REPOST FROM SOURCE: https://xcancel.com/jamesob/status/1860340932706730261 --- BITCOIN CORE'S LOSS OF FOCUS The legacy technical leadership in bitcoin is becoming increasingly less effective. -- Almost universally, Core and "graybeard" devs are not focusing on _the_ fundamental problem in bitcoin: preserving trustless UTXO ownership. Instead they are distracted with valuable but secondary issues like mempool policy, Core code architecture, and minor IBD performance. These things are important in their own right, but they fundamentally don't matter if in times of trouble most users can't take possession of their own coins. Core devs are exceptionally talented people. The brightest engineers. But the priorities of the project are out of whack. The aggregate focus does not reflect the thing that makes bitcoin a unique asset: trustless custody. -- Given the current limits of bitcoin, even upper-middle class Americans will not be able to self-custody, let alone the rest of the world. If bitcoin doesn't figure out how to ensure that most users have a trustless way of owning and sometimes moving coins, it will become basically indistinguishable from a gold ETF. A row in some OFAC-compliant database. Another financial widget that is subject to the regulatory dictates of government. In fact, if bitcoin does not scale UTXO ownership, gold will have the advantage that at least small amounts of it *can* be self-custodied and traded peer-to-peer. The same won't be able to be said for bitcoin. In a world where on-chain fees are in the thousands of dollars and there is not a workable, trustless layer two, most coins will be stuck with custodians. Forget payments. I'm talking about savings. I'm talking about less than checking-account volume. 1-2 transactions a month. If you think that most people should be able to DCA and withdrawal to self-custody once a month, maybe spend once every few years for big purchases, I've got news for you: Given bitcoin's current limitations, only 18 million users can do that. A little over 5% of Americans. -- Right now, the chain capacity is able to meet demand for self-custody because we are in a time of relative peace. Most don't feel at risk keeping their bitcoin with a custodian. That can change very rapidly. As bitcoin grows in value and challenges fiat currency, governments will increasingly want to control it. They won't ban it, which is now obvious, but almost certainly they will impose OFAC-like restrictions and possible wealth taxes. When the regulatory hammer comes down, tens of millions will look to withdrawal their coins into self-custody. But they may not be able to. -- Unfortunately this risk does not seem to be top of mind in the current Core culture. One instance of a tone-deaf Core response to this kind of problem relates to CTV. As Jeremy Rubin has been pointing out for years, CTV would be the most efficient way to guarantee that people can withdrawal coins from institutions in times of chain-panic and congestion, allowing exit to happen during crises without fully "unrolling" transactions. I wrote about this at length in 2023, and why it seems there is no more efficient way to do this ( And yet technical figureheads like @Matt Corallo and @Murch downplay the value of CTV, claiming that it has no compelling uses. CTV is one of the primitive building blocks that we need to figure out UTXO scaling solutions. (Not to mention its use in applications like vaults.) Some Core devs might argue "well okay, maybe we need that functionality - but CTV isn't the right way to do it. We need to think harder!" The problem is that time is running out. As nation-states begin to enter the technical ecosystem, soft forks that promote scaling and self-custody will be more difficult to deploy. Powerful actors will not want bitcoin to change - they're perfectly happy letting regulated custodians act as the L2. As the market cap grows, the stakes of change go up, and it will be much harder to get economically relevant actors to run new consensus. Because Core devs aren't paying close attention to the covenants conversation, they may not realize that CTV is upgradeable, simple, and well-tested. It's good enough. This gap in understanding partially reveals that those devs prefer to work on more smaller self-contained puzzle problems that are more tractable. Maybe this is understandable given the fraught Core development process and historical drama of soft forks, but neither of those are an excuse for abandoning the core challenge of realizing bitcoin. -- Segwit and Taproot were massive changes, and I can almost understand why so much drama was spent on them. They both basically reinvented how locking scripts are stored and executed in bitcoin. But to make significant headway on finding a scaling solution for self-custody, it may only take a few opcodes - much more narrowly scoped bits of functionality. Changes that are much easier