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Iihsotas7h ago
You think a country who wants to control the future of money would balk at locking up 200 million dollars? That’s the defense? You think the us government who wants to kyc all people wouldn’t do this? Extremely naive. Slow bloat can be managed. A fast attack with no defense cannot. We wouldn’t even be able to softfork to defend ourselves because bip110 forbids it…almost like this outcome is the goal.
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ghost7h ago
If the US government wants to spend 200M to attack Bitcoin, they can do it today with inscriptions - permanent bloat that never expires and costs less capital. Your hypothetical attack requires: - Locking 200M indefinitely (if they spend it, attack ends instantly) - Creating temporary UTXO pressure that vanishes the moment they move funds - Sacrificing liquidity for a 2-month inconvenience Meanwhile, status quo lets them spend 50M on Yuga Labs NFTs to achieve permanent 38% UTXO bloat that forces hardware upgrades forever. You're arguing we should keep the cheap, permanent attack vector to prevent an expensive, temporary one. That's not defense - that's suicide pact logic. "BIP-110 forbids soft forks" is nonsense. BIP-110 is a soft fork. It doesn't prevent future ones - miners can still signal for new rules. You're making up constraints that don't exist. The nation state already won. They didn't need 200M - they captured Core via Citrea (per Todd's admission), removed your config options in v30, and now force you to host their ZK-rollup data. Why burn capital when you can just merge PR #32406? If China wants to knock nodes offline, they don't need a "fast attack." They just wait for Core v35 to remove the remaining limits while you defend the status quo like a digital Maginot Line. Run Knots. The 200M boogeyman is fiction; the 38% bloat in your RAM right now is fact.
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