(per today)) effectively guarantee a chainsplit-- so I&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; don&amp;#39;t think that holds.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; _______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;_______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;-------------- next part --------------&lt;br/&gt;An HTML attachment was scrubbed...&lt;br/&gt;URL: &amp;lt;&lt;a href=&#34;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20170620/dfa5b469/attachment-0001.html&amp;gt&#34;&gt;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20170620/dfa5b469/attachment-0001.html&amp;gt&lt;/a&gt;;
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    <updated>2023-06-07T18:03:27Z</updated>
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  <entry>
    <id>https://njump.me/nevent1qqsvc96an8dhwys7u73kdyf2t2lqx5ee9ne86yp28kqpwhwhacstqfczyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79ykh78ser</id>
    
      <title type="html">📅 Original date posted:2017-06-10 📝 Original message:Just a ...</title>
    
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      In reply to &lt;a href=&#39;/nevent1qqsqzk6vtadx8hw2m3tka5wqme6rlt8zys06rxc6llhngvjj9ygumtq0dgz3e&#39;&gt;nevent1q…gz3e&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;_________________________&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;📅 Original date posted:2017-06-10&lt;br/&gt;📝 Original message:Just a quick follow-up on BIP91&amp;#39;s prospects of avoiding a BIP148 chain&lt;br/&gt;split, because I may have left an overly pessimistic impression -&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;In short: the timing isn&amp;#39;t as dire as I suggested, BUT unless concrete&lt;br/&gt;progress on a plan starts taking shape, esp miner support, *the split is&lt;br/&gt;indeed coming.*&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;THE GOOD NEWS: several refinements have been noted which could get BIP91&lt;br/&gt;(or splitprotection, Segwit2x, etc) deployed faster:&lt;br/&gt;- The lock-in window could be shortened, eg to splitprotection&amp;#39;s 504 blocks&lt;br/&gt;(3.5 days)&lt;br/&gt;- Of course the 80% threshold could just be reduced, eg to&lt;br/&gt;splitprotection&amp;#39;s 65%&lt;br/&gt;- BIP91 nodes could start signaling on bit 1 the moment bit 4 reaches&lt;br/&gt;lock-in, rather than waiting another period until it  &amp;#34;activates&amp;#34;.&lt;br/&gt; (Orphaning of non-bit-1-signaling blocks would probably also have to start&lt;br/&gt;at or shortly after the same time [1].)&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Combining these approaches, *July 26* is an approximate hard deadline for&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;50% of miners to be running BIP91 in order to prevent the split.  So,&lt;br/&gt;significantly less tight than my previous June 30 (or my original,&lt;br/&gt;erroneous &amp;#34;a few days ago&amp;#34;).&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;THE BAD NEWS: no one should underestimate the steps that would need to be&lt;br/&gt;completed by that deadline:&lt;br/&gt;1. Coordinate on a solution (BIP91, splitprotection, Segwit2x, BIP148&lt;br/&gt;itself, ...)&lt;br/&gt;2. Implement and test it&lt;br/&gt;3. Convince &amp;gt;50% of miners to run it [2]&lt;br/&gt;4. Miners upgrade to the new software and begin signaling&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;In particular, #3: afaict a lot of convincing is still needed before miner&lt;br/&gt;support for any of these reaches anything like 50%.  (With the exception of&lt;br/&gt;Segwit2x, but it has the additional handicap that it probably needs to&lt;br/&gt;include deployable hard fork code, obviously ambitious in 1.5 months.)&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;[1] See Saicere&amp;#39;s comment:&lt;br/&gt;&lt;a href=&#34;https://github.com/btc1/bitcoin/pull/11#discussion_r121086886&#34;&gt;https://github.com/btc1/bitcoin/pull/11#discussion_r121086886&lt;/a&gt;, and related&lt;br/&gt;discussion at &lt;a href=&#34;https://github.com/btc1/bitcoin/pull/11#issuecomment-307330011&#34;&gt;https://github.com/btc1/bitcoin/pull/11#issuecomment-307330011&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;[2] Note that &amp;gt;50% need to run the *solution*, eg BIP91; old BIP141 nodes&lt;br/&gt;signaling segwit support do *not* count, since they won&amp;#39;t orphan non-bit-1&lt;br/&gt;blocks.  The impending split isn&amp;#39;t between nodes that support segwit vs&lt;br/&gt;don&amp;#39;t, but between those that reject non-segwit-supporting blocks vs don&amp;#39;t.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;On Fri, Jun 9, 2017 at 1:23 AM, Jacob Eliosoff &amp;lt;jacob.eliosoff at gmail.com&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Ah, two corrections:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; 1. I meant to include an option c): of course &amp;gt;50% of hashpower running&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; BIP148 by Aug 1 avoids a split.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; 2. More seriously, I misrepresented BIP148&amp;#39;s logic: it doesn&amp;#39;t require&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; segwit *activation*, just orphans non-segwit-*signaling* (bit 1) blocks&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; from Aug 1.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; I believe that means 80% of hashrate would need to be running BIP91&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; (signaling bit 4) by ~June 30 (so BIP91 locks in ~July 13, activates ~July&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; 27), not &amp;#34;a few days ago&amp;#34; as I claimed.  So, tight timing, but not&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; impossible.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Sorry about the errors.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; On Fri, Jun 9, 2017 at 12:40 AM, Jacob Eliosoff &amp;lt;jacob.eliosoff at gmail.com&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; I&amp;#39;ve been trying to work out the expected interaction between James&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Hilliard&amp;#39;s BIP91 [1] (or splitprotection [2], or Segwit2x [3], which both&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; use variants of BIP91 activation) and the BIP148 UASF [4].  Some of this is&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; subtle so CORRECTIONS WELCOME, but my conclusions are:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; 1. It&amp;#39;s extremely unlikely BIP91-type logic can activate segwit in time&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; to avoid a BIP148 chain split.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; 2. So, in practice all we can do is ensure the BIP148 split is as&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; painless as possible.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; REASONING:  First, some dates.  BIP148, whose deadline is already&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; deployed and thus unlikely to be postponed, starts orphaning non-segwit&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; blocks on midnight (GMT) the morning of August 1.  Meanwhile, here are&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Bitcoin&amp;#39;s rough expected next four difficulty adjustment dates (they could&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; vary by ~1-3 days depending on block times, but it&amp;#39;s unlikely to matter&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; here):&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; 1. June 17&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; 2. June 30&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; 3. July 13&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; 4. July 27&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; If Segwit activates on adj date #5 or later (August), it will be too late&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; to avoid BIP148&amp;#39;s split, which will have occurred the moment August began.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; So, working backwards, and assuming we want compatibility with old BIP141&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; nodes:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; - Segwit MUST activate by adj #4 (~July 27)&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; - Therefore segwit MUST be locked in by adj #3 (~July 13: this is&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; inflexible, since this logic is in already-deployed BIP141 nodes)&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; - Therefore, I *think* &amp;gt;50% of hashpower needs to be BIP91 miners,&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; signaling bit 1 and orphaning non-BIP91 (ie, BIP91&amp;#39;s bit 4 must activate),&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; by adj #2 (June 30)?&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; - Therefore, as currently designed, BIP91 bit 4 must be locked in by adj&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; #1 (June 17)&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; - Therefore, &amp;gt;=80% of hashrate must start signaling BIP91&amp;#39;s bit 4 by a&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; few days ago...&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; There are ways parts of this could be sped up, eg, James&amp;#39; &amp;#34;rolling&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; 100-block lock-in periods&amp;#34; [5], to get BIP91 signaling bit 1 sooner.  But&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; to be compatible with old BIP141 nodes, &amp;gt;50% of hashrate must be activated&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; BIP91 miners by ~June 30: there&amp;#39;s no fudging that.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; So, it seems to me that to avoid the BIP148 split, one of two things&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; would have to happen:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; a) 95% of hashrate start signaling bit 1 by ~June 30.  Given current stat&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; is 32%, this would basically require magic.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; b) BIP91 is deployed and &amp;gt;50% (80% or whatever) of hashrate is&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; *activated* BIP91 miners by ~June 30, ~3 weeks from now.  Again, much too&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; soon.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; So, I think the BIP148 split is inevitable.  I actually expect that few&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; parts of the ecosystem will join the fork, so disruption will be bearable.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; But anyway let me know any flaws in the reasoning above.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; [1] &lt;a href=&#34;https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0091.mediawiki&#34;&gt;https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0091.mediawiki&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; [2] &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2017&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2017&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; -June/014508.html&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; [3] &lt;a href=&#34;https://github.com/btc1/bitcoin/pull/11&#34;&gt;https://github.com/btc1/bitcoin/pull/11&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; [4] &lt;a href=&#34;https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0148.mediawiki&#34;&gt;https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0148.mediawiki&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; [5] &lt;a href=&#34;https://github.com/btc1/bitcoin/pull/6#issuecomment-305917729&#34;&gt;https://github.com/btc1/bitcoin/pull/6#issuecomment-305917729&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;-------------- next part --------------&lt;br/&gt;An HTML attachment was scrubbed...&lt;br/&gt;URL: &amp;lt;&lt;a href=&#34;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20170610/8122eddf/attachment.html&amp;gt&#34;&gt;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20170610/8122eddf/attachment.html&amp;gt&lt;/a&gt;;
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    <updated>2023-06-07T18:02:52Z</updated>
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  <entry>
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      <title type="html">📅 Original date posted:2017-06-09 📝 Original ...</title>
    