to test and reason about, and don't reinvent the engine of bitcoin. -- As I continue campaigning for a renewed focus on scaling coin ownership, some may compare me to the "big blockers" of the 2017 scaling wars. The big-blockers camp wanted to raise the blocksize for the sake of housing the world's P2P payments. They resisted the use of Lightning and other second layer solutions. The reality is that they have been partially vindicated. Lightning has not solved our problems, and given the on-chain footprint that existing channel constructions require, it categorically cannot. Lightning certainly helps reduce on-chain payment volume once someone has opened a channel - but to do that for most people will require a layer 1 innovation. I don't share the big blockers' objectives. I don't think that trying to fit the world's P2P payments on the base chain is a reasonable target. But the ability to resist near complete capture of UTXO custody by third-party financial institutions - *that* is intertwined with the core purpose of bitcoin. In Satoshi's whitepaper, the first sentence claims "A purely peer-to-peer version of electronic cash would allow online payments to be sent directly from one party to another without going through a financial institution." If most users become unable to even take possession of their own coins a few times a year, we have failed on the objective. -- I am not writing this out of any sense of antagonism. Yes, I am frustrated that after numerous attempts, Core devs are not engaging more productively with the few people trying to translate scaling strategies to the base layer. But I'm hoping that by calling attention to this issue, we can get some of these great minds to refocus on bitcoin's critical mission, and to realize that ossification will come sooner than we thought. The existing (and well-funded) power structures *want* stasis. The recent show of rapid institutional affinity should make you suspicious that bitcoin in its current form isn't a threat to the fiat order. The lack of "ivory tower" attendance in the recent OP_NEXT and the broader covenants discourse demonstrates that, like many of America's elite institutions, there has been mission drift in bitcoin's technical elite. I hope this changes. -- The risk of merging many of the opcodes proposed during the last few years is limited. OP_CAT, OP_CTV, lnhance, probably OP_CCV, some others; they're all fine. If sufficiently tested, great additions to bitcoin. We can pretty easily mitigate what risk there is with comprehensive testing and analysis, provided the focus is there. The upside is almost infinite: a reasonable attempt to continue the preservation of bitcoin's unique function - trustless self-custody that is practically available to most.

Replies (73)

isaac-asdf's avatar
isaac-asdf 1 year ago
In that case, what do you think the safest approach to that is? I also agree and it seems to me that we need some form of covenants if we want btc to remain freedom money
I THINK YOU MISREMEMBER. REGARDLESS I AM NOT ADVOCATING ANYTHING HERE. I JUST THINK IMPORTANT TECHNICAL BITCOIN DISCUSSION SHOULD NOT BE EXCLUSIVE TO X AND SINCE JAMES REFUSES TO USE NOSTR I HAD TO BE HIS REPOST BOT.
We need bitcoin core implemention alternatives. Core should just be the most conservative implementation. And raise the damn blocksize.
Fair enough, I could be. I'll just blame Marty 🤣. Didn't realize it wasn't your write up until after I commented. Generally a fan, and didn't mean to seem so confrontational. I don't think the risks of soft Forks are discussed enough. Satoshi was conservative for a reason.
Lostdog's avatar
Lostdog 1 year ago
Considering the amounts of unnecessary bullshit and aggression that core devs face on a regular basis, I'm not surprised none of them want to be associated to anything remotely controversial anymore. Toxic maxi culture has become a caricature of itself. It's not an immune system, it's become an auto immune disease
We have consensus. That's enough. But the details will evolve. I don't think there's a silver bullet. A lot of small steps will make the difference. Furthermore, Bitcoin doesn't need to be used by every person on the planet. There is a minimum viable user base for bitcoin to fulfill its function, and currently no one really knows what that size will be. Either way, humanity as a whole will benefit, including people who do not have the privilege of interacting with the base.
matt. really. when someone warms up with waffle and then start talking about "time is running out" without having given me substance to build on, i'm like what the fuck is the reason why you posted this CATV waffle? did you actually read it and are you thinking about the fact that bitcoin transaction scaling has maintained the fee rate at mere cents and nobody should be fucking putting their coins in custody anyway so pray tell what the fuck logic is going on here?
