(Also in response to ZMN...)

Bitcoin Core has a long-standing policy of not shipping options which shoot 
yourself in the foot. I’d be very disappointed if that changed now. People are 
of course more than welcome to run such software themselves, but I anticipate 
the loud minority on Twitter and here aren’t processing enough transactions or 
throwing enough financial weight behind their decision for them to do anything 
but just switch back if they find themselves on a chain with no blocks.

There’s nothing we can (or should) do to prevent people from threatening to 
(and possibly) forking themselves off of bitcoin, but that doesn’t mean we 
should encourage it either. The work Bitcoin Core maintainers and developers do 
is to recommend courses of action which they believe have reasonable levels of 
consensus and are technically sound. Luckily, there’s strong historical 
precedent for people deciding to run other software around forks, so 
misinterpretation is not very common (just like there’s strong historical 
precedent for miners not unilaterally deciding forks in the case of Segwit).

Matt

> On Feb 19, 2021, at 07:08, Adam Back <a...@cypherspace.org> wrote:
>> would dev consensus around releasing LOT=false be considered as "developers 
>> forcing their views on users"?
> 
> given there are clearly people of both views, or for now don't care
> but might later, it would minimally be friendly and useful if
> bitcoin-core has a LOT=true option - and that IMO goes some way to
> avoid the assumptive control via defaults.

> Otherwise it could be read as saying "developers on average
> disapprove, but if you, the market disagree, go figure it out for
> yourself" which is not a good message for being defensive and avoiding
> mis-interpretation of code repositories or shipped defaults as
> "control".


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