- policy neutrality. 
- It can't be censored.
- it can't be shut down
- and the rules cannot change from underneath you.

except it can be shutdown the minute it actually gets used by its inability to scale.

what's the point of having all this if nobody can use it?
what's the point of going through all that energy and CO2 for a mere 24,000 transactions an hour?

It's clear that it's just a matter of time before it collapses.

Here's a simple proposal (concept) that doesn't pretend to set a fixed block size limit as you can't ever know the demands the future will bring https://gist.github.com/gubatron/143e431ee01158f27db4

We don't need to go as far as countries with hyper inflation trying to use the technology to make it collapse, anybody here who has distributed commercial/free end user software knows that any small company out there installs more copies in a couple weeks than all the bitcoin users we have at the moment, all we need is a single company/project with a decent amount of users who are now enabled to transact directly on the blockchain to screw it all up (perhaps OpenBazaar this winter could make this whole thing come down, hopefully they'll take this debate and the current limitations before their release, and boy are they coding nonstop on it now that they got funded), the last of your fears should be a malicious government trying to shut you down, for that to happen you must make an impact first, for now this is a silly game in the grand scheme of things.

And you did sound pretty bad, all of his points were very valid and they share the concern of many people, many investors, entrepreneurs putting shitload of money, time and their lives on a much larger vision than that of a network that does a mere 3,500 tx/hour, but some people seem to be able to live in impossible or useless ideals. 

It's simply irresponsible to not want to give the network a chance to grow a bit more. Miners centralizing is inevitable given the POW based consensus, hobbists-mining is only there for countries with very cheap energy.

If things remain this way, this whole thing will be a massive failure and it will probably take another decade before we can open our mouths about cryptocurrencies, decentralization and what not, and this stubornness will be the one policy that censored everyone, that shutdown everyone, that made the immutable rules not matter.

Perhaps it will be Stellar what ends up delivering at this stubborn pace.


On Tue, Aug 11, 2015 at 4:38 AM, Thomas Zander via bitcoin-dev <bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
>It follows then, that if we make a decision now which destroys that property, which makes it possible to censor bitcoin, to deny service, or to pressure miners into changing rules contrary to user interests, then Bitcoin is no longer interesting.

You asked to be convinced of the need for bigger blocks. I gave that.
What makes you think bitcoin will break when more people use it?

Sent on the go, excuse the brevity. 
From: Mark Friedenbach
Sent: Tuesday, 11 August 2015 08:10
To: Thomas Zander
Cc: Bitcoin Dev
Subject: Re: [bitcoin-dev] Fees and the block-finding process

On Mon, Aug 10, 2015 at 11:31 PM, Thomas Zander via bitcoin-dev <bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
On Monday 10. August 2015 23.03.39 Mark Friedenbach wrote:
> This is where things diverge. It's fine to pick a new limit or growth
> trajectory. But defend it with data and reasoned analysis.

We currently serve about 0,007% of the world population sending maybe one
transaction a month.
This can only go up.

There are about 20 currencies in the world that are unstable and showing early
signs of hyperinflation. If even small percentage of these people cash-out and
get Bitcoins for their savings you'd have the amount of people using Bitcoin
as savings go from maybe half a million to 10 million in the space of a couple
of months. Why so fast? Because all the world currencies are linked.
Practically all currencies follow the USD, and while that one may stay robust
and standing, the linkage has been shown in the past to cause chain-effects.

It is impossible to predict how much uptake Bitcoin will take, but we have
seen big rises in price as Cyprus had a bailin and then when Greece first
showed bad signs again.
Lets do our due diligence and agree that in the current world economy there
are sure signs that people are considering Bitcoin on a big scale.

Bigger amount of people holding Bitcoin savings won't make the transaction
rate go up very much, but if you have feet on the ground you already see that
people go back to barter in countries like Poland, Ireland, Greece etc.
And Bitcoin will be an alternative to good to ignore.  Then transaction rates
will go up. Dramatically.

If you are asking for numbers, that is a bit tricky. Again; we are at
0,007%... Thats like a f-ing rounding error in the world economy. You can't
reason from that. Its like using a float to do calculations that you should
have done in a double and getting weird output.

