Bitcoin community divided over core developers latest update

A collective statement from 31 Bitcoin core developers has sparked a global debate between Bitcoiners after suggesting a hands-off approach to how the Bitcoin network is used, amid ongoing controversy over non-monetary use cases.

โ€œThis is not endorsing or condoning non-financial data usage, but accepting that as a censorship-resistant system, Bitcoin can and will be used for use cases not everyone agrees on,โ€ the June 6 statement published on the Bitcoin Core website said.

Bitcoiners are โ€œnot in a positionโ€ to place mandates

The letter argued that Bitcoin is a network โ€œdefined by its usersโ€ and that its core contributors are โ€œnot in a positionโ€ to mandate what software or policies they desire. It comes amid the ongoing debate over spam inscriptions on the Bitcoin network.

โ€œBeing free to run any software is the networkโ€™s primary safeguard against coercion,โ€ it added.

Source: Bitcoin Core Project

While many Bitcoiners supported the update with an โ€œACKโ€ comment, others objected.

JAN3 CEO Samson Mow criticized the tone of the letter on the same day. He said, โ€œItโ€™s disingenuous to just say โ€œit is what it is now, too bad.โ€

โ€œBitcoin Core devs have been changing the network gradually to enable spam and now seem focused on also removing barriers for spammers,โ€ Mow said. โ€œThis statement itself is also inappropriate,โ€ he added.

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Source: James Check

On May 8, Bitcoin Core developers decided to remove a long-standing limit on transaction data in a network upgrade to allow for larger data segments, which some Bitcoiners saw as opening the door to non-financial use cases.

However, Casa founder Jameson Lopp defended the letter. Lopp said, โ€œCore Devs are a group saying we canโ€™t force anyone to run code they donโ€™t like; here is our thinking on relay policy and network health.โ€

โ€œWhen there was no cohesive message, and it was just a bunch of independent developers making individual statements, Bitcoin Core was accused of having โ€œpoor public relations,โ€ Lopp said, adding:

โ€œNow a joint statement is published, and people find reasons to cry about it.โ€

The developers argued in the letter that it is better for the Bitcoin node software โ€œto aim to have a realistic idea of what will end up in the next block, rather than attempting to intervene between consenting transaction creators and miners to discourage activity that is largely harmless at a technical level.โ€ It added:

โ€œWhile we recognize that this view isnโ€™t held universally by all users and developers, it is our sincere belief that it is in the best interest of Bitcoin and its users, and we hope our users agree.โ€

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Bitcoiner Carl Horton said, โ€œItโ€™s Bit โ€œCoinโ€ not Bit โ€œBucketโ€ or Bit โ€œStoreโ€ or whatever general purpose data store you have in mind. Itโ€™s a โ€œpeer to peer electronic cash system.โ€ย ย 

Meanwhile, Bitcoin core developer Luke Dashjr criticized the goals of the transaction relay policy outlined in the statement. โ€œThe goals of transaction relay listed are basically all wrong,โ€ Dashjr said.ย 

โ€œPredicting what will be mined is a centralizing goal. Expecting spam to be mined is defeatism. Helping spam propagate is harmful,โ€ Dashjr said.

The developers said the main goals of transaction relay are predicting what Bitcoin transactions will be mined, โ€œspeeding up block propagationโ€ for the transactions expected to be mined, and helping Bitcoin miners learn about fee-paying transactions.

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