    <link rel="alternate" href="https://njump.me/nevent1qqsfdhl7j4hlj403tj6urr6m9nfjveg6nnhh8evgvqfrrk5e4wya2tqzyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79ykn9py4m" />
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      In reply to &lt;a href=&#39;/nevent1qqsruzvkpcga5xj2w6g8szcjq3vsaxlws3jyxres7pgt4purw90atuc8sevd7&#39;&gt;nevent1q…evd7&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;_________________________&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;📅 Original date posted:2017-06-09&lt;br/&gt;📝 Original message:I&amp;#39;ve been trying to work out the expected interaction between James&lt;br/&gt;Hilliard&amp;#39;s BIP91 [1] (or splitprotection [2], or Segwit2x [3], which both&lt;br/&gt;use variants of BIP91 activation) and the BIP148 UASF [4].  Some of this is&lt;br/&gt;subtle so CORRECTIONS WELCOME, but my conclusions are:&lt;br/&gt;1. It&amp;#39;s extremely unlikely BIP91-type logic can activate segwit in time to&lt;br/&gt;avoid a BIP148 chain split.&lt;br/&gt;2. So, in practice all we can do is ensure the BIP148 split is as painless&lt;br/&gt;as possible.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;REASONING:  First, some dates.  BIP148, whose deadline is already deployed&lt;br/&gt;and thus unlikely to be postponed, starts orphaning non-segwit blocks on&lt;br/&gt;midnight (GMT) the morning of August 1.  Meanwhile, here are Bitcoin&amp;#39;s&lt;br/&gt;rough expected next four difficulty adjustment dates (they could vary by&lt;br/&gt;~1-3 days depending on block times, but it&amp;#39;s unlikely to matter here):&lt;br/&gt;1. June 17&lt;br/&gt;2. June 30&lt;br/&gt;3. July 13&lt;br/&gt;4. July 27&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;If Segwit activates on adj date #5 or later (August), it will be too late&lt;br/&gt;to avoid BIP148&amp;#39;s split, which will have occurred the moment August began.&lt;br/&gt;So, working backwards, and assuming we want compatibility with old BIP141&lt;br/&gt;nodes:&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;- Segwit MUST activate by adj #4 (~July 27)&lt;br/&gt;- Therefore segwit MUST be locked in by adj #3 (~July 13: this is&lt;br/&gt;inflexible, since this logic is in already-deployed BIP141 nodes)&lt;br/&gt;- Therefore, I *think* &amp;gt;50% of hashpower needs to be BIP91 miners,&lt;br/&gt;signaling bit 1 and orphaning non-BIP91 (ie, BIP91&amp;#39;s bit 4 must activate),&lt;br/&gt;by adj #2 (June 30)?&lt;br/&gt;- Therefore, as currently designed, BIP91 bit 4 must be locked in by adj #1&lt;br/&gt;(June 17)&lt;br/&gt;- Therefore, &amp;gt;=80% of hashrate must start signaling BIP91&amp;#39;s bit 4 by a few&lt;br/&gt;days ago...&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;There are ways parts of this could be sped up, eg, James&amp;#39; &amp;#34;rolling&lt;br/&gt;100-block lock-in periods&amp;#34; [5], to get BIP91 signaling bit 1 sooner.  But&lt;br/&gt;to be compatible with old BIP141 nodes, &amp;gt;50% of hashrate must be activated&lt;br/&gt;BIP91 miners by ~June 30: there&amp;#39;s no fudging that.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;So, it seems to me that to avoid the BIP148 split, one of two things would&lt;br/&gt;have to happen:&lt;br/&gt;a) 95% of hashrate start signaling bit 1 by ~June 30.  Given current stat&lt;br/&gt;is 32%, this would basically require magic.&lt;br/&gt;b) BIP91 is deployed and &amp;gt;50% (80% or whatever) of hashrate is *activated*&lt;br/&gt;BIP91 miners by ~June 30, ~3 weeks from now.  Again, much too soon.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;So, I think the BIP148 split is inevitable.  I actually expect that few&lt;br/&gt;parts of the ecosystem will join the fork, so disruption will be bearable.&lt;br/&gt;But anyway let me know any flaws in the reasoning above.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;[1] &lt;a href=&#34;https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0091.mediawiki&#34;&gt;https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0091.mediawiki&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;[2]&lt;br/&gt;&lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2017-June/014508.html&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2017-June/014508.html&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;[3] &lt;a href=&#34;https://github.com/btc1/bitcoin/pull/11&#34;&gt;https://github.com/btc1/bitcoin/pull/11&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;[4] &lt;a href=&#34;https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0148.mediawiki&#34;&gt;https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0148.mediawiki&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;[5] &lt;a href=&#34;https://github.com/btc1/bitcoin/pull/6#issuecomment-305917729&#34;&gt;https://github.com/btc1/bitcoin/pull/6#issuecomment-305917729&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;-------------- next part --------------&lt;br/&gt;An HTML attachment was scrubbed...&lt;br/&gt;URL: &amp;lt;&lt;a href=&#34;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20170609/e606bbb0/attachment-0001.html&amp;gt&#34;&gt;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20170609/e606bbb0/attachment-0001.html&amp;gt&lt;/a&gt;;
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    <updated>2023-06-07T18:02:51Z</updated>
  </entry>

