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41 sats \ 1 reply \ @k00b 1 Jun
I haven’t read either book but this is consistent with the stories I hear on either side:
But Bier and Ver's depictions of most of the deeper underlying are extremely different. To Bier, the small-block side is standing on behalf of users against small but powerful cabals of miners and exchanges trying to wrest control of the chain for their own benefit. Small blocks keep Bitcoin decentralized by making sure regular users can run nodes and verify the chain. To Ver, the big-block side is standing on behalf of users against small but powerful cabals of self-appointed high priests and VC-funded companies (namely, Blockstream) who profit from building the layer 2 solutions that the small-block roadmap necessitates. Large blocks keep Bitcoin decentralized by making sure users can continue to afford on-chain transactions without needing to depend on centralized layer-2 infrastructure.
The closest that I can see to the two sides even "agreeing on the terms of the debate" is that Bier's book accepts that many big blockers are well intentioned, even acknowledging that they have valid grievances regarding pro-small-block forum moderators censoring opposing views, but frequently criticizes the big block side for being incompetent, while Ver's book is more willing to ascribe malicious intent and even conspiracy theories to small blockers, but rarely criticizes their competence. This echoes a common political trope I have heard on quite a few occasions, that "the right thinks that the left is naive, the left thinks that the right is evil".
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I like this. It's so easy to paint the other side -- whoever that is -- as either idiots or bad actors, when really, there are obvious tradeoffs to everything, and people can reasonably prefer different ones.
The actual blocksize war was before my time, but when I started learning about it the big block side seemed the obvious right side. As I understood the ecosystem better, and the forces at play, I flipped. I'm glad the small blockers won the day, but I can definitely see the other perspective.
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You have to be a real idiot listening to this guy...
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Why is he still talking? just STFU and disappear , you did enough damage....
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0 sats \ 1 reply \ @om 1 Jun
I liked the article and especially his perspective of "the first civil war in a digital nation".
His complaint about neither book mentioning ZK-SNARK is understandable but since Bitcoin doesn't have gas, introducing resourse-hungry opcodes like OP_ZKSNARKVERIFY are not practical. That said, I do hope that similar functionality can be achieved with either OP_CAT or various BitVMs.
I wonder though why his article on civil wars in digital nations never mentions ETC.
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It's fascinating how both sides argue for decentralization but from different angles. Bier's view on ZK-SNARKs makes sense given Bitcoin's limitations. Curious omission of ETC in the civil war discussion though!
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😴
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