This sort of statement represents one consequence of the aforementioned bad precedent.

Are checkpoints good now? Are hard forks okay now?

What is the maximum depth of a reorg allowed by this non-machine consensus?

Shouldn't we just define a max depth so that all cruft deeper than that can just be discarded on a regular basis?

Why are there activation heights defined by this hard fork if it's not possible to reorg back to them?

The "BIP" is neither a Proposal (it's been decided, just documenting for posterity), nor an Improvement (there is no actual benefit, just some tidying up in the notoriously obtuse satoshi code base), nor Bitcoin (a hard fork defines an alt coin, so from Aug 4 forward it has been CoreCoin).

e

On Nov 16, 2016, at 5:29 AM, Jameson Lopp <jameson.lopp@gmail.com> wrote:

Since "buried deployments" are specifically in reference to historical consensus changes, I think the question is more one of human consensus than machine consensus. Is there any disagreement amongst Bitcoin users that BIP34 activated at block 227931, BIP65 activated at block 388381, and BIP66 activated at block 363725? Somehow I doubt it.

It seems to me that this change is merely cementing into place a few attributes of the blockchain's history that are not in dispute.

- Jameson

On Tue, Nov 15, 2016 at 5:42 PM, Eric Voskuil via bitcoin-dev <bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
Actually this does nothing to provide justification for this consensus rule change. It is just an attempt to deflect criticism from the fact that it is such a change.

e

> On Nov 15, 2016, at 9:45 AM, Btc Drak <btcdrak@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I think this is already covered in the BIP text:-
>
> "As of November 2016, the most recent of these changes (BIP 65,
> enforced since December 2015) has nearly 50,000 blocks built on top of
> it. The occurrence of such a reorg that would cause the activating
> block to be disconnected would raise fundamental concerns about the
> security assumptions of Bitcoin, a far bigger issue than any
> non-backwards compatible change.
>
> So while this proposal could theoretically result in a consensus
> split, it is extremely unlikely, and in particular any such
> circumstances would be sufficiently damaging to the Bitcoin network to
> dwarf any concerns about the effects of this proposed change."
>
>
> On Mon, Nov 14, 2016 at 6:47 PM, Eric Voskuil via bitcoin-dev
> <bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
>> NACK
>>
>> Horrible precedent (hardcoding rule changes based on the assumption that
>> large forks indicate a catastrophic failure), extremely poor process
>> (already shipped, now the discussion), and not even a material performance
>> optimization (the checks are avoidable once activated until a sufficiently
>> deep reorg deactivates them).
>>
>> e
>>
>> On Nov 14, 2016, at 10:17 AM, Suhas Daftuar via bitcoin-dev
>> <bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
>>
>> Hi,
>>
>> Recently Bitcoin Core merged a simplification to the consensus rules
>> surrounding deployment of BIPs 34, 66, and 65
>> (https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/8391), and though the change is a
>> minor one, I thought it was worth documenting the rationale in a BIP for
>> posterity.
>>
>> Here's the abstract:
>>
>> Prior soft forks (BIP 34, BIP 65, and BIP 66) were activated via miner
>> signaling in block version numbers. Now that the chain has long since passed
>> the blocks at which those consensus rules have triggered, we can (as a
>> simplification and optimization) replace the trigger mechanism by caching
>> the block heights at which those consensus rules became enforced.
>>
>> The full draft can be found here:
>>
>> https://github.com/sdaftuar/bips/blob/buried-deployments/bip-buried-deployments.mediawiki
>>
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>>
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