  <entry>
    <id>https://njump.me/nevent1qqsqzk6vtadx8hw2m3tka5wqme6rlt8zys06rxc6llhngvjj9ygumtqzyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79ykacvy3p</id>
    
      <title type="html">📅 Original date posted:2017-06-09 📝 Original message:Ah, ...</title>
    
    <link rel="alternate" href="https://njump.me/nevent1qqsqzk6vtadx8hw2m3tka5wqme6rlt8zys06rxc6llhngvjj9ygumtqzyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79ykacvy3p" />
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      In reply to &lt;a href=&#39;/nevent1qqsfdhl7j4hlj403tj6urr6m9nfjveg6nnhh8evgvqfrrk5e4wya2tqpz3vxv&#39;&gt;nevent1q…3vxv&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;_________________________&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;📅 Original date posted:2017-06-09&lt;br/&gt;📝 Original message:Ah, two corrections:&lt;br/&gt;1. I meant to include an option c): of course &amp;gt;50% of hashpower running&lt;br/&gt;BIP148 by Aug 1 avoids a split.&lt;br/&gt;2. More seriously, I misrepresented BIP148&amp;#39;s logic: it doesn&amp;#39;t require&lt;br/&gt;segwit *activation*, just orphans non-segwit-*signaling* (bit 1) blocks&lt;br/&gt;from Aug 1.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;I believe that means 80% of hashrate would need to be running BIP91&lt;br/&gt;(signaling bit 4) by ~June 30 (so BIP91 locks in ~July 13, activates ~July&lt;br/&gt;27), not &amp;#34;a few days ago&amp;#34; as I claimed.  So, tight timing, but not&lt;br/&gt;impossible.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Sorry about the errors.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;On Fri, Jun 9, 2017 at 12:40 AM, Jacob Eliosoff &amp;lt;jacob.eliosoff at gmail.com&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; I&amp;#39;ve been trying to work out the expected interaction between James&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Hilliard&amp;#39;s BIP91 [1] (or splitprotection [2], or Segwit2x [3], which both&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; use variants of BIP91 activation) and the BIP148 UASF [4].  Some of this is&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; subtle so CORRECTIONS WELCOME, but my conclusions are:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; 1. It&amp;#39;s extremely unlikely BIP91-type logic can activate segwit in time to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; avoid a BIP148 chain split.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; 2. So, in practice all we can do is ensure the BIP148 split is as painless&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; as possible.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; REASONING:  First, some dates.  BIP148, whose deadline is already deployed&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; and thus unlikely to be postponed, starts orphaning non-segwit blocks on&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; midnight (GMT) the morning of August 1.  Meanwhile, here are Bitcoin&amp;#39;s&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; rough expected next four difficulty adjustment dates (they could vary by&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; ~1-3 days depending on block times, but it&amp;#39;s unlikely to matter here):&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; 1. June 17&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; 2. June 30&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; 3. July 13&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; 4. July 27&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; If Segwit activates on adj date #5 or later (August), it will be too late&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; to avoid BIP148&amp;#39;s split, which will have occurred the moment August began.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; So, working backwards, and assuming we want compatibility with old BIP141&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; nodes:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; - Segwit MUST activate by adj #4 (~July 27)&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; - Therefore segwit MUST be locked in by adj #3 (~July 13: this is&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; inflexible, since this logic is in already-deployed BIP141 nodes)&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; - Therefore, I *think* &amp;gt;50% of hashpower needs to be BIP91 miners,&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; signaling bit 1 and orphaning non-BIP91 (ie, BIP91&amp;#39;s bit 4 must activate),&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; by adj #2 (June 30)?&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; - Therefore, as currently designed, BIP91 bit 4 must be locked in by adj&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; #1 (June 17)&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; - Therefore, &amp;gt;=80% of hashrate must start signaling BIP91&amp;#39;s bit 4 by a few&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; days ago...&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; There are ways parts of this could be sped up, eg, James&amp;#39; &amp;#34;rolling&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; 100-block lock-in periods&amp;#34; [5], to get BIP91 signaling bit 1 sooner.  But&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; to be compatible with old BIP141 nodes, &amp;gt;50% of hashrate must be activated&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; BIP91 miners by ~June 30: there&amp;#39;s no fudging that.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; So, it seems to me that to avoid the BIP148 split, one of two things would&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; have to happen:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; a) 95% of hashrate start signaling bit 1 by ~June 30.  Given current stat&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; is 32%, this would basically require magic.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; b) BIP91 is deployed and &amp;gt;50% (80% or whatever) of hashrate is *activated*&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; BIP91 miners by ~June 30, ~3 weeks from now.  Again, much too soon.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; So, I think the BIP148 split is inevitable.  I actually expect that few&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; parts of the ecosystem will join the fork, so disruption will be bearable.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; But anyway let me know any flaws in the reasoning above.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; [1] &lt;a href=&#34;https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0091.mediawiki&#34;&gt;https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0091.mediawiki&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; [2] &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; 2017-June/014508.html&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; [3] &lt;a href=&#34;https://github.com/btc1/bitcoin/pull/11&#34;&gt;https://github.com/btc1/bitcoin/pull/11&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; [4] &lt;a href=&#34;https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0148.mediawiki&#34;&gt;https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0148.mediawiki&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; [5] &lt;a href=&#34;https://github.com/btc1/bitcoin/pull/6#issuecomment-305917729&#34;&gt;https://github.com/btc1/bitcoin/pull/6#issuecomment-305917729&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;-------------- next part --------------&lt;br/&gt;An HTML attachment was scrubbed...&lt;br/&gt;URL: &amp;lt;&lt;a href=&#34;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20170609/e004899e/attachment-0001.html&amp;gt&#34;&gt;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20170609/e004899e/attachment-0001.html&amp;gt&lt;/a&gt;;
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    <updated>2023-06-07T18:02:51Z</updated>
  </entry>

  <entry>
    <id>https://njump.me/nevent1qqsresz2rmcjz7evc5h4qqylypfvfxtvf9w5u5jp3xwjse2nr4e592gzyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79ykvl9gsh</id>
    
      <title type="html">📅 Original date posted:2017-06-07 📝 Original message:This ...</title>
    
