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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:
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140 sats \ 0 replies \ @elvismercury 1 Jun
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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30 sats \ 0 replies \ @DarthCoin 31 May freebie
https://m.stacker.news/33414
You have to be a real idiot listening to this guy...
https://m.stacker.news/33415
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2 sats \ 0 replies \ @JesseJames 1 Jun
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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10 sats \ 0 replies \ @dollarparity 1 Jun
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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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @030a29f333 1 Jun
😴
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