Hi Jameson,
Just as "the incentives are in place" for short term greedy participants to make their case for full node runners to follow them off a cliff, so are the incentives in place for those with longer term perspectives to encourage authors of confiscatory proposals to abandon them, and encourage the rest of the community to reject them as well.[1]
The people who appeal to short-term incentives to call in the plunge protection squad fail to see that in doing so they irreparably damage the long term value of their coins (and create extra work for those of us with lower time preferences who must now consider the logistics of defensive forking) by undermining one of the foundational principles that gives their coins value to begin with.
There is a difference between "can" and "should" and the norm around here is pretty well established that bitcoin protocol developers (and the broader community of full node runners) "should not" interfere with existing spending conditions, even if they are believed to be insecure. Key (mis)management is an application layer concern, not a consensus layer concern. If you disagree, where is your proposal for freezing coins held on exchanges? You have already written about the risks posed by such custody arrangements, and this is a much more imminent threat than the specter of a CRQC.[2]
[1] To say nothing of the incentives of the vulnerable keyholders and the CRQC operators, but that is a secondary and more academic topic compared to the discussion about principles and long term system integrity.
[2]
https://blog.casa.io/the-custodian-menace
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