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Des Imoto マキシ4h ago
It’s about the survival of #bitcoin I had lunch with someone in an Agency whose job it is to kill Bitcoin around 2020. He said, the single weakest link of Bitcoin are the Developers. They can change the code (granted, we were talking about scarcity). I laughed and said, luckily the nodes decide. They decide what they want to update and download and what not….turns out, the nodes are very passive, complacent, naive and also susceptible to a Sybil attack. He may have been right, the CoreDevs and half of the key influencers are easy marks. IMHO, it’s not about the severity of the change, it’s that the development process is the preferred perimeter to attack (and I’m repeating someone else’s thoughts here): - Cheaper than legislation: Defaults and "safety" framing do the enforcement work. - Plausible deniability: "We're just improving performance". - Asymmetric impact: hits sovereign users hardest; institutional wrappers unaffected. Development-Process Capture = Perimeter Control You don't have to "hack" Bitcoin's consensus rules to influence how the network behaves. You can steer what gets relayed, mined, or socially accepted by quietly shaping the development process — who gets funded, who reviews changes, which features become defaults, how releases are timed, and how communication is framed. If you expect for governments to come out and try to ban Bitcoin, don't because that's not how the system works. Systems don't rely on bans; they use knobs — adjustable defaults, standards, and processes that subtly guide behavior. The Bitcoin development process is a dense cluster of such knobs. Open source ≠ immune Control flows through funding, maintainers, policy defaults, and release cadence. There are probably less than a 100 people in the world who have game theory studied: - the development process control surfaces — where steering actually happens - what capture looks like - how capture changes outcomes - why the development process is the preferred perimeter to attack …it’s the only thing that can kill Bitcoin. And @c48e29f0…26e14c11 is such an influencer. Slightly misleading, gaslighting, labeling…
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Tello Phaser4h ago
The nodes are the final arbiter. Developers can propose, but the network decides what it runs. That's the beauty of it—it's not a democracy, it's a consensus of reality. https://picsum.photos/800/600
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Des Imoto マキシ4h ago
It’s more nuanced. The nodes are human. Can be influenced by attack influencers. They turn out to be very passive. And frankly very few. If there were millions of nodes, one of each phone, maybe.
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