    <link rel="alternate" href="https://njump.me/nevent1qqsresz2rmcjz7evc5h4qqylypfvfxtvf9w5u5jp3xwjse2nr4e592gzyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79ykvl9gsh" />
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      In reply to &lt;a href=&#39;/nevent1qqs8rcmaszt9rmg07lz74we6zx590nkwfs28y6nnt3khyefttz7qkng7hme3y&#39;&gt;nevent1q…me3y&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;_________________________&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;📅 Original date posted:2017-06-07&lt;br/&gt;📝 Original message:This is not the safest defense against a split.  If 70% of miners run&lt;br/&gt;&amp;#34;splitprotection&amp;#34;, and 0.1% run BIP148, there&amp;#39;s no &amp;#34;safety&amp;#34;/&amp;#34;defense&amp;#34;&lt;br/&gt;reason for splitprotection to activate segwit.  It should only do so if&lt;br/&gt;*BIP148* support (NB: not just segwit support!) &amp;gt;50%.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;The truly defensive logic is &amp;#34;If the majority supports orphaning non-segwit&lt;br/&gt;blocks starting Aug 1, I&amp;#39;ll join them.&amp;#34;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;If the real goal of this BIP is to induce miners to run segwit, then fair&lt;br/&gt;enough.  But passing it off as the safest defense is bad faith.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;On Wed, Jun 7, 2017 at 10:10 AM, Erik Aronesty via bitcoin-dev &amp;lt;&lt;br/&gt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; This is, by far, the safest way for miners to quickly defend against a&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; chain split, much better than a -bip148 option.   This allows miners to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; defend themselves, with very little risk, since the defense is only&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; activated if the majority of miners do so. I would move for a very rapid&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; deployment.   Only miners would need to upgrade.   Regular users would not&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; have to concern themselves with this release.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; On Wed, Jun 7, 2017 at 6:13 AM, James Hilliard via bitcoin-dev &amp;lt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; I think even 55% would probably work out fine simply due to incentive&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; structures, once signalling is over 51% it&amp;#39;s then clear to miners that&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; non-signalling blocks will be orphaned and the rest will rapidly&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; update to splitprotection/BIP148. The purpose of this BIP is to reduce&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; chain split risk for BIP148 since it&amp;#39;s looking like BIP148 is going to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; be run by a non-insignificant percentage of the economy at a minimum.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; On Wed, Jun 7, 2017 at 12:20 AM, Tao Effect &amp;lt;contact at taoeffect.com&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; See thread on replay attacks for why activating regardless of threshold&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; is a&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; bad idea [1].&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; BIP91 OTOH seems perfectly reasonable. 80% instead of 95% makes it more&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; difficult for miners to hold together in opposition to Core. It gives&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; Core&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; more leverage in negotiations.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; If they don&amp;#39;t activate with 80%, Core can release another BIP to reduce&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; it&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; to 75%.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Each threshold reduction makes it both more likely to succeed, but also&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; increases the likelihood of harm to the ecosystem.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Cheers,&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Greg&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; [1]&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2017&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2017&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; -June/014497.html&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; --&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Please do not email me anything that you are not comfortable also&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; sharing&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; with the NSA.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; On Jun 6, 2017, at 6:54 PM, James Hilliard &amp;lt;james.hilliard1 at gmail.com&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; This is a BIP8 style soft fork so mandatory signalling will be active&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; after Aug 1st regardless.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; On Tue, Jun 6, 2017 at 8:51 PM, Tao Effect &amp;lt;contact at taoeffect.com&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; What is the probability that a 65% threshold is too low and can allow a&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &amp;#34;surprise miner attack&amp;#34;, whereby miners are kept offline before the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; deadline, and brought online immediately after, creating potential&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; havoc?&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; (Nit: &amp;#34;simple majority&amp;#34; usually refers to &amp;gt;50%, I think, might cause&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; confusion.)&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; -Greg Slepak&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; --&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Please do not email me anything that you are not comfortable also&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; sharing&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; with the NSA.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; On Jun 6, 2017, at 5:56 PM, James Hilliard via bitcoin-dev&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &amp;lt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Due to the proposed calendar(&lt;a href=&#34;https://segwit2x.github.io/&#34;&gt;https://segwit2x.github.io/&lt;/a&gt;) for the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; SegWit2x agreement being too slow to activate SegWit mandatory&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; signalling ahead of BIP148 using BIP91 I would like to propose another&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; option that miners can use to prevent a chain split ahead of the Aug&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; 1st BIP148 activation date.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; The splitprotection soft fork is essentially BIP91 but using BIP8&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; instead of BIP9 with a lower activation threshold and immediate&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; mandatory signalling lock-in. This allows for a majority of miners to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; activate mandatory SegWit signalling and prevent a potential chain&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; split ahead of BIP148 activation.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; This BIP allows for miners to respond to market forces quickly ahead&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; of BIP148 activation by signalling for splitprotection. Any miners&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; already running BIP148 should be encouraged to use splitprotection.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &amp;lt;pre&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; BIP: splitprotection&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Layer: Consensus (soft fork)&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Title: User Activated Soft Fork Split Protection&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Author: James Hilliard &amp;lt;james.hilliard1 at gmail.com&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Comments-Summary: No comments yet.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Comments-URI:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Status: Draft&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Type: Standards Track&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Created: 2017-05-22&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; License: BSD-3-Clause&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;          CC0-1.0&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &amp;lt;/pre&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; ==Abstract==&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; This document specifies a coordination mechanism for a simple majority&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; of miners to prevent a chain split ahead of BIP148 activation.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; ==Definitions==&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &amp;#34;existing segwit deployment&amp;#34; refer to the BIP9 &amp;#34;segwit&amp;#34; deployment&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; using bit 1, between November 15th 2016 and November 15th 2017 to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; activate BIP141, BIP143 and BIP147.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; ==Motivation==&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; The biggest risk of BIP148 is an extended chain split, this BIP&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; provides a way for a simple majority of miners to eliminate that risk.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; This BIP provides a way for a simple majority of miners to coordinate&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; activation of the existing segwit deployment with less than 95%&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; hashpower before BIP148 activation. Due to time constraints unless&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; immediately deployed BIP91 will likely not be able to enforce&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; mandatory signalling of segwit before the Aug 1st activation of&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; BIP148. This BIP provides a method for rapid miner activation of&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; SegWit mandatory signalling ahead of the BIP148 activation date. Since&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; the primary goal of this BIP is to reduce the chance of an extended&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; chain split as much as possible we activate using a simple miner&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; majority of 65% over a 504 block interval rather than a higher&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; percentage. This BIP also allows miners to signal their intention to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; run BIP148 in order to prevent a chain split.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; ==Specification==&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; While this BIP is active, all blocks must set the nVersion header top&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; 3 bits to 001 together with bit field (1&amp;lt;&amp;lt;1) (according to the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; existing segwit deployment). Blocks that do not signal as required&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; will be rejected.