This is just me putting in my formal objection to BIP148 and BIP149 based on my 
experience with the ETH/ETC hard fork and involvement in that drama.

First, it's important to note that ETC/ETH HF is a very different situation 
from BIP148 and all other soft-forks. To those on this mailing list, the 
reasons should be self-evident (one results in two incompatible chains, the 
other doesn't).

However, replay attacks are common to both possibilities (i.e. when BIP148 has 
<51% hash power).

I believe the severity of replay attacks is going unvoiced and is not 
understood within the bitcoin community because of their lack of experience 
with them.

I further believe that replay attacks are the #1 issue with BIP148, BIP149, 
etc., superseding wipeout attacks in severity.

These are not baseless beliefs, they're born out of experience and I think 
anyone will reach the same conclusion upon study.

In a nutshell, replay attacks mean that all talk of there being potentially 
"two coins" as a result of BIP148 is basically nonsense.

Replay attacks effectively eliminate that possibility.

When users go to "sell their legacy coins", they've just sold their 148 coins, 
and vice versa.

Both of the coin-splitting techniques given so far by the proponents BIP148 are 
also untenable:

- Double-spending to self with nLockTime txns is insanely complicated, risky, 
not guaranteed to work, extremely time consuming, and would likely result in a 
massive increase in backlogged transactions and increased fees.

- Mixing with 148 coinbase txns destroys fungibility.

Without a coin, there is no real threat from BIP148. Without that threat, there 
is no point to BIP148, and the miners know this.

These and other concerns are outlined and explained in more detail in this 
conversation I had yesterday with John Light:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=33rL3-p8cPw 
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=33rL3-p8cPw>

Cheers,
Greg Slepak

--
Please do not email me anything that you are not comfortable also sharing with 
the NSA.

Attachment: signature.asc
Description: Message signed with OpenPGP

_______________________________________________
bitcoin-dev mailing list
bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org
https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev

Reply via email to