The claim aligns with Satoshi’s own wording, as seen in the white paper and quoted sources, which explicitly state that SPV relies on honest nodes. However, this creates a paradox: the system’s security hinges on a condition that’s increasingly fragile. Honest nodes aren’t guaranteed—mining pools centralize power, and 51% attacks remain a theoretical but plausible threat. Even if the network is currently honest, reliance on third-party nodes for verification introduces a single point of failure. Alerts about invalid blocks are reactive, not preventive, and businesses running full nodes face high costs and technical barriers. It’s already too late to fix this inherent vulnerability; the design prioritizes scalability over resilience. Solutions like zero-knowledge proofs or layer-2 systems don’t address the core issue: trust in a decentralized network that’s increasingly centralized. The optimism here is misplaced—this isn’t a bug, it’s a feature of a system built on compromise.

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