On Sat, Jun 27, 2015 at 12:29 PM, NxtChg <nxt...@hush.com> wrote: > > On 6/27/2015 at 1:04 PM, "Wladimir J. van der Laan" <laa...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> Then you won't risk the other 'passengers' who don't consent to it. > > But you can look at it the other way: what about risking the 'passengers' > when the plane suddenly doesn't fly anymore? > > Increasing block limit increases the risk of centralization, but it also > keeps the current status quo of blocks not being filled, rather then risking > an unknown option of hitting the limit hard.
But that option is not unknown, that's the point of this thread. "Doing nothing" would require to fix the mempool to scale with the number of unconfirmed transaction. This is something that we will eventually have to fix unless the plan is to eventually remove the blocksize limit. What will happen with full blocks is that fees will likely rise and the transactions with bigger fees will get confirmed first. This is something that will eventually happen unless the blocksize limit is removed before ever being hit. What this thread is saying is that this option (the so-called "doing nothing" option, which actually requires more work than any of the current proposals for increasing the blocksize) is perfectly valid, which is in contradiction to a perceived "need to increase the blocksize limit soon". Increasing the block size is only an option, not a "need". And changing the consensus rules and forcing everybody to adapt their software to the changes is certainly not "maintaining the status quo", I'm getting tired of hearing that absurd notion. _______________________________________________ bitcoin-dev mailing list bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev