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On Fri, Jun 26, 2015 at 04:09:18PM +0200, Pieter Wuille wrote:

> People say that larger blocks are necessary. In the long term, I agree - in
> the sense that systems that do not evolve tend to be replaced by other
> systems. This evolution can come in terms of layers on top of Bitcoin's
> blockchain, in terms of the technology underlying various aspects of the
> blockchain itself, and also in the scale that this technology supports.
> 
> I do, however, fundamentally disagree that a fear for a change in economics
> should be considered to necessitate larger blocks. If it is, and there is
> consensus that we should adapt to it, then there is effectively no limit
> going forward. This is similar to how Congress voting to increase the
> copyright term retroactively from time to time is really no different from
> having an infinite copyright term in the first place. This scares me.

Fully agree Pieter. Couldn't have stated it better.

It has been disappointing and scary to see political pressure tactics being 
used to change a distributed consensus system. 

By using the system everyone agreed on one set of consensus rules, that was the 
"social contract" of Bitcoin. To me, the consensus rules are more like rules of 
physics than laws. They cannot be changed willy-nilly according to needs of 
some groups, much less than lower gravity can be legislated to help the airline 
industry.

It is shocking to hear wide misunderstanding that it is supposedly 'the 
developers' that decide on such changes. As if this is merely a private 
top-down project. No, the point was that this can continue without any kind of 
central guidance, with expected stability. As a developer I work on improving 
the technical aspects and fixing bugs, not on 'governing' it.
By expecting a few developers to make controversial decisions you are breaking 
the expectations, as well as making life dangerous for those developers. I'll 
jump ship before being forced to merge an even remotely controversial hardfork.

The stressful conditions of last weeks have thus made me hostile toward the 
idea of hardforks. At least to hardforks that make politically loaded changes. 
In this case further centralization to well-connected geographic locales by 
increasing network bandwidth requirements.

Resiliency and decentralization are the key aspects. I would not want to risk 
breaking the system, or at least wildly changing its properties and 
applicability out of perceived necessity, and fear.

Wladimir
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