I have not seen all of the emails in reply come through on the mailing list, I 
am sure it is always that way. There are a couple to reply to, replies 
indented>:

On Mon, Mar 11, 2019 at 12:47 PM Dustin Dettmer via bitcoin-dev 
<bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org<mailto:bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org>>
 wrote:
What about putting it in a deprecated state for some time. Adjust the 
transaction weight so using the op code is more expensive (10x, 20x?) and get 
the word out that it will be removed in the future.

You could even have nodes send a reject code with the message “OP_CODESEPARATOR 
is depcrecated.”
>Yes, that sort of thing, widely publicised. Positive publicity is a good thing.


From: Moral Agent via bitcoin-dev 
<bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org<mailto:bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org>>
Sent: Monday, 11 March 2019 5:24 AM
To: LORD HIS EXCELLENCY JAMES HRMH; Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
Subject: Re: [bitcoin-dev] OP_CODESEPARATOR Re: BIP Proposal: The Great 
Consensus Cleanup

>Lock in a blockheight to get rid of it 10 years in the future.

And then make UTXOs containing OP_CODESEAPRATOR (etc.) and mined prior to the 
soft fork activation standard, with weight penalties as appropriate, so there 
would be no difficulty spending them before the cutoff?
>Yes, precisely that sort of thing so that there is no difficulty spending the 
>UTXOs before the cutoff, preferably we would never prevent spending existing 
>valid transactions in the blockchain, also not only to morally discourage the 
>creation of new transactions with OP_CODESEAPRATOR but to physically prevent 
>them if possible. At the minimum, 10 years of depreciated notifications should 
>be enough for anyone but pre-signed lock-timed transactions may be a different 
>matter. Do we currently allow them to be mined and the UTXO's not valid to be 
>spent until n height/time? We should.

On Sun, Mar 10, 2019 at 10:55 AM LORD HIS EXCELLENCY JAMES HRMH via bitcoin-dev 
<bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org<mailto:bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org>>
 wrote:

Opinion: Lock in a blockheight to get rid of it 10 years in the future. Use it 
as press that Bitcoin is going to lose $1,000,000 if some mystery person does 
not put their transaction through by then, try for global presses. Use the 
opportunity to get rid of it while you are able. Once gazetted anything is 
public knowledge.

Regards,
LORD HIS EXCELLENCY JAMES HRMH

________________________________
From: 
bitcoin-dev-boun...@lists.linuxfoundation.org<mailto:bitcoin-dev-boun...@lists.linuxfoundation.org>
 
<bitcoin-dev-boun...@lists.linuxfoundation.org<mailto:bitcoin-dev-boun...@lists.linuxfoundation.org>>
 on behalf of Matt Corallo via bitcoin-dev 
<bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org<mailto:bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org>>
Sent: Saturday, 9 March 2019 7:14 AM
To: Sjors Provoost
Cc: Bitcoin Protocol Discussion
Subject: Re: [bitcoin-dev] OP_CODESEPARATOR Re: BIP Proposal: The Great 
Consensus Cleanup

Aside from the complexity issues here, note that for a user to be adversely 
affect, they probably have to have pre-signed lock-timed transactions. 
Otherwise, in the crazy case that such a user exists, they should have no 
problem claiming the funds before activation of a soft-fork (and just switching 
to the swgwit equivalent, or some other equivalent scheme). Thus, adding 
additional restrictions like tx size limits will equally break txn.

> On Mar 8, 2019, at 14:12, Sjors Provoost 
> <sj...@sprovoost.nl<mailto:sj...@sprovoost.nl>> wrote:
>
>
>> (1) It has been well documented again and again that there is desire to 
>> remove OP_CODESEPARATOR, (2) it is well-documented OP_CODESEPARATOR in 
>> non-segwit scripts represents a rather significant vulnerability in Bitcoin 
>> today, and (3) lots of effort has gone into attempting to find practical 
>> use-cases for OP_CODESEPARATOR's specific construction, with no successes as 
>> of yet. I strongly, strongly disagree that the highly-unlikely remote 
>> possibility that someone created something before which could be rendered 
>> unspendable is sufficient reason to not fix a vulnerability in Bitcoin today.
>>
>>> I suggest an alternative whereby the execution of OP_CODESEPARATOR 
>>> increases the transactions weight suitably as to temper the vulnerability 
>>> caused by it.  Alternatively there could be some sort of limit (maybe 1) on 
>>> the maximum number of OP_CODESEPARATORs allowed to be executed per script, 
>>> but that would require an argument as to why exceeding that limit isn't 
>>> reasonable.
>>
>> You could equally argue, however, that any such limit could render some 
>> moderately-large transaction unspendable, so I'm somewhat skeptical of this 
>> argument. Note that OP_CODESEPARATOR is non-standard, so getting them mined 
>> is rather difficult in any case.
>
> Although I'm not a fan of extra complicity, just to explore these two ideas a 
> bit further.
>
> What if such a transaction:
>
> 1. must have one input; and
> 2. must be smaller than 400 vbytes; and
> 3. must spend from a UTXO older than fork activation
>
> Adding such a contextual check seems rather painful, perhaps comparable to 
> nLockTime. Anything more specific than the above, e.g. counting the number of 
> OP_CODESEPARATOR calls, seems like guess work.
>
> Transaction weight currently doesn't consider OP codes, it only considers if 
> bytes are part of the witness. Changing that to something more akin to 
> Ethereums gas pricing sounds too complicated to even consider.
>
>
> I would also like to believe that whoever went through the trouble of using 
> OP_CODESEPARATOR reads this list.
>
> Sjors
>

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