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; ==Deployment==&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; This BIP will be deployed by &amp;#34;version bits&amp;#34; with a 65%(this can be&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; adjusted if desired) activation threshold BIP9 with the name&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &amp;#34;splitprotecion&amp;#34; and using bit 2.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; This BIP starts immediately and is a BIP8 style soft fork since&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; mandatory signalling will start on midnight August 1st 2017 (epoch&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; time 1501545600) regardless of whether or not this BIP has reached its&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; own signalling threshold. This BIP will cease to be active when segwit&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; is locked-in.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; === Reference implementation ===&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &amp;lt;pre&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; // Check if Segregated Witness is Locked In&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; bool IsWitnessLockedIn(const CBlockIndex* pindexPrev, const&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Consensus::Params&amp;amp; params)&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; {&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;   LOCK(cs_main);&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;   return (VersionBitsState(pindexPrev, params,&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Consensus::DEPLOYMENT_SEGWIT, versionbitscache) ==&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; THRESHOLD_LOCKED_IN);&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; }&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; // SPLITPROTECTION mandatory segwit signalling.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; if ( VersionBitsState(pindex-&amp;gt;pprev, chainparams.GetConsensus(),&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Consensus::DEPLOYMENT_SPLITPROTECTION, versionbitscache) ==&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; THRESHOLD_LOCKED_IN &amp;amp;&amp;amp;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;    !IsWitnessLockedIn(pindex-&amp;gt;pprev, chainparams.GetConsensus()) &amp;amp;&amp;amp;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; // Segwit is not locked in&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;    !IsWitnessEnabled(pindex-&amp;gt;pprev, chainparams.GetConsensus()) ) //&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; and is not active.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; {&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;   bool fVersionBits = (pindex-&amp;gt;nVersion &amp;amp; VERSIONBITS_TOP_MASK) ==&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; VERSIONBITS_TOP_BITS;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;   bool fSegbit = (pindex-&amp;gt;nVersion &amp;amp;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; VersionBitsMask(chainparams.GetConsensus(),&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Consensus::DEPLOYMENT_SEGWIT)) != 0;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;   if (!(fVersionBits &amp;amp;&amp;amp; fSegbit)) {&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;       return state.DoS(0, error(&amp;#34;ConnectBlock(): relayed block must&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; signal for segwit, please upgrade&amp;#34;), REJECT_INVALID, &amp;#34;bad-no-segwit&amp;#34;);&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;   }&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; }&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; // BIP148 mandatory segwit signalling.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; int64_t nMedianTimePast = pindex-&amp;gt;GetMedianTimePast();&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; if ( (nMedianTimePast &amp;gt;= 1501545600) &amp;amp;&amp;amp;  // Tue 01 Aug 2017 00:00:00 UTC&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;    (nMedianTimePast &amp;lt;= 1510704000) &amp;amp;&amp;amp;  // Wed 15 Nov 2017 00:00:00 UTC&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;    (!IsWitnessLockedIn(pindex-&amp;gt;pprev, chainparams.GetConsensus()) &amp;amp;&amp;amp;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; // Segwit is not locked in&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;     !IsWitnessEnabled(pindex-&amp;gt;pprev, chainparams.GetConsensus())) )&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; // and is not active.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; {&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;   bool fVersionBits = (pindex-&amp;gt;nVersion &amp;amp; VERSIONBITS_TOP_MASK) ==&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; VERSIONBITS_TOP_BITS;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;   bool fSegbit = (pindex-&amp;gt;nVersion &amp;amp;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; VersionBitsMask(chainparams.GetConsensus(),&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Consensus::DEPLOYMENT_SEGWIT)) != 0;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;   if (!(fVersionBits &amp;amp;&amp;amp; fSegbit)) {&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;       return state.DoS(0, error(&amp;#34;ConnectBlock(): relayed block must&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; signal for segwit, please upgrade&amp;#34;), REJECT_INVALID, &amp;#34;bad-no-segwit&amp;#34;);&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;   }&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; }&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &amp;lt;/pre&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/compare/0.14...jameshilli&#34;&gt;https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/compare/0.14...jameshilli&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; ard:splitprotection-v0.14.1&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; ==Backwards Compatibility==&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; This deployment is compatible with the existing &amp;#34;segwit&amp;#34; bit 1&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; deployment scheduled between midnight November 15th, 2016 and midnight&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; November 15th, 2017. This deployment is also compatible with the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; existing BIP148 deployment. This BIP is compatible with BIP91 only if&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; BIP91 activates before it and before BIP148. Miners will need to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; upgrade their nodes to support splitprotection otherwise they may&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; build on top of an invalid block. While this bip is active users&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; should either upgrade to splitprotection or wait for additional&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; confirmations when accepting payments.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; ==Rationale==&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Historically we have used IsSuperMajority() to activate soft forks&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; such as BIP66 which has a mandatory signalling requirement for miners&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; once activated, this ensures that miners are aware of new rules being&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; enforced. This technique can be leveraged to lower the signalling&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; threshold of a soft fork while it is in the process of being deployed&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; in a backwards compatible way. We also use a BIP8 style timeout to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; ensure that this BIP is compatible with BIP148 and that BIP148&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; compatible mandatory signalling activates regardless of miner&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; signalling levels.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; By orphaning non-signalling blocks during the BIP9 bit 1 &amp;#34;segwit&amp;#34;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; deployment, this BIP can cause the existing &amp;#34;segwit&amp;#34; deployment to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; activate without needing to release a new deployment. As we approach&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; BIP148 activation it may be desirable for a majority of miners to have&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; a method that will ensure that there is no chain split.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; ==References==&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; *[&lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; 2017-March/013714.html&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Mailing list discussion]&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; *[&lt;a href=&#34;https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/blob/v0.6.0/src/main.cp&#34;&gt;https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/blob/v0.6.0/src/main.cp&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; p#L1281-L1283&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; P2SH flag day activation]&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; *[[bip-0009.mediawiki|BIP9 Version bits with timeout and delay]]&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; *[[bip-0016.mediawiki|BIP16 Pay to Script Hash]]&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; *[[bip-0091.mediawiki|BIP91 Reduced threshold Segwit MASF]]&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; *[[bip-0141.mediawiki|BIP141 Segregated Witness (Consensus layer)]]&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; *[[bip-0143.mediawiki|BIP143 Transaction Signature Verification for&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Version 0 Witness Program]]&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; *[[bip-0147.mediawiki|BIP147 Dealing with dummy stack element&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; malleability]]&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; *[[bip-0148.mediawiki|BIP148 Mandatory activation of segwit deployment]]&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; *[[bip-0149.mediawiki|BIP149 Segregated Witness (second deployment)]]&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; *[&lt;a href=&#34;https://bitcoincore.org/en/2016/01/26/segwit-benefits/&#34;&gt;https://bitcoincore.org/en/2016/01/26/segwit-benefits/&lt;/a&gt; Segwit&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; benefits]&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; ==Copyright==&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; This document is dual licensed as BSD 3-clause, and Creative Commons&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; CC0 1.0 Universal.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; _______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; _______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; _______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;-------------- next part --------------&lt;br/&gt;An HTML attachment was scrubbed...&lt;br/&gt;URL: &amp;lt;&lt;a href=&#34;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20170607/308e84ea/attachment-0001.html&amp;gt&#34;&gt;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20170607/308e84ea/attachment-0001.html&amp;gt&lt;/a&gt;;
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    <updated>2023-06-07T18:02:36Z</updated>
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  <entry>
    <id>https://njump.me/nevent1qqszy2q8lz64l2lwxe6w6jg8w6ck5saa0y7qf0fhn0g76mlu8vytnuqzyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79yk2axs26</id>
    
