Bitcoin doesn't need "changes" it needs better "education."
Recently here on Stacker News and since forever on Twitter... there have been proposals for 'forks' and 'upgrades' and 'new features' and quite frankly they're 99% a 'solution in search of a problem' in my opinion.
I read over and over about how the population of the world will 'share' UTXOs and how UTXOs will "need to scale"... so that everyone (Billions of people?) will be able to custody their own UTXOs. Otherwise Bitcoin doesn't "scale" and it's relegated to the 'lesser' and it 'will have failed'.
And all I have to say is that I have news for you - you're absolutely right Bitcoin does not "scale" on its base layer and no blockchain can that's worth anything.
The future of Bitcoin is through scaling solutions (like lightning) and the vast majority of "On-Chain" Bitcoin will rarely move. Let's say that again - in the future, it's logical that the vast majority of On-Chain Bitcoin will rarely move.
- On-Chain isn't fast enough, seamless enough, or inevitably cheap enough for cups of coffee or small daily purchases for many, many People... and believing otherwise is an absolute fantasy. This fantasy does not help Bitcoiners or members of the public who might become Bitcoiners in the future.
If somehow, maybe, people were clamoring, tripping over themselves to make on-chain transactions, to send money around the world, to make purchases and send funds from address to address.... spending and saving, spending and saving...
Then I would agree OK let's talk about scaling and solutions and the risks of changing protocol and "soft-forks."
But precisely none of that has happened.
We need to get real:
- How many people in your actual day to day lives do you know that use Lightning... much less know what it is? Much less know the basics of Bitcoin or who have made any serious effort to study it?
- What percentage of Bitcoiners (people who "own" Bitcoin) actually self-custody? VS leaving it on an exchange like Bitcoiners have recommended against...
- And to the extent that self-custody is more available today than ever through Sparrow or smartphone apps or inexpensive hardware wallets (that you can build yourself)...
Why the hell don't more people self-custody? The actual percentage of those who do (from the data available) is very small.
"Oh but the fees are too high."
"It's too complicated."
"People will never use the hardware-wallet thing..."
To which I call bullshit.
Are people stupid?
Do they not drive cars? (Hi-speed, heavy vehicles for which they are responsible?)
Do they have everything handed to them all their lives? Does the grocery store give out tomatoes, onions, and potatoes to consume for free?
Transaction fees periodically come down to the 2-3 sats/vb range (as the Runes Enjoyeers run out of money frequently) at which point withdrawal from exchanges is economical. And I can't tell you the number of forum posts out there complaining about "30$ exchange withdraw fees..." positing about "how expensive Bitcoin is" to use at "30$ per transaction" (at which point someone inevitably says 'buy my shitcoin bro it's cheap...')
My brothers and sisters, this is not a Bitcoin problem this is an exchange problem and an education problem by which users don't tell exchanges to go fuck themselves and hold them accountable.
Had users purchased their Bitcoin on FTX, promptly withdrew it and kept it themselves in a shoebox at home (WAY safer than FTX) they wouldn't have been burned by criminals.
And let's suppose that all these tools were seamlessly and readily available right now: vaults, UTXO sharing, Arc, channel factories, the conditional spending of UTXOs all of it available to the masses in smartphone apps on your favorite platform...
Would it meaningfully move Bitcoin adoption today?
No. No it wouldn't.
And no-one (relatively speaking) would probably necessarily them.
And the adoption of the real, meaningful kind that's good for the ecosystem we want to see - self-custody, individually-opened lightning channels, coinjoins, coin control, the spending of Bitcoin on goods and services...
These things no matter the ease of use of a tool require the user to approach Bitcoin with an open mind and give a shit and with 8 dollar$ lattes and 30$ lunches in most American cities...
Users just don't give a shit.
And the "cope" of how expensive using Bitcoin is, is absolutely not convincing.
- Look at all the plane tickets spent on dumb vacations.
- The Uber rides from drunken nights out (at 5$ a beer, 10+$ a cocktail in cities)
- The expensive gifts and toys people finance to keep in their front yards keeping up with the Joneses that they can't really...
- and all the obscenely depreciating crap people buy at Costco and The Home Depot that gets stuffed into a drawer and forgotten about...
[12-foot tall Halloween skeletons for 300$ plus tax]
https://www.businessinsider.com/guides/home/home-depot-12-foot-skeleton-review#:~:text=The%2012%2Dfoot%20skeleton%2C%20affectionately,stock%20due%20to%20its%20popularity.
And people can't afford to open one lightning channel once to have it available for weeks or months?
Really?
To have an almost unlimited number of transactions, sending and receiving the world's Greatest Money? Thermodynamically sound?
Really?
This is a piss-poor, unconvincing cope pushed by developers that is, in my opinion not reflective of the real world. With the costs of things so high that people routinely purchase junk (those 300$ Giant Skeletons at The Home Depot are sold out) the cost-prohibition of opening a lightning channel once or twice is not convincing, sorry.
For the cost of a McDonald's meal (5$) or a Chick-Fill-A meal (10$?) or a beer in Chicago (I've paid around 8$!) or the junk people throw away... think of how many lightning channels could be economically opened and how much transacted (especially with Bitcoin's appreciating exchange rate)!
And to the extent that prices have 'gone-up' and the Dollar has depreciated 20-30% the last several years...
Doesn't saving in thermodynamically-sound, economically-sound, technologically-sound money actually pay for itself?
In summary: Bitcoin doesn't need more 'forks' or 'soft-forked-tools' or 'features added'. It needs more 'time', education, and the benefits of saving in Bitcoin apparent to the Public. From someone who spends Bitcoin on Lightning daily (for example on Stacker News or Bitrefill) I touch on-chain maybe once every 6 weeks.
And the rest of the time it's Lightning and any future mass-adoption of Bitcoin will look similar in my opinion.
Let's pop the bubble, look at the big picture and not let the perfect be the enemy of the good. A horse can be forced to water but not made to drink.
I apologize if I sound testy or judgemental (I don't intend to!) but too often folks don't see the forest-for-the trees, and there is a lot of bullshit proposed that is not reflective of the real world, its risks, or the phenomenal improvement on the world that Bitcoin already is.