On Sun, Jul 04, 2021 at 11:39:44AM -0700, Jeremy wrote: > However, I think the broader community is unconvinced by the cost benefit > of arbitrary covenants. See > https://medium.com/block-digest-mempool/my-worries-about-too-generalized-covenants-5eff33affbb6 > as a recent example. Therefore as a critical part of building consensus on > various techniques I've worked to emphasize that specific additions do not > entail risk of accidentally introducing more than was bargained for to > respect the concerns of others. Respecting the concerns of others doesn't require lobotomizing useful tools. Being respectful can also be accomplished by politely showing that their concerns are unfounded (or at least less severe than they thought). This is almost always the better course IMO---it takes much more effort to satisfy additional engineering constraints (and prove to reviewers that you've done so!) than it does to simply discuss those concerns with reasonable stakeholders. As a demonstration, let's look at the concerns from Shinobi's post linked above: They seem to be worried that some Bitcoin users will choose to accept coins that can't subsequently be fungibily mixed with other bitcoins. But that's already been the case for a decade: users can accept altcoins that are non-fungible with bitcoins. They talk about covenants where spending is controlled by governments, but that seems to me exactly like China's CBDC trial. They talk about exchanges depositing users' BTC into a covenant, but that's just a variation on the classic not-your-keys-not-your-bitcoins problem. For all you know, your local exchange is keeping most of its BTC balance commitments in ETH or USDT. To me, it seems like the worst-case problems Shinobi describes with covenants are some of the same problems that already exist with altcoins. I don't see how recursive covenants could make any of those problems worse, and so I don't see any point in limiting Bitcoin's flexibility to avoid those problems when there are so many interesting and useful things that unlimited covenants could do. -Dave