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From: 0xB10C <0xb10c@gmail•com>
To: Bitcoin Development Mailing List <bitcoindev@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [bitcoindev] Adding New BIP Editors
Date: Thu, 4 Apr 2024 05:58:25 -0700 (PDT)	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <d807460e-b4ed-4017-815d-c2f69034cb19n@googlegroups.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <10ffcb51-9389-4127-800c-0b8f16ba0a10n@googlegroups.com>


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I support Kanzure, Ruben, Atack, and Murch as new BIP editors. 

Niklas Goegge schrieb am Donnerstag, 4. April 2024 um 11:12:46 UTC+2:

> Hi,
>
> Assuming they are willing, I am supportive of Kanzure, Ruben, Laolu and 
> Murch as BIP editors.
>
> Best
> Niklas
>
> Anthony Towns schrieb am Donnerstag, 4. April 2024 um 06:33:05 UTC+1:
>
>> On Wed, Apr 03, 2024 at 07:44:00PM +0000, Pieter Wuille wrote: 
>> > - Scope: related to technology that supports the bitcoin currency. 
>>
>> > This last one may be controversial, but I feel that some of the 
>> discussion the past months about the process has shown that there is 
>> unclarity/disagreement here, and it would be good to have some guideline 
>> written out here. I think scope will inevitably be somewhat of a grey zone, 
>> but I feel some limits (whether spelled out or not) will exist regardless 
>> (nobody would consider including the HTTP spec in scope for a BIP, I 
>> think?). 
>>
>> > I also don't think scope should be tied to specific technologies (e.g. 
>> it shouldn't just be about on-chain transactions, as e.g. that would 
>> exclude address formats), but if not that, what scoping is useful? And to 
>> me, restricting to technology that supports the bitcoin currency is fairly 
>> clear, reasonable, and avoids a circular definition. As an example, that 
>> would exclude OpenTimestamps from scope (which was suggested in 
>> https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2023-October/022077.html). 
>> I see that as an unrelated application which happens to make use of the 
>> Bitcoin blockchain, which on itself is one of the technologies that 
>> supports bitcoin - but is an indirection too far to be in scope. 
>>
>> For BINANA I phrased that as "proposals only being rejected if they are 
>> ... unrelated to Bitcoin", on the basis that deciding some BIP/BIN is 
>> dumb and ignoring it wastes a lot less time than arguing about whether 
>> it's a good thing for the monetary properties of Bitcoin (which is what 
>> I'm interested in helping people work on). 
>>
>> For example, would adding script opcodes whose only purpose is to better 
>> support moving BTC to/from sidechains like Liquid or WBTC on Eth, where 
>> they can be used as collateral in market makers for trading other tokens 
>> count as "supporting the bitcoin currency"? This might include such 
>> things like Drivechains (BIP 300, 301), eg. Is such a feature more about 
>> supporting asset trading, or is anything that involves buying/selling 
>> things with Bitcoin count as supporting bitcoin as a currency? 
>>
>> Does it make a difference that a script opcode would be consensus 
>> critical? Another way of allowing trading between BTC and other assets is 
>> the "Taproot Assets" proposal (BIPs PR#1489), which anchor trades between 
>> BTC and tokenized assets on the Bitcoin blockchain, but don't require 
>> consensus changes. If the BIPS repo includes docs on Drivechains, is 
>> excluding proposals about Taproot Assets or RGB or similar that valuable? 
>>
>> Those all seems arguable to me; but why force people to have those 
>> arguments over making up a number and hosting a document in a git repo? 
>>
>> > > * The Comments-URI thing is outdated and everyone seems to ignore it. 
>> > > Comments-Summary is even weirder. 
>> > Agreed. It's unused, and sometimes misinterpreted. I think we should 
>> get rid of it. 
