I agree that the block subsidy is a large economic driver of mining right now. I don’t understand why Bitcoiners seem so convinced there will be a smooth transition from block subsidy to voluntary fee as the halvings continue. Is there literally any evidence that the fee market will work? Isn’t it pure conjecture? I’d really like an answer on that one.
As for L2 scaling, yeah I don’t believe LN in it’s current form is all that usable. Lots of smart people believe its getting there, though, so without doing object level analysis for myself I tend to think L2 will ultimately succeed. Again, though, I haven’t seen a high quality back and forth about this between two smart, well informed, people, which is definitely concerning.
The one major disagreement we have is that “proof-of-work has no advantages over proof-of-stake.” These two consensus mechanisms are entirely different. Proof-of-work requires staking a resource that is external to the network. This is critical, as it means that, were the network to fork, you can only stake your energy on one of the two new chains. In contrast, under proof-of-stake, your stake is duplicated in a fork.
This is critical, as it means that, were the network to fork, you can only stake your energy on one of the two new chains. In contrast, under proof-of-stake, your stake is duplicated in a fork.
I honestly never really thought about this before but I suppose it’s worth considering. Maybe it’s easier for a community to split after some controversial decision with proof of stake?
Proof of work is not really immune to it though. When the DAO hack happened on Ethereum, the chain split into Ethereum and Ethereum Classic even though the network used proof of work at the time.
Validators will continue to stake on any chain so long as it’s profitable. I don’t really see how proof of stake vs work changes that.
I agree that the block subsidy is a large economic driver of mining right now. I don’t understand why Bitcoiners seem so convinced there will be a smooth transition from block subsidy to voluntary fee as the halvings continue. Is there literally any evidence that the fee market will work? Isn’t it pure conjecture? I’d really like an answer on that one.
As for L2 scaling, yeah I don’t believe LN in it’s current form is all that usable. Lots of smart people believe its getting there, though, so without doing object level analysis for myself I tend to think L2 will ultimately succeed. Again, though, I haven’t seen a high quality back and forth about this between two smart, well informed, people, which is definitely concerning.
The one major disagreement we have is that “proof-of-work has no advantages over proof-of-stake.” These two consensus mechanisms are entirely different. Proof-of-work requires staking a resource that is external to the network. This is critical, as it means that, were the network to fork, you can only stake your energy on one of the two new chains. In contrast, under proof-of-stake, your stake is duplicated in a fork.
I honestly never really thought about this before but I suppose it’s worth considering. Maybe it’s easier for a community to split after some controversial decision with proof of stake?
Proof of work is not really immune to it though. When the DAO hack happened on Ethereum, the chain split into Ethereum and Ethereum Classic even though the network used proof of work at the time.
Validators will continue to stake on any chain so long as it’s profitable. I don’t really see how proof of stake vs work changes that.