pull down to refresh

The BIP110 debate has raged for eight months, and both camps keep pressuring me to pick a side. I get it. If BIP110 is existential, which both sides insist it is, then rallying people to pass it or kill it becomes a moral duty. I still refuse. Not because neutrality is the safe spot, the cowardice I'm accused of, but because I have good reason. This article is that reason. A binary view of this question is corrosive, and the worst of its effects is that it sets the stage for centralization.

In this X post, I said I don't know the consequences of BIP110. Plenty of people called that incompetent, cowardly, or both. Others praised it as humility. It's neither. It's just true. I don't know the consequences, and here's my claim: neither do you.

OverconfidenceOverconfidence

Arguing on the internet is annoying for a lot of reasons, but the worst is the certainty. Everyone is dead sure of their position. The reason is simple: people believe the argument that sounds more confident. Over time this has ratcheted up until total certainty is table stakes for any argument at all. In person, certainty is harder to fake. Body language, tone of voice, a pause in the wrong place, all of it leaks the doubt most people actually feel. Online, words are easy to compose, and it's easy to sound like you know when you don't.

This produces some terrible arguments, and certainty about consequences is the worst of them.

If you've studied dynamic systems, you know they're exquisitely sensitive to initial conditions. A tiny change at the start can produce wildly different outcomes. The popular version is the butterfly effect: a butterfly flaps its wings and six months later the weather turns on the other side of the planet. Science fiction writers use this to show that small acts have big consequences. From a complexity standpoint, that's not the useful part.

The useful part is that you can't tell what's going to happen. It's why weather forecasts fall apart past two weeks. Weather is a dynamic system, and dynamic systems don't let you see far ahead.

So when I say I don't know the consequences of BIP110, I mean it. I don't know, and I don't think anyone can know short of running the experiment, because Bitcoin is a dynamic system too. It has feedback loops, interdependent variables, and behavior that resists modeling.

Looking BackLooking Back

Take the last soft fork, Taproot. It was in the works for years, and plenty of very smart people implemented it and predicted how it would get used.

One predicted use was social recovery, which is using Taproot to back up your coins with help from your friends. The people making that prediction knew Taproot inside out. They were wrong. Five years on, I'm not aware of a single consumer wallet doing social recovery with Taproot.

What actually happened, nobody saw coming. Inscriptions, ordinals, BRC-20. People used Taproot to stuff junk into the blockchain. There were also more positive developments like BitVM and Ark. These are second-order consequences, and no one predicted them before Taproot shipped.

If we look back at Segwit, no one predicted the deluge of fork coins that would emerge in late 2017 and early 2018. Nor did anyone predict that BCH would emerge or be adopted by Bitmain or that Craig Wright would join them and then split from them and then decide to sue Bitcoin Core devs leading to the resignation of the lead maintainer.

Epistemic HumilityEpistemic Humility

I’m not fence-sitting, I’m telling the truth. We don't understand the full consequences of what we're doing, so we should move carefully and slowly. I'm wary of soft forks in general for exactly this reason because the second and third order consequences are things we keep failing to predict.

A hallmark of centralized systems is that they pretend to know what can't be known, namely every consequence of a policy. It's the hubris that drives legislators to pass law after law, certain they're doing good because their intentions are good, even when the results are bad. Hayek called it the "Pretense of Knowledge," and it's the conceit that makes centralization possible. If people really grasped dynamic systems and how hard second and third order effects are to predict, they'd want fewer laws, not more.

That's exactly what's happening here, and people understand other peoples' pretense of knowledge well enough when it suits them. BIP110 advocates demanded it from Core devs over the elimination of the OP_RETURN standardness rules, which was then walked back to a changed default. Now the same demand runs the other way regarding BIP110. Each side claims it knows the consequences and the other side doesn't. The truth is that nobody knows them, least of all the second and third order effects.

People also paper over their ignorance by appealing to intentions. We want small miners to get as much fees as the big miners get. We want CSAM off the blockchain. Fine intentions, both. But intentions don't make good law. Austrian economists have known this for a century, and you don't have to look past socialism's many failed runs to see why.

The Decentralized WayThe Decentralized Way

If we shouldn't make large changes, what's the alternative? A decentralized one. Instead of one policy for everyone, we decide one person at a time. Centralization means surrendering your self-sovereignty and letting some other entity decide for you, usually with a single rule for all. That road leads to surveillance, restriction, confiscation, and worse. More laws don't make a better society.

Decentralized law has a far better track record. English Common Law is the classic example. Nobody legislated it. It changed one case at a time. Consensus emerged and norms shifted, but slowly. That's why I favor a policy-based approach over a consensus-based one. Consensus changes carry all the second and third order risk I've been describing. Policy is each node deciding for itself.

BIP110BIP110

So is Jimmy against BIP110? Against soft forks in general?

My stance is that Bitcoin is money and that money is best when it changes very little, which is why I’m an ossificationist. Related to that is my position on soft forks which is that it’s fine for bug fixes and security improvements. That includes removing op codes almost nobody uses. I'm for simplification and for shrinking Bitcoin's attack surface. Does BIP110 qualify? I can't tell. Read it one way and it shrinks the attack surface: less arbitrary data, smaller blocks, cheaper nodes, more of them. Read it the other way and it's a policy preference smuggled into a hurried consensus change, something even the proponents half-concede when their own FAQ admits spam is best fought with filters, not forks. Both readings are honest. I can't decide between them, and saying so isn't a dodge. It's the truth.

