I don't know why, but I have the feeling that protocols that require game theoretic arguments to be proven secure are inferior to protocols that don't. Collateral is always a red flag to me, as it implicitly opens up known and unknown pitfalls down the line. That doesn't mean game theoretic arguments don't have value, but I'd like to keep them as minimal as possible, nicely relegated to a few, very constrained cases. Just my own two cents.
Christian Decker
npub1j08d...pdm2
They call me Dr. Bitcoin. -- Bitcoin enthusiast since 2009, and researcher at Blockstream
GM 👋
Today we are extremely proud to open-source the #greenlight client repository as part of our Developer Preview🌱
Included are the client libraries, with bindings for python and JS, as well as all the tools to self-host a Greenlight node.
Learn more at buff.ly/3IY4Mun 🚀