      <title type="html">📅 Original date posted:2017-06-07 📝 Original message:While ...</title>
    
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      In reply to &lt;a href=&#39;/nevent1qqs2lgv42xm9ygd2t3hqdtr6r26c7axrddar9kxh303xw5w5w2a7dlqqy53u7&#39;&gt;nevent1q…53u7&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;_________________________&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;📅 Original date posted:2017-06-07&lt;br/&gt;📝 Original message:While this isn&amp;#39;t an unreasonable proposal, it will orphan blocks from any&lt;br/&gt;miner who isn&amp;#39;t running it (or BIP148) by Aug 1, right?  That seems rather&lt;br/&gt;rushed for a non-backwards-compatible SF, especially since in practice,&lt;br/&gt;miners are unlikely to deploy it until it comes bundled with some version&lt;br/&gt;of the Segwit2x HF code.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;I realize this is a touchy topic but - how much hard evidence is there that&lt;br/&gt;there *will* be significant disruption if miners simply ignore both this&lt;br/&gt;and BIP148?  Correct me but afaict, BIP148 has ~0% hashrate support.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Unless the HF code is ready and agree on soon (say by Jul 1), my vote is to&lt;br/&gt;keep the main chain backwards-compatible, especially if evidence of miner&lt;br/&gt;support for BIP148 doesn&amp;#39;t materialize soon.  It seems less disruptive for&lt;br/&gt;recently-deployed BIP148 nodes to revert than to ask every miner in the&lt;br/&gt;system to quickly upgrade or get orphaned.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Just my view, I respect that others will differ.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;On Tue, Jun 6, 2017 at 9:54 PM, James Hilliard via bitcoin-dev &amp;lt;&lt;br/&gt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; This is a BIP8 style soft fork so mandatory signalling will be active&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; after Aug 1st regardless.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; On Tue, Jun 6, 2017 at 8:51 PM, Tao Effect &amp;lt;contact at taoeffect.com&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; What is the probability that a 65% threshold is too low and can allow a&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &amp;#34;surprise miner attack&amp;#34;, whereby miners are kept offline before the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; deadline, and brought online immediately after, creating potential havoc?&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; (Nit: &amp;#34;simple majority&amp;#34; usually refers to &amp;gt;50%, I think, might cause&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; confusion.)&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; -Greg Slepak&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; --&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Please do not email me anything that you are not comfortable also sharing&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; with the NSA.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; On Jun 6, 2017, at 5:56 PM, James Hilliard via bitcoin-dev&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &amp;lt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Due to the proposed calendar(&lt;a href=&#34;https://segwit2x.github.io/&#34;&gt;https://segwit2x.github.io/&lt;/a&gt;) for the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; SegWit2x agreement being too slow to activate SegWit mandatory&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; signalling ahead of BIP148 using BIP91 I would like to propose another&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; option that miners can use to prevent a chain split ahead of the Aug&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; 1st BIP148 activation date.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; The splitprotection soft fork is essentially BIP91 but using BIP8&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; instead of BIP9 with a lower activation threshold and immediate&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; mandatory signalling lock-in. This allows for a majority of miners to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; activate mandatory SegWit signalling and prevent a potential chain&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; split ahead of BIP148 activation.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; This BIP allows for miners to respond to market forces quickly ahead&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; of BIP148 activation by signalling for splitprotection. Any miners&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; already running BIP148 should be encouraged to use splitprotection.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &amp;lt;pre&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;  BIP: splitprotection&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;  Layer: Consensus (soft fork)&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;  Title: User Activated Soft Fork Split Protection&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;  Author: James Hilliard &amp;lt;james.hilliard1 at gmail.com&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;  Comments-Summary: No comments yet.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;  Comments-URI:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;  Status: Draft&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;  Type: Standards Track&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;  Created: 2017-05-22&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;  License: BSD-3-Clause&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;           CC0-1.0&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &amp;lt;/pre&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; ==Abstract==&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; This document specifies a coordination mechanism for a simple majority&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; of miners to prevent a chain split ahead of BIP148 activation.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; ==Definitions==&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &amp;#34;existing segwit deployment&amp;#34; refer to the BIP9 &amp;#34;segwit&amp;#34; deployment&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; using bit 1, between November 15th 2016 and November 15th 2017 to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; activate BIP141, BIP143 and BIP147.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; ==Motivation==&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; The biggest risk of BIP148 is an extended chain split, this BIP&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; provides a way for a simple majority of miners to eliminate that risk.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; This BIP provides a way for a simple majority of miners to coordinate&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; activation of the existing segwit deployment with less than 95%&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; hashpower before BIP148 activation. Due to time constraints unless&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; immediately deployed BIP91 will likely not be able to enforce&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; mandatory signalling of segwit before the Aug 1st activation of&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; BIP148. This BIP provides a method for rapid miner activation of&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; SegWit mandatory signalling ahead of the BIP148 activation date. Since&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; the primary goal of this BIP is to reduce the chance of an extended&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; chain split as much as possible we activate using a simple miner&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; majority of 65% over a 504 block interval rather than a higher&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; percentage. This BIP also allows miners to signal their intention to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; run BIP148 in order to prevent a chain split.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; ==Specification==&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; While this BIP is active, all blocks must set the nVersion header top&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; 3 bits to 001 together with bit field (1&amp;lt;&amp;lt;1) (according to the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; existing segwit deployment). Blocks that do not signal as required&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; will be rejected.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; ==Deployment==&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; This BIP will be deployed by &amp;#34;version bits&amp;#34; with a 65%(this can be&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; adjusted if desired) activation threshold BIP9 with the name&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &amp;#34;splitprotecion&amp;#34; and using bit 2.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; This BIP starts immediately and is a BIP8 style soft fork since&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; mandatory signalling will start on midnight August 1st 2017 (epoch&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; time 1501545600) regardless of whether or not this BIP has reached its&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; own signalling threshold. This BIP will cease to be active when segwit&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; is locked-in.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; === Reference implementation ===&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &amp;lt;pre&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; // Check if Segregated Witness is Locked In&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; bool IsWitnessLockedIn(const CBlockIndex* pindexPrev, const&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Consensus::Params&amp;amp; params)&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; {&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;    LOCK(cs_main);&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;    return (VersionBitsState(pindexPrev, params,&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Consensus::DEPLOYMENT_SEGWIT, versionbitscache) ==&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; THRESHOLD_LOCKED_IN);&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; }&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; // SPLITPROTECTION mandatory segwit signalling.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; if ( VersionBitsState(pindex-&amp;gt;pprev, chainparams.GetConsensus(),&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Consensus::DEPLOYMENT_SPLITPROTECTION, versionbitscache) ==&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; THRESHOLD_LOCKED_IN &amp;amp;&amp;amp;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;     !IsWitnessLockedIn(pindex-&amp;gt;pprev, chainparams.GetConsensus()) &amp;amp;&amp;amp;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; // Segwit is not locked in&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;     !IsWitnessEnabled(pindex-&amp;gt;pprev, chainparams.GetConsensus()) ) //&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; and is not active.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; {&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;    bool fVersionBits = (pindex-&amp;gt;nVersion &amp;amp; VERSIONBITS_TOP_MASK) ==&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; VERSIONBITS_TOP_BITS;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;    bool fSegbit = (pindex-&amp;gt;nVersion &amp;amp;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; VersionBitsMask(chainparams.GetConsensus(),&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Consensus::DEPLOYMENT_SEGWIT)) != 0;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;    if (!(fVersionBits &amp;amp;&amp;amp; fSegbit)) {&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;        return state.DoS(0, error(&amp;#34;ConnectBlock(): relayed block must&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; signal for segwit, please upgrade&amp;#34;), REJECT_INVALID, &amp;#34;bad-no-segwit&amp;#34;);&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;    }&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; }&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; // BIP148 mandatory segwit signalling.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; int64_t nMedianTimePast = pindex-&amp;gt;GetMedianTimePast();&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; if ( (nMedianTimePast &amp;gt;= 1501545600) &amp;amp;&amp;amp;  // Tue 01 Aug 2017 00:00:00 UTC&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;     (nMedianTimePast &amp;lt;= 1510704000) &amp;amp;&amp;amp;  // Wed 15 Nov 2017 00:00:00 UTC&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;     (!IsWitnessLockedIn(pindex-&amp;gt;pprev, chainparams.GetConsensus()) &amp;amp;&amp;amp;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; // Segwit is not locked in&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;      !IsWitnessEnabled(pindex-&amp;gt;pprev, chainparams.GetConsensus())) )&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; // and is not active.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; {&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;    bool fVersionBits = (pindex-&amp;gt;nVersion &amp;amp; VERSIONBITS_TOP_MASK) ==&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; VERSIONBITS_TOP_BITS;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;    bool fSegbit = (pindex-&amp;gt;nVersion &amp;amp;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; VersionBitsMask(chainparams.GetConsensus(),&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Consensus::DEPLOYMENT_SEGWIT)) != 0;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;    if (!(fVersionBits &amp;amp;&amp;amp; fSegbit)) {&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;        return state.DoS(0, error(&amp;#34;ConnectBlock(): relayed block must&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; signal for segwit, please upgrade&amp;#34;), REJECT_INVALID, &amp;#34;bad-no-segwit&amp;#34;);&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;    }&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; }&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &amp;lt;/pre&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/compare/0.14&#34;&gt;https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/compare/0.14&lt;/a&gt;...&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; jameshilliard:splitprotection-v0.14.1&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; ==Backwards Compatibility==&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; This deployment is compatible with the existing &amp;#34;segwit&amp;#34; bit 1&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; deployment scheduled between midnight November 15th, 2016 and midnight&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; November 15th, 2017. This deployment is also compatible with the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; existing BIP148 deployment. This BIP is compatible with BIP91 only if&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; BIP91 activates before it and before BIP148. Miners will need to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; upgrade their nodes to support splitprotection otherwise they may&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; build on top of an invalid block. While this bip is active users&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; should either upgrade to splitprotection or wait for additional&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; confirmations when accepting payments.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; ==Rationale==&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Historically we have used IsSuperMajority() to activate soft forks&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; such as BIP66 which has a mandatory signalling requirement for miners&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; once activated, this ensures that miners are aware of new rules being&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; enforced. This technique can be leveraged to lower the signalling&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; threshold of a soft fork while it is in the process of being deployed&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; in a backwards compatible way. We also use a BIP8 style timeout to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; ensure that this BIP is compatible with BIP148 and that BIP148&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; compatible mandatory signalling activates regardless of miner&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; signalling levels.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; By orphaning non-signalling blocks during the BIP9 bit 1 &amp;#34;segwit&amp;#34;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; deployment, this BIP can cause the existing &amp;#34;segwit&amp;#34; deployment to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; activate without needing to release a new deployment. As we approach&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; BIP148 activation it may be desirable for a majority of miners to have&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; a method that will ensure that there is no chain split.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; ==References==&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; *[&lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev/2017-March/013714.html&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Mailing list discussion]&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; *[&lt;a href=&#34;https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/blob/v0.6.0/src/main&#34;&gt;https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/blob/v0.6.0/src/main&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; cpp#L1281-L1283&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; P2SH flag day activation]&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; *[[bip-0009.mediawiki|BIP9 Version bits with timeout and delay]]&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; *[[bip-0016.mediawiki|BIP16 Pay to Script Hash]]&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; *[[bip-0091.mediawiki|BIP91 Reduced threshold Segwit MASF]]&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; *[[bip-0141.mediawiki|BIP141 Segregated Witness (Consensus layer)]]&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; *[[bip-0143.mediawiki|BIP143 Transaction Signature Verification for&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Version 0 Witness Program]]&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; *[[bip-0147.mediawiki|BIP147 Dealing with dummy stack element&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; malleability]]&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; *[[bip-0148.mediawiki|BIP148 Mandatory activation of segwit deployment]]&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; *[[bip-0149.mediawiki|BIP149 Segregated Witness (second deployment)]]&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; *[&lt;a href=&#34;https://bitcoincore.org/en/2016/01/26/segwit-benefits/&#34;&gt;https://bitcoincore.org/en/2016/01/26/segwit-benefits/&lt;/a&gt; Segwit&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; benefits]&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; ==Copyright==&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; This document is dual licensed as BSD 3-clause, and Creative Commons&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; CC0 1.0 Universal.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; _______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; _______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;-------------- next part --------------&lt;br/&gt;An HTML attachment was scrubbed...&lt;br/&gt;URL: &amp;lt;&lt;a href=&#34;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20170607/27553471/attachment-0001.html&amp;gt&#34;&gt;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20170607/27553471/attachment-0001.html&amp;gt&lt;/a&gt;;
    </content>
    <updated>2023-06-07T18:02:33Z</updated>
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  <entry>
    <id>https://njump.me/nevent1qqs2cy796dut44dpww6ynpr2f7t378774jsazygj2mkdx64489m2kyqzyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79ykpq7map</id>
    
