Dear Paul,

Drivechain has several issues that you've acknowledged but have not, IMO, adequately (at all really) addressed [1].

I think there are far safer solutions for scaling Bitcoin and integrating it with other chains than DC, which is again, a serious security risk to the whole network, as per [1].

Adopting DC would be an irreversible course of action, and one that in my opinion would unnecessarily damage not only other sidechains, but the main chain as well.

There is no rush, a proper solution is likely to present itself (I even have one that I'm toying with, but it's not quite ready yet for publication). I'm sure others are thinking similar thoughts too.

Kind regards,
Greg Slepak

[1] https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2017-June/014600.html

--

Please do not email me anything that you are not comfortable also sharing with the NSA.

On Jul 11, 2017, at 3:17 PM, Paul Sztorc via bitcoin-dev <bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:

Hi Greg,


On 7/11/2017 5:11 PM, Gregory Maxwell wrote:
I think it's great that people want to experiment with things like
drivechains/sidechains and what not, but their security model is very
distinct from Bitcoin's and, given the current highly centralized
mining ecosystem, arguably not very good.  So positioning them as a
major solution for the Bitcoin project is the wrong way to go. Instead
we should support people trying cool stuff, at their own risk.

So, given that although the vast majority of the things in the document
are things I've been supporting for months (Please see Note 1 way down
at the bottom) I cannot support your document.
Is this the only reason you do not support the document? If so I would
be happy to take out the section, if enough people share such a view.

As to your specific complaints, I have addressed both the security model
and the concept of mining centralization on this list in the recent
past. I would like to hear your responses to my claims, if you are
willing to share them. As for positioning DC as a major solution, it is
a little confusing because Luke-Jr and Adam back seem to feel it is at
least worth discussing on those terms (and I know of no reason why it
would not be discussed on those terms). The peer review here on
[bitcoin-dev] seemed to be moving forward without any serious
objections. And it seems unsportsmanlike for you to object, for reasons
which you keep only to yourself.


On a more meta-subject, I think grandly stated "top down" roadmaps
in highly collaborative development are of minimal utility at best
I'm aiming for minimal utility.

IMO the way to do "roadmaps" in Bitcoin is to roadmap the finalization
and release process once the basic technology is done; because it's
only past that point that guarantees can really start being made.

But that isn't what your document does-- it names a lot of things which
are still various shades of research at this point
I don't understand this at all. This document attempts to do exactly
what its predecessor did -- nothing more or less.

This was an incredible benefit to our customers, but the only way it was
possible was because _features_ were not guaranteed in a release.
No one is suggesting that features be guaranteed, either ever or in
releases.


One of the big screwups with segwit handling was people sticking
some random unrealistic date on it it which was done AFAIK,
by well meaning folks who took some random numbers from people
working on it for when they'd be done with the development-- not the
testing, not the integration, and certainly not deployment and published
it as The Date.  Then even though the development was actually done
by them, segwit was portrayed as massively delayed, because what
matters to the users is deployment-- which we can't control.
I really don't think they are related. For a start, software is almost
always delayed. An obvious second is that this entire scaling
conversation is polarized to the hilt and everyone that can be blamed
for something has been blamed for something.

No one likes to be held to a certain deadline, but this roadmap is just
about producing some clarity for people who do not do this 24/7.

I see you've done this yourself with signature aggregation, sticking Q4 2016
right on it, which as far as I can tell is a figure that comes from mars.
I asked Adam Back for it.

It's also not really appropriate to ask people to sign onto stuff when they
can't even review it.  Perhaps the signature aggregation stuff is insecure,
patent encumbered, or practically useless... (It won't be but no one could
tell that from your post; because it doesn't even exist as a concrete proposal)
Again, I think you're missing the point. If there is a problem with SA,
you can just suggest it be removed from the document.


I think people would rightly protest about a number of these things-- especially
things like the the agg sigs and tx compaction, "wtf, I've not heard
of this. Who
are you to insist this goes into Bitcoin?"
This is a very strange argument. I would consider it a benefit if people
learned from the document, and discovered things that they had not heard
of before.

There is no "insisting" of any kind.


[  Note 1: I think it is important to disclose that several of the
items in this list appear to be more or less quoted out of my own
blockstream-internal descriptions of things we've been working on in
Bitcoin.
A while back Adam Back asked me to publish something which contained
significant chunks of this document more or less verbatim,
He probably showed you an earlier draft. But I wrote almost all of this
myself, and I can only recall 2 or 3 phrases (not even complete
sentences) included from Adam Back. And most of the phrases are
themselves just boring descriptions that I'm sure anyone could write.
Some phrases may have simply been taken from bitcoincore.org or
somewhere similar.

I am not exactly sure what you are insinuating but I encourage you to
clarify it.

and I
declined saying that I personally disagree with some of his points and
didn't think that Blockstream attempting to redirect the Bitcoin
project (esp towards drivechains) was appropriate-- along with my
(above) views on roadmaps (which I have included here a private email
thread on the subject). I feel it's important to disclose this, and
that the document was not otherwise created with the input of project
contributors (except Luke-Jr, apparently). I wasn't previously aware
that Adam had been working with Paul on this, had I been I would have
also encouraged people to be a little more transparent about it. ]
I really don't understand what you are disclosing. That Adam asked you
for feedback on the draft? And then, in the next sentence, that not
enough experts were asked for feedback on the draft? I'm legitimately
confused by this part.

As I stated, we can remove the drivechain section. But surely you can
appreciate how bizarre your position on roadmaps is. What exactly, did
you intended to create at [1]? Since it is described explicitly as "the
roadmap in Capacity increases for the Bitcoin system", have you been
disagreeing with it's characterization as a 'roadmap' this entire time?
One wonders why you haven't said anything until now.

[1] https://bitcoincore.org/en/2015/12/21/capacity-increase/

In my first email I list the benefits of having a roadmap. One benefit
is that, without one, it is likely that a large majority of outsiders
have almost no idea at all what is being worked on, what effect it will
have, or when it might be ready, or to whom/what they should turn to for
advice on such matters. Do you have a different way of addressing this
communication problem?

Paul

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