>>
>> For BINANA I added a "Discussion" header where the BIN author can point 
>> to 
>> locations where discussion has/can take place -- it seemed like a useful 
>> thing to have beyond just links in the "rationale", both for researching 
>> background into the proposals development, and as a pointer to somewhere 
>> people can leave additional feedback. I don't think there's much value in 
>> having a dedicated discussion area in the BINANA/BIP repo itself though. 
>>
>> > > * "Informational BIPs do not necessarily represent a Bitcoin 
>> community 
>> > > consensus or recommendation". Aha, does this imply that Standards 
>> > > Track BIPs need to represent a Bitcoin community consensus or 
>> > > recommendation? 
>> > Indeed. I don't think BIPs should be representing community consensus 
>> or recommendations. But perhaps they can document individual pieces of 
>> evidence of acceptance; see further? 
>>
>> Documenting consensus change activation seems useful if nothing else, 
>> eg as in BIP 90. 
>>
>> > > * Ever tried to write pseudocode or LaTeX in mediawiki format? It's 
>> > > more than annoying, believe me. 
>> > I'd like permitting BIPs to be written in markdown. 
>>
>> This is already permitted, see https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/pull/1504 
>>
>> > Some forms of Status are useful I think, but they ought to reflect the 
>> author's intent, not the community's perception. E.g. "Draft", "Proposed", 
>> and "Withdrawn" make sense to me for any kind of standard. In Draft stage 
>> more substantial changes could be permitted, but would convey the idea 
>> isn't yet intended for adoption. Of course, the BIP1 status fields weren't 
>> really used, and the BIP2 status fields don't seem to be doing much better. 
>> If we assume that BIP3 status fields aren't going to be used either this is 
>> all for nought, but perhaps it's still worth trying with a significantly 
>> simplified assortment of statuses. 
>> > 
>> > Things like "Active / Final" and "Rejected" relate to community 
>> acceptance, and I agree those don't belong in BIPs. 
>>
>> I think "Proposed" is much more related to community acceptance than 
>> "Active" -- you can reasonably say something is "Active" once a single 
>> implementation has a released version that actively supports it, for 
>> example; but describing a standard as "Proposed" seems to be pretty 
>> clearly trying to achieve so form of community acceptance? Who else 
>> would you be proposing it to? 
>>
>> I'd look at the lifecycle more as something like: 
>>
>> * Draft: author expects further changes, don't deploy this 
>> * Proposed: author is hoping for multiple implementations to adopt this; 
>> author thinks it's complete, but there may be objections and it may 
>> need to go back to Draft state to resolve those objections 
>> * Active: one or more implementations have deployed this feature as 
>> specced. changes will usually be specified in a new proposal/standard. 
>> acceptable changes might be fixing ambiguities, adding extra rationale 
>> or test cases, etc. 
>> * Withdrawn: no current implementations support this, author doesn't 
>> think it should be adopted, author isn't planning on making further 
>> changes to it 
>>
>> For comparison, BINANA currently has BINs marked Draft, Active and Info: 
>> https://github.com/bitcoin-inquisition/binana 
>>
>> (Note that adding a consensus change in inquisition and doing a heretical 
>> activation of that change on signet would still leave the spec in "Draft" 
>> -- further changes are expected) 
>>
>> (As far as BIP 2's list goes, I think Deferred should just be Draft; 
>> Rejected/Obsolete should just be Withdrawn; Final should just be Active; 
>> and Replaced should either be Withdrawn or Active depending on whether 
>> the replacement is backwards compatible, accompanied by Superseded-By) 
>>
>> > As far as judging consensus goes, perhaps actual consensus changes are 
>> an exception? I feel that for those, an "Accepted" status may actually make 
>> sense, because they actually require the ecosystem to have agreement about. 
>>
>> How about BIP 148 or BIP 91? I think it's fair to call both of those 
>> "Active" and would have been fair to mark them Active sometime in 
>> April-July 2017 -- that doesn't mean there was necessarily community 
>> consensus behind them: merely that there was software implementing 
>> those standards active on the network, and that if someone wanted to do 
>> something similar but different, that would warrant being a different 
>> standard. If it had turned out there wasn't consensus behind either 
>> proposal, and no one was mining a blockchain that those implementations 
>> would accept, at most that would warrant the author marking the BIPs as 
>> "Withdrawn" IMO. 
