Adam Back [ARCHIVE] on Nostr: 📅 Original date posted:2015-06-28 📝 Original message:On 28 June 2015 at 12:29, ...
📅 Original date posted:2015-06-28
📝 Original message:On 28 June 2015 at 12:29, Benjamin <benjamin.l.cordes at gmail.com> wrote:
> I agree that naive scaling will likely lead to bad outcomes. They might have
> the advantage though, as this would mean not changing Bitcoin.
Sure we can work incrementally and carefully, and this is exactly what
Bitcoin has been doing, and *must* do for safety and security for the
last 5 years!
That doesnt mean that useful serious improvements have not been made.
> Level2 and Lightning is not well defined. If you move money to a third
> party, even if it is within the constrained of a locked contract, then I
> don't think that will solve the issues.
I think you misunderstand how lightning works. Every lightning
transaction *is* a valid bitcoin transaction that could be posted to
the Bitcoin network to reclaim funds if a hub went permanently
offline. It is just that while the hubs involved remain in service,
there is no need to do so. This is why it has been described as a
(write coalescing) write cache layer for Bitcoin.>
I believe people expect lightning to be peer 2 peer like bitcoin.
Adam
📝 Original message:On 28 June 2015 at 12:29, Benjamin <benjamin.l.cordes at gmail.com> wrote:
> I agree that naive scaling will likely lead to bad outcomes. They might have
> the advantage though, as this would mean not changing Bitcoin.
Sure we can work incrementally and carefully, and this is exactly what
Bitcoin has been doing, and *must* do for safety and security for the
last 5 years!
That doesnt mean that useful serious improvements have not been made.
> Level2 and Lightning is not well defined. If you move money to a third
> party, even if it is within the constrained of a locked contract, then I
> don't think that will solve the issues.
I think you misunderstand how lightning works. Every lightning
transaction *is* a valid bitcoin transaction that could be posted to
the Bitcoin network to reclaim funds if a hub went permanently
offline. It is just that while the hubs involved remain in service,
there is no need to do so. This is why it has been described as a
(write coalescing) write cache layer for Bitcoin.>
I believe people expect lightning to be peer 2 peer like bitcoin.
Adam