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Marcel
9e02ef62bf212188aab2ad6a5a1b9893707a11d08ec2c39f087f1e8efe780797
Replying to Avatar Dennis

Pretty wild for what started as a joke, but that's how nostr:npub1qv02xpsc3lhxxx5x7xswf88w3u7kykft9ea7t78tz7ywxf7mxs9qrxujnc works: Congrats to the magazine team for pulling off those three issues – looking forward to hopefully many more! Good job, peers! 🧡📙👌

Thank you all for the opportunity! 🙃

Klingt genau so präzise wie meine Followeranzahl auf #nostr. Find ich gut! 🤣

Die Frage war eher retorisch gemeint! Es gab auf jeden Fall große Zustimmung im Publikum. 👏

Replying to Avatar Lyn Alden

“We should change Bitcoin now in a contentious way to fix the security budget” is basically the same tinkering mentality that central bankers have.

It begins with an overconfident assumption that they know fees won’t be sufficient in the future and that a certain “fix” is going to generate more fees. But some “fixes” could even backfire and create less fees, or introduce bugs, or damage the incentive structure.

The Bitcoin fee market a couple decades out will primarily be a function of adoption or lack thereof. In a world of eight billion people, only a couple hundred million can do an on chain transaction per year, or a bit more with maximal batching. The number of people who could do a monthly transaction is 1/12th of that number. In order to be concerned that bitcoin fees will be too low to prevent censorship in the future, we have to start with the assumption that not many people use bitcoin decades out.

Fedwire has about 100x the gross volume that Bitcoin currently does, with a similar number of transactions. What will Bitcoin’s fee market be if volumes go up 5x or 10x, let alone 50x or 100x? Who wants to raise their hand with a confident model of what bitcoin volumes will be in 2040?

What will someone pay to send a ten million dollar equivalent on chain settlement internationally? $100 in fees per million dollar settlement transaction would be .01%. $300 to get it in a quicker block would be 0.03%. That type of environment can generate tens of billions of dollars of fees annually. The fees that people pay to ship millions of dollars of gold long distances, or to perform a real estate transaction worth millions of dollars, are extremely high. Even if bitcoin is a fraction of that, it would be high by today’s standards. And in a world of billions of people, if nobody wants to pay $100 to send a million dollar settlement bearer asset transaction, then that’s a world where not many people use bitcoin period.

In some months the “security budget” concern trends. In other months, the “fees will be so high that only rich people can transact on chain” concern trends. These are so wildly contradictory and the fact that both are common concerns shows how little we know about the long term future.

I don’t think the fee market can be fixed by gimmicks. Either the network is desirable to use in a couple decades or it’s not. If 3 or 4 decades into bitcoin’s life it can’t generate significant settlement volumes, and gets easily censored due to low fees, then it’s just not a very desirable network at that point for one reason or another.

Some soft forks like covenants can be thoughtfully considered for scaling and fee density, and it’s good for smart developers to always be thinking about low risk improvements to the network that the node network and miners might have a high consensus positive view toward over time. But trying to rush VC-backed softforks, and using security budget FUD to push them, is pretty disingenuous imo.

Anyway, good morning.

Replying to Avatar Niel Liesmons

https://void.cat/d/DsESUS6Ky1j4Cqo61iYBdb.webp

https://void.cat/d/SrbHbvcNuep1gJuwjmgqBV.webp

https://void.cat/d/VMGe7p49PE4bkEpaPJaYWs.webp

Nostr-browser concept.

-> Inspiration for nostr:npub1xdtducdnjerex88gkg2qk2atsdlqsyxqaag4h05jmcpyspqt30wscmntxy & co.

A Portal seems to me to be the ideal visual for this, given how you jump from one app to another by clicking on an icon. That icon might as well be a purple portal.

Looks good!

Replying to Avatar SMS

Get it, OpenAI needs cash. But how could anyone get there eyes scanned?

Also, does this mean, open source models might make the race in the end?