>>
>> The same argument applies to BIP 343 I think. I believe only one 
>> implementation adopted it [0], and I don't believe any actively 
>> maintained 
>> software implements that BIP as written, but if you did implement it 
>> you'd continue to track the bitcoin blockchain, so I think it would 
>> be fair to have marked that BIP as "Active" once it was adopted by an 
>> implementation, and to have left it marked that way. 
>>
>> [0] "Bitcoin Core-based Taproot Client" which doesn't even seem to exist 
>> in web.archive.org. 
>>
>> https://github.com/BitcoinActivation/BitcoinTaproot.org/blob/master/taproot.html 
>>
>> If the segwit2x fork had ever had a written spec, I likewise think it 
>> would have been appropriate for it to be a BIP, perhaps being marked as 
>> Proposed on 2017-07-01 [1], Active on 2017-07-22 [2], and Withdrawn on 
>> either 2017-11-08 [3] or 2019-10-09 (when the btc1/bitcoin github repo 
>> was marked as archived). 
>>
>> [1] https://github.com/btc1/bitcoin/pull/50 
>> [2] https://github.com/btc1/bitcoin/releases/tag/v1.14.5 
>> [3] 
>> https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-segwit2x/2017-November/000685.html 
>>
>> Cheers, 
>> aj 
>>
>

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  reply	other threads:[~2024-04-04 13:02 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 96+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2024-02-27 18:53 'Ava Chow' via Bitcoin Development Mailing List
2024-02-27 20:11 ` [bitcoindev] " 'Léo Haf' via Bitcoin Development Mailing List
2024-02-27 22:40   ` Luke Dashjr
2024-02-27 22:57     ` 'Ava Chow' via Bitcoin Development Mailing List
2024-02-27 23:26     ` Steve Lee
2024-02-28 11:12     ` bitcoin-dev-ml.void867 via Bitcoin Development Mailing List
2024-02-28 16:31     ` Tim Ruffing
2024-03-07 20:56       ` Antoine Riard
2024-03-14 11:56       ` Chris Stewart
2024-03-27 21:25         ` Murch
2024-03-27 23:36           ` Keagan McClelland
2024-03-27 23:39           ` John C. Vernaleo
2024-03-28 13:02             ` Murch
2024-03-28 16:09               ` /dev /fd0
2024-03-28 20:04                 ` Matt Corallo
2024-03-28 20:31                   ` Antoine Riard
2024-03-28 20:59                   ` John C. Vernaleo
2024-03-28 21:19                     ` Matt Corallo
2024-03-29  2:34                     ` Michael Folkson
2024-03-29  5:24                   ` /dev /fd0
2024-03-29 21:08                     ` Antoine Riard
2024-03-30 11:51                       ` Michael Folkson
2024-03-30 20:01                         ` Antoine Riard
2024-03-31 16:01                           ` Michael Folkson
2024-04-01 20:14                             ` Antoine Riard
2024-04-07 10:11                             ` Ali Sherief
2024-04-01 21:13                   ` David A. Harding
2024-04-01 23:55                     ` /dev /fd0
2024-04-02  0:37                       ` 'Ava Chow' via Bitcoin Development Mailing List
2024-04-02 13:49                         ` /dev /fd0
2024-04-02 14:28                           ` Luke Dashjr
2024-04-02 15:13                             ` Gloria Zhao
2024-04-02 15:39                               ` Luke Dashjr
2024-04-03 15:03                                 ` Murch
2024-04-02  8:18                     ` Michael Folkson
2024-04-02 14:24                     ` nvk
2024-04-11 14:22                       ` Sergi Delgado Segura
2024-04-15 17:50                         ` Matt Corallo
2024-04-16 12:34                           ` Tim Ruffing
2024-04-16 13:32                             ` NVK
