I applaud the miners. Now we are achieving real consensus and it's encouraging. While the future is still uncertain as to the best method of gaining social consensus, we now know the stakes and value of coming together.
BTC To the moon.
Is it the perceived attack that you're against or is the proposal to expand the transaction throughput size?imo Bitcoin was designed by satoshi to give this sort of attack massive chance of failure.
I'm counting on him. I'm counting on hash majority never activating segwit.
I'm against the attack - segwit.Is it the perceived attack that you're against or is the proposal to expand the transaction throughput size?imo Bitcoin was designed by satoshi to give this sort of attack massive chance of failure.
I'm counting on him. I'm counting on hash majority never activating segwit.
I'm referring to BIP91 lock-in and activation, which means BIP141 (SegWit) will be enforced. Non-BIP141 signalling blocks are now rejected.I applaud the miners. Now we are achieving real consensus and it's encouraging. While the future is still uncertain as to the best method of gaining social consensus, we now know the stakes and value of coming together.
BTC To the moon.
If your talking about a user activated segwit soft fork?, you can count me out of that BS for what it is worth.
segwit is dangerous for Bitcoin immutability. Even more so soft forked.
imo Bitcoin was designed by satoshi to give this sort of attack massive chance of failure.
I'm counting on him. I'm counting on hash majority never activating segwit.
While things aren't over yet, it's clear that SegWit will be enforced now.Things aren't over yet.
UASF may still happen but probably least likely.
Segwit2x is going to happen but the 2x part will be fought hard and may not happen.
UAHF (Bitcoin ABC) looks like it happening anyways on Aug 1st.
Plus we still have ongoing alternative clients like BU and Classic.
segwit "anyone can spend"?I have absolutely no concerns about SegWit causing a problem for immutability. I am not sure what you even mean by this.
Anyways, I am looking forward to making SegWit transactions on Bitcoin's mainnet, and testing new address formats such as BIP173. http://bitcoin.sipa.be/bech32/demo/demo.html
SegWit facts – Not ‘anyone can spend’ so stop saying they cansegwit "anyone can spend"?I have absolutely no concerns about SegWit causing a problem for immutability. I am not sure what you even mean by this.
Anyways, I am looking forward to making SegWit transactions on Bitcoin's mainnet, and testing new address formats such as BIP173. http://bitcoin.sipa.be/bech32/demo/demo.html
I don't see why Segwit and another hard fork that increases block-size is implemented. Wouldn't such a system be more efficient and appease to more of the Bitcoin community?I'm against the attack - segwit.Is it the perceived attack that you're against or is the proposal to expand the transaction throughput size?imo Bitcoin was designed by satoshi to give this sort of attack massive chance of failure.
I'm counting on him. I'm counting on hash majority never activating segwit.
More tx throughput is needed - bigger blocks.
I agree with Craig Wright's speech posted elsewhere on "the forum" by Ver.
Craig Wright's speech was awful. Any sophisticated point he was trying to make was muttled by his horrible, seemingly unprepared rhetoric. He sounded like the typical American politician. Full of big emotion, small words, and a weak grasp of the English language.I'm against the attack - segwit.
More tx throughput is needed - bigger blocks.
I agree with Craig Wright's speech posted elsewhere on "the forum" by Ver.
Roger explains it very well. I'll try to paraphrase (and likely do so poorly), the problem with Segwit is that if you separate the witness from the transaction there's no mechanism to confirm that the correct parties were involved in the transaction. This will open up opportunity for funds to be stolen or rerouted from a transaction without any proof of where the transaction was originally intended to go. Obviously if this risk is realized the consequences are significant.I don't see why Segwit and another hard fork that increases block-size is implemented. Wouldn't such a system be more efficient and appease to more of the Bitcoin community?
Unfortunately, the fact the messenger is awful, does not make the message wrong.Craig Wright's speech was awful. Any sophisticated point he was trying to make was muttled by his horrible, seemingly unprepared rhetoric. He sounded like the typical American politician. Full of big emotion, small words, and a weak grasp of the English language.I'm against the attack - segwit.
More tx throughput is needed - bigger blocks.
I agree with Craig Wright's speech posted elsewhere on "the forum" by Ver.
If it wasn't for Roger Ver interpreting Craig's remarks in a more concise manner I would have dismissed Craig's point of view completely.
segwit brings massive technical debt, far more so through a soft fork.I don't see why Segwit and another hard fork that increases block-size is implemented. Wouldn't such a system be more efficient and appease to more of the Bitcoin community?
This is only a small part of the problems of segwit soft fork, as you probably know.Anybody who argues against SegWit because it uses “anyone can spend” transactions is either being disingenuous or does not understand what they are talking about.
Anybody who persists in making this argument is lying or dim. By exposing themselves as either of these things they completely undermine their cause and can be safely dismissed.
https://seebitcoin.com/2017/02/segwit-f ... -they-can/
What do you mean by 4x the loading for a potential max 1.7 return? What is loading and return?segwit brings massive technical debt, far more so through a soft fork.I don't see why Segwit and another hard fork that increases block-size is implemented. Wouldn't such a system be more efficient and appease to more of the Bitcoin community?
segwit creates 4x the loading for a potential max 1.7 return.
That is not efficient.
The Bitcoin "community" don't generally understand bitcoin.
Most "community" members are not real.
On bitcointalk for example, i have proven that to be the case.
Just shill accounts under theymos' control.
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