> that does not change the fact that Alice -> Bob -> Zack was mined in the
> blockchain, and those transactions exist
If you use it in that way, then cut-through is pointless. The whole point of
using it is scaling. If you have only "Alice -> Zack" transaction, that is
included in some block, then cut-through is really useful. In other cases, if
you include all transactions anyway, and create only a proof for some nodes,
then it doesn't scale, because you have to always process those transactions in
the middle, while there is no need to do so. It is needed only during batching,
to prevent double-spending, but if it is deeply confirmed, then who needs
something that doesn't scale?
Also, going in that direction is a natural consequence of enabling full-RBF:
transactions will be replaced, which means mempool-level-batching (ideally
non-interactive, done automatically by nodes) will be next, sooner or later.
On 2023-09-05 19:49:51 user Peter Todd <p...@petertodd.org> wrote:
On Sun, Sep 03, 2023 at 06:01:02PM +0200, vjudeu via bitcoin-dev wrote: > >
Given the current concerns with blockchain size increases due to inscriptions,
and now that the lightning network is starting to gain more traction, perhaps
people are now more willing to consider a smaller blocksize in favor of pushing
more activity to lightning? > > People will not agree to shrink the maximum
block size. However, if you want to kill inscriptions, there is another
approach, that could be used to force them into second layers: it is called
cut-through, and was described in this topic:
https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=281848.0 > > Then, if you have "Alice
-> Bob -> ... -> Zack" transaction chain, and for example some inscriptions
were created in "Alice -> Bob" transaction, then cut-through could remove those
inscriptions, while leaving the payment unaffected, because the proper amount
of coins will be received by Zack, as it should be. You are incorrect:
cut-through transactions will not meaningfully affect inscriptions. While it is
true that with fancy cryptography we can prove the Alice -> ... -> Zack chain,
that does not change the fact that Alice -> Bob -> Zack was mined in the
blockchain, and those transactions exist. Anyone running a full archival node
will still have those transactions, and can provide them (and all their
inscription data) to anyone who needs it. This is not unlike how in Bitcoin
right now many people run pruned nodes that do not have any archival
inscription data. Them running those nodes does not prevent others from running
full archival nodes that do make that data available. -- https://petertodd.org
'peter'[:-1]@petertodd.org
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