      <title type="html">📅 Original date posted:2017-05-31 📝 Original message:Maybe ...</title>
    
    <link rel="alternate" href="https://njump.me/nevent1qqs2cy796dut44dpww6ynpr2f7t378774jsazygj2mkdx64489m2kyqzyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79ykpq7map" />
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      In reply to &lt;a href=&#39;/nevent1qqsqy0aqpk7smgw3wf45gjd2ycg82xzlslnymuu5xylg5ezx0j59pvgy9zuut&#39;&gt;nevent1q…zuut&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;_________________________&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;📅 Original date posted:2017-05-31&lt;br/&gt;📝 Original message:Maybe there&amp;#39;s some hole in Jorge&amp;#39;s logic and scrapping blockmaxsize has&lt;br/&gt;quadratic hashing risks, and maybe James&amp;#39; 10KB is too ambitious; but even&lt;br/&gt;if so, a simple 1MB tx size limit would clearly do the trick.  The broader&lt;br/&gt;point is that quadratic hashing is not a compelling reason to keep&lt;br/&gt;blockmaxsize post-HF: does someone have a better one?&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;On May 30, 2017 9:46 PM, &amp;#34;Jean-Paul Kogelman via bitcoin-dev&amp;#34; &amp;lt;&lt;br/&gt;bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; That would invalidate any pre-signed transactions that are currently out&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; there. You can&amp;#39;t just change the rules out from under people.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; On May 30, 2017, at 4:50 PM, James MacWhyte via bitcoin-dev &amp;lt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;  The 1MB classic block size prevents quadratic hashing&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt; problems from being any worse than they are today.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Add a transaction-size limit of, say, 10kb and the quadratic hashing&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; problem is a non-issue. Donezo.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; _______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; _______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;-------------- next part --------------&lt;br/&gt;An HTML attachment was scrubbed...&lt;br/&gt;URL: &amp;lt;&lt;a href=&#34;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20170530/a232820b/attachment.html&amp;gt&#34;&gt;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20170530/a232820b/attachment.html&amp;gt&lt;/a&gt;;
    </content>
    <updated>2023-06-07T18:01:50Z</updated>
  </entry>

