On Mon, Jun 13, 2022 at 08:25:11PM -0400, Antoine Riard via bitcoin-dev wrote: > For that reason, I believe it would be beneficial to the flourishing of > multi-party funded transactions to fix the Dos vector by seeing a subset of > the network running full-rbf and enabling propagation of honest multi-party > transactions to the interested miners, replacing potential non-signaling > double-spend from a malicious counterparty. Moving towards that direction, > I've submitted a small patch against Bitcoin Core enabling it to turn on > full-rbf as a policy, still under review [3]. The default setting stays > **false**, i.e keeping opt-in RBF as a default replacement policy. I've > started to run the patch on a public node at 146.190.224.15. BTW I changed one of my OTS calendars to issue fee-bumping txs without the opt-in RBF flag set as an experiment. I also made sure txs would propagate to the above node. As of right now, it's up to 32 replacements (once per block), without any of them mined; the calendars use the strategy of starting at the minimum possible fee, and bumping the fee up every time a new block arrives without the tx getting mined. So that's evidence we don't have much full-rbf hash power at this moment. You can see the current status at: https://alice.btc.calendar.opentimestamps.org/ -- https://petertodd.org 'peter'[:-1]@petertodd.org