2024-04-16 17:08                         ` 'Ava Chow' via Bitcoin Development Mailing List
2024-04-17 23:58                           ` 'nsvrn' via Bitcoin Development Mailing List
2024-04-19 22:32                           ` Olaoluwa Osuntokun
2024-04-20 19:14                           ` 'Ava Chow' via Bitcoin Development Mailing List
2024-04-20 19:48                             ` NVK
2024-04-20 19:59                             ` Michael Folkson
2024-04-20 20:59                               ` 'Ava Chow' via Bitcoin Development Mailing List
2024-04-20 20:46                             ` Steve Lee
2024-04-20 21:08                               ` 'Ava Chow' via Bitcoin Development Mailing List
2024-04-20 21:11                                 ` Steve Lee
2024-04-20 21:37                                   ` 'Ava Chow' via Bitcoin Development Mailing List
2024-04-20 22:03                                     ` Steve Lee
2024-04-20 22:47                                       ` 'Ava Chow' via Bitcoin Development Mailing List
2024-04-22  2:44                                         ` Steve Lee
2024-04-20 22:21                                 ` Michael Folkson
2024-04-20 23:05                                   ` 'Ava Chow' via Bitcoin Development Mailing List
2024-04-21 11:43                                     ` Michael Folkson
2024-04-21 16:39                                       ` 'Ava Chow' via Bitcoin Development Mailing List
2024-04-21 17:57                                         ` Michael Folkson
2024-04-21 18:47                                           ` 'Ava Chow' via Bitcoin Development Mailing List
2024-04-21 19:18                                             ` Michael Folkson
2024-04-21 20:48                                             ` Antoine Riard
2024-04-21 23:01                             ` Matt Corallo
2024-04-22  0:06                               ` 'Ava Chow' via Bitcoin Development Mailing List
2024-04-22  4:28                             ` Ali Sherief
2024-04-23 22:15                             ` Anthony Towns
2024-04-25  6:42                               ` Antoine Riard
2024-03-29 22:17               ` Keagan McClelland
2024-03-30  4:04               ` Peter Todd
2024-04-01 18:42               ` Jonas Nick
2024-03-27 23:54           ` Matt Corallo
2024-03-28 15:50             ` Brandon Black
2024-03-28 19:42               ` Antoine Riard
2024-03-28 20:04               ` Matt Corallo
2024-04-02 13:17                 ` [bitcoindev] Time for an update to BIP2? Tim Ruffing
2024-04-03 19:44                   ` Pieter Wuille
2024-04-04  5:00                     ` Anthony Towns
2024-04-04  9:09                       ` Niklas Goegge
2024-04-04 12:58                         ` 0xB10C [this message]
2024-05-13 18:33                       ` Murch
2024-04-01 18:41             ` [bitcoindev] Re: Adding New BIP Editors Murch
2024-03-31 17:01           ` 'Ava Chow' via Bitcoin Development Mailing List
2024-04-01  6:21             ` /dev /fd0
2024-04-01 11:58             ` Michael Folkson
2024-04-03 16:58             ` Juan Galt
2024-04-03 17:24               ` Vasil Dimov
2024-04-03 18:34                 ` 'Fabian' via Bitcoin Development Mailing List
2024-03-07 22:39     ` Keagan McClelland
2024-02-27 21:33 ` [bitcoindev] " 'Antoine Poinsot' via Bitcoin Development Mailing List
2024-02-27 21:48   ` Greg Tonoski
2024-02-27 23:10 ` [bitcoindev] " /dev /fd0
2024-02-28  4:22 ` /dev /fd0
2024-03-09 10:46 ` Michael Folkson
2024-03-10 17:27   ` Bitcoin Error Log
2024-03-11 16:48   ` Jon A
2024-04-05 19:18 ` Larry Ruane

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