This^ 100%! If you want to get political, you're free to fork off or use other blockchain solutions. But let the engineers do their job! After they're done, the market can decide. It's not like engineers can dictate how a blockchain is used. That's the beauty of the OSS model.
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6/ This IMO is better than your idea of voting the engineers in. For a couple of reasons. First, just because you vote some people in doesn’t mean they don’t have political bias, or can’t acquire bias *after* they get voted in.
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7/ Secondly, by introducing an election process you allow the possibility that the election could be gamed (who would be the judge of such an election, btw?). You also add a bureaucratic bottleneck that could deter potential contributors from contributing.
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8/ Rather than doing that, OSS is about having a hands-off approach at the system input: everyone who is worth his/her salt can contribute. And enforcing quality *at the system output*: code is reviewed & subjected to a common, objective standard that everyone agrees on.
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9/ I believe this process is a good model for the so-called “governance” of blockchain protocol development. Again, contingent on the fact that we define the common objective standard clearly.
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> Again, contingent on the fact that we define the common objective standard clearly. IMO this is impossible.
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Why not? eg: many would agree that Bitcoin has these high-level requirements (ranked by priority): 1) Security (immutability of ledger + secure token ownership) 2) Decentralization 3) Scalability 4) Privacy When there're conflicting goals, higher priority req takes precedence.
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You can flesh it out further of cos. E.g.: How to go about making trade-offs, in what scenarios they are allowed. If you disagree with said standard, that’s the signal for forking off to your own blockchain.
End of conversation
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Umm, the block size was not "mistaken" for a political issue, the block size *was* a political issue. And good luck agreeing on an objective standard.
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