On 6/28/2015 at 10:05 PM, "Patrick Murck" <[email protected]> wrote:

>Maintainer is empowered to make changes to "teh Bitcoin" but the reality is 
>that the Core Maintainer role is really about cat
>herding and project management of Bitcoin Core the open-source software 
>project and not the bitcoin network.

It's not about pushing a change, it's about refusing a change on the grounds of 
controversy.

This is _not_ an attack on Wladimir. His position in view of circumstances is 
perfectly reasonable: to take the safest option.

Even at the risk of stagnation, as he pointed out, at least your funds won't be 
expropriated. It's a noble position to defend the minority.

Unfortunately (or fortunately), the majority of power usually gets what it 
wants. Of course, "they will have it their way anyway" is not an appropriate 
reason to flip-flop on an ethical position, so nobody expects Wladimir to 
change his mind.

Thus, we are playing a variation of prisoner's dilemma here: the best solution 
would be an agreement on both sides, if only they could agree.

In reality, there's a good chance that Gavin's fork will win, creating 
precisely the problems and risks, which Wladimir tries to avoid, only more. And 
we will end up with lose-lose situation.

But we lack any other mechanism for a scenario where interests of some of those 
7 committers become misaligned with interests of the majority (which seems to 
be the case).

And every time Bitcoin will face similar disagreement in the future we will go 
through it again...

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