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On Oct 31, 2025, at 14:20, Juan Aleman <bitco...@juanaleman.com> wrote:
Hello bitcoin developers,
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Hi Juan,
Not sure if you're confusing me with the other Antoine or not,
but still here my honest answer to your post.
The power is within the hands of the multitude of users.
The users are the ones who freely picked up a full-node software,
use it to support their bitcoin endeavors, recommend it to their
friends, bring back technical feedback to the devs to improve it,
make it the evangelism for free at their local meetup or on social
network and ultimately who are free to allocate capital and ressources
to further the development of a full-node software.
If you think that bitcoin core isn't adverse to the desiderata of the
users, I do think the lastest months where we have seen an alternative
client suddenly being adopted by large swarm of full-node operators is
quite telling. While core has been deemed being in a situation of quasi-
monopoly for years and that situation would be de facto immutable, the
story of the last months points towards another reality.
So there is no real "repository authority" as you're describing, or if
there is one it's rather because season after season, we see the same
cycle repeating. Some groups of users or developers wish to have their
consensus ideas or policy mechanisms adopted in bitcoin (core), there is
a grounded pushback from another faction of users and developers and then
the first dimissed group goes to re-patch their ideas on top of a core
fork and finally engage in a "my way or the fork highway" kind of escalation.
In my view, the root of the problem is not that "Core" is "corrupted" or
"compromised". It's a human institution, so of course there are things that
can be improved, and things are constantly improved. The real problem is that
most of the time, the dissatisfied of the Core process don't have the cold
determination to go for real in developing their own alternative bitcoin
clients, with its own set of features, its own culture of development and
in patiently growing its user base.
Apologies if I say something obvious, but it's not by threatening to soft-fork
that a full-node project is going to earn the credibility and the "trust" of
large swarm of the community. Quite the contrary, it's more likely to have the
opposite effect in the low-time preference minds. Basic of "product management",
if you have hundreds of users that are okay to choose a lower quality software
because of default settings, that's great news. You have already a niche, now
professionalize a bit the project and keep growing from it.
I really hope that one of the positive outcome that will emerge from the last
months of circus will be that finally that Bitcoin Gnocchi starts to be a real
project, that it grows its own community of contributors and go to live more a
life of its own. And if Gnocchi is not a delicious enough software in the taste
of some, the good news is that libbitcoinkernel probably slashes by few order of
magnitude the complexity of building a full-node. More freedom to make your own
kitchen and cook your own recipes.
Frankly, what you're proposing with the repository label renaming, it's just cosmetic.
Bitcoin core won't loose its shamanic-like "authority" just because some repository
would have changed its name. But because, there would be an ecosystem with multiple
high-quality well-maintained clients to pick up from, and network-wide change would
have to be the fruit of a high-flying technical debate, or at least to be experimented
on its own by an implementation for a while resulting in unequivocal improvements.
But on the stability of the network and not slipping into fork adventurism, bitcoin
core is right here and one can be sure I share plainly the opinion of many of core
contributors.
Best,
Antoine
OTS hash: 17d321f45c7499543a96fb660d9e18ba6448bb9514d51c77e7868d5bdb125b95
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