Agreed on both accounts. The main point is that there are no inherent rights built into bitcoin - just aligned economic interests enforced by agreed upon technical rules. The technical rules allow for a majority to dictate, while the economic interests may or may not support such a change.

On Sun, Jun 28, 2015 at 10:16 AM, Eric Lombrozo <elombrozo@gmail.com> wrote:
Furthermore, the actual way in which the conflict is resolved sets a precedent for how such disagreements are to be “resolved” in the future.

So the means are also important to consider.

- Eric

On Jun 28, 2015, at 6:51 AM, Ivan Brightly <ibrightly@gmail.com> wrote:

On Sun, Jun 28, 2015 at 8:13 AM, Jorge Timón <jtimon@jtimon.cc> wrote:

No, this is very important. The majority has no right to dictate on
the minority.

While an interesting philosophical question, I don't think that this is accurate. First off, bitcoin doesn't imbue  any 'rights' on individuals - it provides the choice of participating or not, nothing more.

Secondly, from a technical perspective, how is it that the majority (or super-majority) are prevented from imposing their will? The best answer is that they are incentivized to not override a minority group since that reduces the inherent value in the system. However, presuming that the majority calculate that the reward for imposing a change is greater than the value lost in such disruption, I don't see how there would be any stopping this change. The longest chain with the greatest number of users valuing the token on that chain "wins".

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