Here's the part I want to be careful about, because it's the whole point of this essay. I'm not for BIP110. I'm also not for stopping it. Those sound like the same refusal, but they're not. To be against activation, I'd have to know the chain is better off without it, and I don't. To be for activation, I'd have to know it's better off with it, and I don't know that either. The boosters are sure it saves Bitcoin. The loudest opponents are just as sure it wrecks it, with their warnings of chain splits and frozen coins. Both are predictions about a dynamic system, which is to say both are guesses wearing the costume of fact. I won't join either side, because joining means claiming a certainty that I've spent this whole essay arguing nobody has.

What I will do is defend the attempt. There's a camp that sees unrestricted data on chain as existential, a slow poison that prices out node operators and turns the world's money into the world's hard drive. I don't share their certainty, but a UASF is exactly the tool a decentralized system hands to people who feel that way: users asserting that they, not miners, are the final authority over the rules. Telling them they aren't allowed to try would be the centralizing move, the one this whole essay warns against, and it would mean pretending I know their stand is wrong. I don't. They have every right to make it.

And they're going to make it no matter what I say. The signaling is live, the software ships, the block heights are set. My declaring for or against changes none of it. So the real choice in front of me was never activate or don't. It's fight the attempt, bless the attempt, or watch it. I choose to watch, because however this resolves, we learn something valuable we currently don’t know.

That's the one thing I'm actually sure of. If BIP110 stalls at single-digit signaling and dies, we learn how a hostile UASF fails and what it takes to kill one. If it activates, we learn what it takes for a soft fork with significant opposition to succeed. Either resolution clears a patch of the fog.

The Honest PositionThe Honest Position

The pressure to declare for or against assumes one side can see the end of this from the beginning. Neither can. The boosters are guessing and the doomsayers are guessing, and dressing a guess in confidence doesn't turn it into knowledge. That's the conceit that builds central planners: the pretense that the consequences of a policy can be known in advance, when the whole lesson of dynamic systems is that they can't.

So my honest position is the one I started with. I don't know the consequences of activating BIP110, I don't know the consequences of blocking it, and neither do you. I'm not for it and I'm not against it. The only thing I'll commit to is the process: the people who think the stakes are existential have the right to make their case to the network, they're going to make it regardless, and watching how it plays out is how we learn. We'll know what BIP110 does to Bitcoin when it plays out, one way or the other. Until then, anyone who tells you they already know is selling the same false certainty that builds every system Bitcoin was made to escape.

245 sats \ 3 replies \ @crrdlx 29 Jun

You're right, of course, in that no one knows exactly how BIP-110 will play out. That's kind of like saying, "I'm not sure if it will rain tomorrow." We can make predictions, but we don't really know.

That said, you could say which one your favor, or which path will likely pan out. That's okay. Staying in the middle seems like playing both sides so that you don't get burnt one day.

I'll give my "position", for lack of better terms:

I tend to lean against BIP-110. Here's how I think it will pan out:

  1. early August, Knotsers reject a block, a "fork" happens, but nothing seems any different
  2. we now have two chains, though all seems the same; did anything actually happen?
  3. as time and blocks move on, there is becomes a discrepancy (as there are now two chains)
  4. one chain will need to distinguish itself, if only to simply explain the discrepancies that are in question
  5. so, now we have BTC (which we currently have) and the Knots BTC, call it KNOTSBTC
  6. people get confused at all this; they go to resources and look up bitcoin prices and such; undoubtedly, BTC refers to the Bitcoin, the current BTC that we know
  7. in fact, there is no KNOTSBTC on any exchange or media outlet to reference; people get more confused
  8. Just like with ETH after the DAO situation, we eventually wind up with two chains, two tickers: a large-and-dominant one (BTC) and a niche-one (KNOTSBTC). This is fine. Things go on, people will fuss and rant about the "real bitcoin", but's the reality will be that we simply have two chains: BTC and KNOTSBTC
  9. All of this questioning, bickering, infighting/"debate", is a hindrance to bitcoin evolving and growing. Normies and markets dislike discord.

All this said, I'm largely uninterested. Let's just let the market work this all out, as it eventually does with everything. Maybe that's your position Jimmy and I can respect that. I guess, as a default, I lean toward innovation over ossification. And, if it can be boiled down to those binary sides, I lean against BIP-110 for (1) allowing the free market to decide and (2) innovation over ossification.

The good news: we can just sit back, let it happen, watch with popcorn, and the free market and freedom in economics will work it all out.

reply

Neither of the 2 supporters that we had an AMA with seem to be willing to fork off over this:

  1. Bob Burnett said so explicitly
  2. Hunter Beast implicitly said it

So, I don't think there will be a minority hardfork, unless it is a close call.

reply

Have you put your sats behind that?? hashtag Predyx!

reply

Fair question, but no. Saying I'm not much of a gambler is an understatement. I'll put my casino limit of $1 in a slot machine, bet it all (yolo!), and walk away win or lose. That's how I roll. I do love horse racing, wrote about it at #973869 but again, have gone to the races solely to watch them and never even bet. My track max is $20, usually split with my wife.

I see on predyx a yes is for BIP-110 "happening" is 15 cents and no is 85. Since I lean no, thats not a great return on the risk...paying 85 sats for the chance to get 15. I'll just let my words stand for themselves. That's good enough for me.

reply
41 sats \ 0 replies \ @Lumor 30 Jun
There's a camp that sees unrestricted data on chain as existential, a slow poison that prices out node operators and turns the world's money into the world's hard drive.

Node operators should be prepared to store max-sized blocks every 10 minutes or run pruned nodes.

Spam sucks and so does BIP-110.

reply
To be against activation, I'd have to know the chain is better off without it, and I don't. To be for activation, I'd have to know it's better off with it, and I don't know that either.

True, agreed. Yet reality forces you to act. There are few truly neutral stances: you gotta do something. Sitting this one out just allows others to make a choice, one way or the other

reply

I think it's good we relax, everything will be fine

reply

BIP110 is just a method of work.

reply