Bottom line is that a maximum size of 8Mb blocks is not that odd. Because a 20
times increase is very common in a "company" that is about 6 years old.
For instance Android was about that age when it started to get shipped by non-
Google companies. There the increase was substantially bigger and the company
backing it was definitely able to change direction faster than the Bitcoin
oiltanker can change direction.

...

Another metric to remember; if you follow hackernews (well, the incubator more
than the linked articles) you'd be exposed to the thinking of these startups.
Their only criteria is growth. and this is rather substantial growth. Like
150% per month.  Naturally, most of these build on top of html or other
existing technologies.  But the point is that exponential growth is expected
in any startup.  They typically have a much much more agressive timeline,
though. Every month instead of every year.
Having exponential growth in the blockchain is really not odd and even if we
have LN or sidechains or the next changetip, this space will be used. And we
will still have scarcity.
 
I'm sorry, I really don't want to sound like a jerk, but not a single word of that mattered. Yes we all want Bitcoin to scale such that every person in the world can use it without difficulty. However if that were all that we cared about then I would be remiss if I did not point out that there are plenty of better, faster, and cheaper solutions to finding global consensus over a payment ledger than Bitcoin. Architectures which are algorithmically superior in their scaling properties. Indeed they are already implemented and you can use them today:

https://www.stellar.org/
http://opentransactions.org/

So why do I work on Bitcoin, and why do I care about the outcome of this debate? Because Bitcoin offers one thing, and one thing only which alternative architectures fundamentally lack: policy neutrality. It can't be censored, it can't be shut down, and the rules cannot change from underneath you. *That* is what Bitcoin offers that can't be replicated at higher scale with a SQL database and an audit log.

It follows then, that if we make a decision now which destroys that property, which makes it possible to censor bitcoin, to deny service, or to pressure miners into changing rules contrary to user interests, then Bitcoin is no longer interesting. We might as well get rid of mining at that point and make Bitcoin look like Stellar or Open-Transactions because at least then we'd scale even better and not be pumping millions of tons of CO2 into the atmosphere from running all those ASICs.

On the other side, 3Tb harddrives are sold, which take 8Mb blocks without
problems.

Straw man, storage is not an issue.
 
You can buy broadband in every relevant country that easily supports the
bandwidth we need. (remember we won't jump to 8Mb in a day, it will likely
take at least 6 months).

Neither one of those assertions is clear. Keep in mind the goal is to have Bitcoin survive active censorship. Presumably that means being able to run a node even in the face of a hostile ISP or government. Furthermore, it means being location independent and being able to move around. In many places the higher the bandwidth requirements the fewer the number of ISPs that are available to service you, and the more visible you are.

It may also be necessary to be able to run over Tor. And not just today's Tor which is developed, serviced, and supported by the US government, but a Tor or I2P that future governments have turned hostile towards and actively censor or repress. Or existing authoritative governments, for that matter. How much bandwidth would be available through those connections?

It may hopefully never be necessary to operate under such constraints, except by freedom seeking individuals within existing totalitarian regimes. However the credible threat of doing so may be what keeps Bitcoin from being repressed in the first place. Lose the capability to go underground, and it will be pressured into regulation, eventually.

To the second point, it has been previously pointed out that large miners stand to gain from larger blocks, for the same basic underlying reasons as selfish mining. The incentive is to increase blocks, and miners are able to do so at will and without cost. I would not be so certain that we wouldn't see large blocks sooner than that.
 
We should get the inverted bloom filters stuff (or competing products) working
at least on a one-to-one basis so we can solve the propagation time problem.
There frankly is a huge amount of optimization that can be done in that area,
we don't even use locality (pingtime) to optimize distribution.
From my experience you can expect a 2-magnitude speedup in that same 6 month
period by focusing some research there.

This is basically already deployed thanks to Matt's relay network. Further improvements are not going to have dramatic effects.
 
Remember 8Gb/block still doesn't support VISA/Mastercard.

No, it doesn't. And 8GB/block is ludicrously large -- it would absolutely, without any doubt destroy the very nature of Bitcoin, turning it into a fundamentally uninteresting reincarnation of the existing financial system. And still be unable to compete with VISA/Mastercard.

So why then the pressure to go down a route that WILL lead to failure by your own metrics?

I humbly suggest that maybe we should play the strengths of Bitcoin instead -- it's trustlessness via policy neutrality.

Either that, or go work on Stellar. Because that's where it's headed otherwise.


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