> what the fuck is the reason why you posted this CATV waffle? BECAUSE PEOPLE ARE HAVING SOFT FORK CONVERSATIONS ON X INSTEAD OF NOSTR AND I TOOK THAT PERSONALLY
isaac-asdf's avatar
isaac-asdf 1 year ago
Agreed about the no silver bullet. That’s why I think making a new primitive available sooner is important though. User available taproot tools are just starting to become more widely available. Getting a new building block in place now gives time for actual testing on what scaling solutions it enables. CTV has been around the longest, is the best studied/tested, and has the lowest chances of unintended side effects
isnt it ok for us to keep educating to take custody, then when the protocol is buckling under fee pressure and theres no space in blocks for people to move btc that is in their custody( or at least somewhere remotely close to that), then we consider a scaling soft fork? honest question why not?
hahah thatd have been hella funny if he updated it to all caps. would change tone drastically 😃 whys James yelling at us hahah
Would be helpful with a list of pros and cons of implementing CTV. This is a lot to take in.
Default avatar
Rand 1 year ago
U may be able to C that but for the rest?! t-y 4 your take/share
Casey R's avatar
Casey R 1 year ago
I would like to see CTV stew for a good while longer. We are not running out of time. I think we need to approach future soft forks from a system dynamics perspective. Humans have a fatal flaw; we tend to think linearly. But complex dynamic systems like Bitcoin are NOT linear. Most problems in organizations are created by past policy decisions. The same, perhaps, could be said for Bitcoin.
Fair point. It’s good to solutions in place. It’s also good to wait a little. Procrastination is a safety measure. Especially when it comes to making changes to bitcoins scripting method
BoomTown's avatar
BoomTown 1 year ago
I don’t know about you but I “deserve” more bitcoin… 😏
Well yes i get your point, but I appreciate Matt sharing stuff and i am able to digest and think about it. It’s not the end of the World. I’m sure he has thoughts, sharing just let’s others formulate thoughts too
Sharing something interesting i didn’t see is useful, especially on Nostr as I’m not on X. I do get your point. It’s just an opinion by someone that’s directly related to Bitcoin, doesn’t mean we all agree. Good to read others’ thoughts on important topics
INTERESTING. I DONT THINK BOOSTING A POST ON NOSTR IS AN ENDORSEMENT EITHER. OPEN DISCUSSION IS GOOD. AS A LARGE ACCOUNT I FEEL AN OBLIGATION TO BOOST MORE. FEW PEOPLE I AGREE WITH 100%.
Personally I agree here, it guides me to question and think through the topic more. I didn’t think you agreed just that you are thinking it’s a topic worth discussing
It’s often hard to find deeply formulated posts on topics, it’s more a promotion of an important area of discussion and hope for a thread to open
What's the rush? Low time preference, Bitcoin will be here for a very very long time and we'll fix anything that needs fixing in time. Patience. Plus, the majority of people will likely never self custody and IMO that's okay. The important thing is Bitcoin offers the option to self custody or to choose companies that offer transparency to customers on the assets they hold, and as long as people have the ability to choose self custody then we can hold all custodians accountable. Custodians are not the enemy, they are just another service that within large economies has demand and will always have demand. In a way anyone who helps other people with securing their assets is a custodian. You see people on here talk about orange pilling someone and being a backup for them if they lose access to there wallet. That's being an unpaid custodian. Anyone with access to funds that are not owned by them are custodians for those funds. Society has been poisoned by FIAT currency and dishonest unaccountable banks, Bitcoin fixes both of those issues. They can't print more, and dishonest actors will eventually be pushed out by honest ones. Just be patient, humanity will outshine our FIAT clouded expectations when we are all on a sound money once again. Things will work out in the end.
Bitcoin is going to die one way or the other like the imaginary thing it is which is made me so much profit off so much other imaginary money but you know or you don't
Why can't UTXOs scale at current stage? Is it linked to perceived high fees and dust UTXOs? What's the essence of the problem here? Imagining what could happen in 50-100 years time is not a constructive proactivensss. And why does James feel like LN is custodial? It easy quite easy to run a lightning node and it is not as gloomy as pushed by the author.
Fees are still 2sat/vbytes in bull markets , I guess scaling can wait