Over 10% now:

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

Prolly nothing šŸ‘€

Thats actionable-voting!

šŸ˜‚

New? Or switching from core?

No specific information, so probably a bit of both.

On knots to they call them SATs?

How many devs work and contribute to Bitcoin Knots?

One, Luke Dashjr

And how many work on Bitcoin Core and contribute?

Unknown, but estimated between 5 to 20 active developers measured month by month.

he was referring to his IQ, and the one dev he can remember

Seriously though..how many devs work and contribute to Bitcoin Core?

"Bitcoin Core typically has around 100–200 active contributors per year, with dozens contributing regularly each month. Over the project’s lifetime, more than 800 individuals have contributed code to the Bitcoin Core repository"

If the above is close to reality then it is beyond me how those calling for decentralization of bitcoin support and use Bitcoin Knots that is maintained and worked on by 1 Developer!!!

Absolutely crazy and against all things bitcoin in my opinion 🤣

You didn't read my reply did you?

It is a very valid argument that what ever figure you put on the number of Core developers, you can add one to that for Knots, so if you say 200 devs, then Knots has 201.

If I take any code and add a couple of lines or change a few parameters and create my own version, I haven't written that app by myself, I have modified an app written by others by a small amount.

That argument sounds clever, but it’s misleading.

Yes, Knots inherits nearly all of its codebase from Bitcoin Core — but that’s exactly the point. The Core repo has hundreds of eyes on it, reviewing, testing, arguing, and reaching rough consensus on what goes in. Knots, on the other hand, introduces changes that bypass that process — changes like filters, which do affect behavior, especially in the context of contentious features.

So if someone adds controversial filtering logic to Core’s codebase and publishes it as Knots, the number of people maintaining that fork doesn’t magically become ā€œCore + 1ā€ : it becomes 1 maintainer making unilateral decisions on top of a collectively maintained base. That’s a huge difference.

This isn’t about copy-pasting code — it’s about who decides what changes go in, and whether those changes are vetted by the broader dev ecosystem. If Knots introduces features that don’t exist in Core, and those features are maintained by a single person, then yes that feature has one maintainer. That’s not a diss, it’s a structural reality.

If someone wants to promote Knots, they should own that - not blur the lines with Core to boost its credibility.

It's neither clever or misleading, simply a true statement.

And yes, if I take some code which is built by a group of other people and make changes which I make public and other people support, then this is an extremely valid process.

It’s not the same. Bitcoin Core changes go through a rigorous review process, peer discussion, and community consensus. Bitcoin Knots is a fork—a personal project. Changes there don’t pass through Core’s checks. One dev forking and tweaking is not the same as 200+ devs maintaining the protocol that runs the majority of the network. Let’s not confuse modification with contribution to consensus.

I understand you have a different opinion, I respect that.

However, you've just repeated yourself, so please see my previous answer.

I'm not wrong and your not attempting to prove me wrong.

Yes..we said our parts.

by your logic voting and a parliament is decentralized.

you are still talking about one software, and one collective making changes on it.

something accepted or not without being tested by the market.

its not like100 devs all have their own alternative versions and experimenting with things in the market of node software in parallel.

its all one collective entity.

makes no sense.

I don't understand

amazon is not centralized because they have many workers?

is a government decentralized because it has parliament or people voting in it?

no that would be a crazy statement.

what is decentralized is multiple nations, experimenting with different laws in parallel.

or multiple companies competing in the free market in parallel.

or multiple bitcoin node implementations competing in the free market of node software, experimenting with different things, and live or die.

so yes some other node implementations, especially one that gives its bitcoin user more options, is decentralization.

one software implemented by one repo, can make changes to the protocol based on votes of few without competing in the market with other options is against everything bitcoin and decentralization.

monopoly over bitcoin software by a single collective is not decentralization.

🄱

FORKING ≠ DECENTRALIZATION.

Bitcoin Core has hundreds of contributors, public review, and global adoption.

Knots is maintained by one person with custom filters, calling that ā€œmore decentralizedā€ just because it’s different is misleading.

Decentralization means many users freely choosing between well-reviewed, consensus-respecting software -not one person pushing personal changes without broad support.

Core is dominant because it’s trusted, not because it’s forced.

That’s decentralization in action.

I love that Bitcoin Core has to realize that they are now a political entity that has to have a relationship with users they think are knuckle-dragging philistines.

"But I believe very strongly I right and they have a provided no viable counter-argument!"

Oh pookie, you are adorbs.

nostr:nevent1qqspxd5schkdw3l2leernlvj4pr4lx8yw68xazr3m7sdt35a8x9thfqpzdmhxue69uhhwmm59e6hg7r09ehkuef0qgswswmx4rkj6d7q05dtafhpkqq2z42fc62s37jvtp642m2jkpfxc2crqsqqqqqphqksh6

Tie one on

šŸ‘€