pull down to refresh
60 sats \ 0 replies \ @nym OP 12 Apr \ parent \ on: The risk of working on social contracts and Bitcoin- Gregory Maxwell (2021) security
Of course, perhaps this is already fine, because there are enough devs who’ll happily quit their jobs if needed, or enough devs who have already hit their FU-money threshold and aren’t beholden to anyone?
To me though, I think it’s a bit of a red flag that LukeDashjr hasn’t gotten one of these funding gigs — I know he’s applied for a couple, and he should superficially be trivially qualified: he’s a long time contributor, he’s been influential in calling out problems with BIP16, in making segwit deployment feasible, in avoiding some of the possible disasters that could have resulted from the UASF activation of segwit, and in working out how to activate taproot, and he’s one of the people who’s good at spotting subtle interactions that risk bugs and vulnerabilities of the sort I talked about above. On the other hand he’s known for having some weird ideas and can be difficult to work with and maybe his expectations are unrealistic. What’s that add up to? Maybe he’s a test case for this exact attack on Bitcoin. Or maybe he’s just had a run of bad luck. Or maybe he just needs to sell himself better, or adopt a more business-friendly attitude — and I guess that’s the attitude to adopt if you want to solve the problem yourself rather than rely on someone else to help.
But… if we all did that, aren’t we hitting that exact “conformity” problem; and doesn’t that more or less leave everyone vulnerable to the “pariah” attack, exploitable by someone pushing your buttons until you overreact at something that’s otherwise innocuous, then tarring you as the sort of person that’s hard to work with, and repeating that process until that sticks, and no one wants to work with you?
While I certainly (and tautologically) like working with people who I like working with, I’m not sure there’s a need for devs to exclusively work with people they find pleasant, especially if the cost is missing things in review, or risking something of a vulnerable monoculture. On the other hand, I tend to think of patience as a virtue, and thus that people who test my patience are doing me a service in much the same way exams in school do — they show you where you’re at and what you need to work on — so it might also be that I’m overly tolerant of annoying people. And I did also list “making working on Bitcoin unenjoyable” as another potential attack vector. So I don’t know that there’s an easy answer. Maybe promoting Luke’s github sponsors page is the thing to do?
Anyway, conclusion.
Despite my initial thoughts above that taproot might be less of a priority this year in order to focus on robustness rather than growth, I think the “let wallets do more multisig so users funds are less likely to be lost” is still a killer feature, so I think that’s still #1 for me. I think trying to help with making p2p and mempool code be more resilient, more encapsulated and more testable might be #2, though I’m not sure how to mitigate the code churn risk that creates. I don’t think I’m going to work much on CI/tests/static analysis, but I do think it’s important so will try to do more review to help that stuff move forward.
Otherwise, I’d like to get the anyprevout patches brought up to date and testable. In so far as that enables eltoo, which then allows better reliability of lightning channels, that’s kind-of a fit for the robustness theme (and robustness in general, I think, is what’s holding lightning back, and thus fits in with the “keep lightning growing at the same rate as Bitcoin, or better” goal as well). It’s hard to rate that as highly as robustness improvements at the base Bitcoin layer though, I think.
There are plenty of other neat technical things too; but I think this year might be one of those ones where you have to keep reminding yourself of a few fundamentals to avoid getting swept up in the excitement, so keeping the above as foundations is probably a good idea.
Otherwise, I’m hoping I’ll be able to continue supporting other people’s dev funding efforts — whether blue sky, or just keeping on with what’s working so far. I’m also hoping to do a bit more writing — my resolution last year was meant to be to blog more, and didn’t really work out, so why not double down on it? Probably a good start (aside from this post) would be writing a response to the Productivity Commission Right to Repair issues paper; I imagine there’ll probably be some more crypto related issues papers to respond to over this year too…
If for whatever reason you’re reading this looking for suggestions you might want to do rather than what I’m thinking about, here are some that come to my mind:
Money: consider supporting or hiring Luke, or otherwise supporting (or, if it’s in your wheelhouse, doing) Bitcoin dev work, or supporting MIT DCI, or funding/setting up something independent from but equally as good as MIT DCI or Chaincode (in increasing order of how much money we’re talking). If you’re a bank affected by the recent OCC letter on payments, making a serious investment in lightning dev might be smart.
Bitcoin code: help improve internal test coverage, static analysis, and/or build reproducibility; setup and maintain external tests; review code and find bugs in PRs before they get merged. Otherwise there’s a million interesting features to work on, so do that.
Lightning: get PTLCs working (using taproot on signet or ecdsa-based), anyprevout/eltoo, improve spam prevention. Otherwise, implementing and fine-tuning everything already on lightning’s TODO list.
Other projects: do more testing on signet in general, test taproot integration on signet (particularly for robustness features like multisig), monitor blockchain and mempool activity for oddities to help detect and prevent potential attacks asap.
(Finally, just in case it’s not already obvious or clear: these are what I think are priorities today, there’s not meant to be any implication that anything outside of these ideas shouldn’t be being worked on)