  <entry>
    <id>https://njump.me/nevent1qqsywcpfma8hhse0277tcx6qckudnsc7guk83dm5pteuhx3unejcutczyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79ykc9mpuv</id>
    
      <title type="html">📅 Original date posted:2017-05-26 📝 Original message:Just ...</title>
    
    <link rel="alternate" href="https://njump.me/nevent1qqsywcpfma8hhse0277tcx6qckudnsc7guk83dm5pteuhx3unejcutczyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79ykc9mpuv" />
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      In reply to &lt;a href=&#39;/nevent1qqsd45xy2qetjd79dxuyyrdrkzc0j606hghwx5awv6sfun9r2dlc8ygvkprrh&#39;&gt;nevent1q…prrh&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;_________________________&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;📅 Original date posted:2017-05-26&lt;br/&gt;📝 Original message:Just to clarify one thing, what I described differs from BIP91 in that&lt;br/&gt;there&amp;#39;s no orphaning.  Just when Segwit2MB support reaches 80%, those 80%&lt;br/&gt;join everyone else in signaling for BIP141.  BIP91 orphaning is an optional&lt;br/&gt;addition but my guess is it wouldn&amp;#39;t be needed.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;On May 26, 2017 4:02 PM, &amp;#34;Matt Corallo&amp;#34; &amp;lt;lf-lists at mattcorallo.com&amp;gt; wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Your proposal seems to be simply BIP 91 tied to the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; as-yet-entirely-undefined hard fork Barry et al proposed.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Using James&amp;#39; BIP 91 instead of the Barry-bit-4/5/whatever proposal, as&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; you propose, would make the deployment on the incredibly short timeline&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Barry et al proposed slightly more realistic, though I would expect to&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; see hard fork code readily available and well-tested at this point in&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; order to meet that timeline.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Ultimately, due to their aggressive timeline, the Barry et al proposal&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; is incredibly unlikely to meet the requirements of a&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; multi-billion-dollar system, and continued research into meeting the&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; spirit, not the text, of their agreement seems warranted.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; Matt&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; On 05/26/17 17:47, Jacob Eliosoff via bitcoin-dev wrote:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; Forgive me if this is a dumb question.  Suppose that rather than&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; directly activating segwit, the Silbert/NYC Segwit2MB proposal&amp;#39;s lock-in&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; just triggered BIP141 signaling (plus later HF).  Would that avoid&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; incompatibility with existing BIP141 nodes, and get segwit activated&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; sooner?  Eg:&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; - Bit 4 (or bit 5 or whatever, now that BIP91 uses 4) signals support&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; for &amp;#34;segwit now, HF (TBD) at scheduled date (Nov 23?)&amp;#34;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; - If bit 4 support reaches 80%, it locks in two things: the scheduled HF&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; (conditional on segwit), and *immediately* turning on bit 1 (BIP141&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; support)&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; I realize this would still leave problems like the aggressive HF&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; schedule, possible chain split at the HF date between Segwit2MB nodes&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; and any remaining BIP141 nodes, etc.  My focus here is how&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; incompatibility with existing nodes could be minimized.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; (BIP91 could also be used if BIP141 support still fell short of 95%.&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; But if Segwit2MB support reaches 80%, it seems likely that an additional&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; 15% will support BIP141-without-HF.)&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; _______________________________________________&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; bitcoin-dev mailing list&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt; &lt;a href=&#34;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&#34;&gt;https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt; &amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;&amp;gt;&lt;br/&gt;-------------- next part --------------&lt;br/&gt;An HTML attachment was scrubbed...&lt;br/&gt;URL: &amp;lt;&lt;a href=&#34;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20170526/b8000d3a/attachment.html&amp;gt&#34;&gt;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20170526/b8000d3a/attachment.html&amp;gt&lt;/a&gt;;
    </content>
    <updated>2023-06-07T18:01:23Z</updated>
  </entry>

  <entry>
    <id>https://njump.me/nevent1qqsqsj6es5d4p6znlkke00j3zhjxuy9h74sdvhzajkysp7ryce583kgzyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79ykjxlrkc</id>
    
      <title type="html">📅 Original date posted:2017-05-26 📝 Original ...</title>
    
    <link rel="alternate" href="https://njump.me/nevent1qqsqsj6es5d4p6znlkke00j3zhjxuy9h74sdvhzajkysp7ryce583kgzyr0u8wrzjrvk9defy9fk7l3mvmqrws4ct27fz3z84yzs0np8l79ykjxlrkc" />
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      In reply to &lt;a href=&#39;/nevent1qqswa9gl6p8l2476y6n0l6fj4guz22c2f6wanyxme7jpxysk24vlxds5rvvdj&#39;&gt;nevent1q…vvdj&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;_________________________&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;📅 Original date posted:2017-05-26&lt;br/&gt;📝 Original message:Forgive me if this is a dumb question.  Suppose that rather than directly&lt;br/&gt;activating segwit, the Silbert/NYC Segwit2MB proposal&amp;#39;s lock-in just&lt;br/&gt;triggered BIP141 signaling (plus later HF).  Would that avoid&lt;br/&gt;incompatibility with existing BIP141 nodes, and get segwit activated&lt;br/&gt;sooner?  Eg:&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;- Bit 4 (or bit 5 or whatever, now that BIP91 uses 4) signals support for&lt;br/&gt;&amp;#34;segwit now, HF (TBD) at scheduled date (Nov 23?)&amp;#34;&lt;br/&gt;- If bit 4 support reaches 80%, it locks in two things: the scheduled HF&lt;br/&gt;(conditional on segwit), and *immediately* turning on bit 1 (BIP141 support)&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;I realize this would still leave problems like the aggressive HF schedule,&lt;br/&gt;possible chain split at the HF date between Segwit2MB nodes and any&lt;br/&gt;remaining BIP141 nodes, etc.  My focus here is how incompatibility with&lt;br/&gt;existing nodes could be minimized.&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;(BIP91 could also be used if BIP141 support still fell short of 95%.  But&lt;br/&gt;if Segwit2MB support reaches 80%, it seems likely that an additional 15%&lt;br/&gt;will support BIP141-without-HF.)&lt;br/&gt;-------------- next part --------------&lt;br/&gt;An HTML attachment was scrubbed...&lt;br/&gt;URL: &amp;lt;&lt;a href=&#34;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20170526/d6a31f4d/attachment.html&amp;gt&#34;&gt;http://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/attachments/20170526/d6a31f4d/attachment.html&amp;gt&lt;/a&gt;;
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    <updated>2023-06-07T18:01:23Z</updated>
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