Block size limit controversy: Difference between revisions
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== Introduction == | == Introduction == | ||
Blocks are limited to 1MB in size. Miners can mine blocks upto the 1MB fixed limit. Any block larger than | Blocks are limited to 1MB in size. Miners can mine blocks upto the 1MB fixed limit. Any block larger than 1MB is invalid. | ||
{{Quote|Once a predetermined number of coins have entered circulation, the incentive can transition entirely to transaction fees and be completely inflation free.|Satoshi Nakamoto <ref>https://bitcoin.org/bitcoin.pdf</ref>}} | {{Quote|Once a predetermined number of coins have entered circulation, the incentive can transition entirely to transaction fees and be completely inflation free.|Satoshi Nakamoto <ref>https://bitcoin.org/bitcoin.pdf</ref>}} | ||
Revision as of 05:09, 2 June 2015
Introduction
Blocks are limited to 1MB in size. Miners can mine blocks upto the 1MB fixed limit. Any block larger than 1MB is invalid.
Once a predetermined number of coins have entered circulation, the incentive can transition entirely to transaction fees and be completely inflation free.—Satoshi Nakamoto [1]
Arguments in favor of increasing the blocksize
- Bigger blocks (more transactions per second)
Arguments in opposition of increasing the blocksize
- A hard fork requires waiting for sufficient consensus.
- Risk of catastrophic consensus failure[clarification needed]
- Orphan rate amplification, more reorgs and double-spends due to slower propagation speeds.
- European/American pools at more of a disadvantage compared to the Chinese pools[why?]
- No amount of max block size would support all the world's future transactions on the main blockchain (various types of off-chain transactions are the only long-term solution)
Damage to decentalization
- Bitcoin is only useful if it is decentralized because centralization requires trust. Bitcoins value proposition is trustlessness.
- The larger the hash-rate a single miner controls, the more centralized Bitcoin becomes and the more trust using Bitcoin requires.
- Running your own full node while mining rather than giving another entity the right to your hash-power decreases the hash-rate of large miners. Those who control hash-power are able to control their own hash power if and only if they run a full node.
- Less individuals who control hash-power will run full nodes if running one becomes more expensive.
- Larger blocks leads to more expensive full nodes.
- Therefore, larger blocks lead to less hashers running full nodes, which leads to centralized entities having more power, which makes Bitcoin require more trust, which weakens Bitcoins value proposition.
Entities positions
| Entity | Supports Larger Blocks | Supports Hard Fork |
|---|---|---|
| CoinBase | Yes |