> On Jun 14, 2015, at 5:53 PM, Eric Lombrozo <elombr...@gmail.com> wrote: > > I think the whole complexity talk is missing the bigger issue. > > Sure, per block validation scales linearly (or quasilinearly…there’s an O(log > n) term in there somewhere but it’s probably dominated by linear factors at > current levels…asymptotic limits don’t always apply very well to finite > systems). And there’s an O(n^2) bandwidth issue.
For accuracy’s sake, I meant to say O(n log n). > > The real issue, though, is validation cost. The n in O(n) here does not > represent block size - it represents the size of the entire block chain for > every new validator that must be synchronized! It means we have no way to > construct short proofs (or at least arguments that are computationally *hard* > to forge) without requiring the validator to maintain the complete system > state. And currently, there is no mechanism for directly compensating > validators. > > A full validator that goes offline even for a short period of time takes a > while to fully catch up to the rest of the network - and starting up a new > validator from scratch will continue to be painful…even for those of us > who’ve turned this into routine by now, let alone new nontechnical users. > > Satoshi’s SPV is not a real solution - it’s a mere suggestion that wasn’t > fully thought out at the time of the Bitcoin white paper. Besides lacking a > good validation security model, practical implementations of it weaken > privacy and complicate client implementations substantially…and the worst > part, it still doesn’t scale all that well. The validator still has to query > every single block (even if filtered) back to the first transaction (which > cannot be determined without doing a blockchain scan anyway). > > So yes, we will most certainly need algorithmic improvements! > > - Eric Lombrozo > > >> On Jun 14, 2015, at 4:58 PM, Adam Back <a...@cypherspace.org> wrote: >> >> Hi Mike >> >> On 15 June 2015 at 00:23, Mike Hearn <m...@plan99.net> wrote: >>>> One thing that is concerning is that few in industry seem inclined to >>>> take any development initiatives or even integrate a library. >>> >>> Um, you mean except all the people who have built more scalable wallets over >>> the past few years, which is the only reason anyone can even use Bitcoin >>> from their phone? >> >> No slight intended obviously to people who do write actual client code. >> >> That was probably insufficiently specific, let me rephrase: I am >> referring to the trend that much of the industry is built on web2.0 >> technology using bitcoin via a library in a web scripting language, >> often with consensus bugs, and even outsourcing and not even running >> their own full node, so that the service itself offered to their users >> isn't even SPV secure to the operator. As well as being heavily based >> on a third-party custody model that is the root cause of the repeated >> wallet breaches. Some of these companies have a noted tendency not to >> upgrade or fix code. >> >> So I mean this not to call out specific companies, but in the sense >> that if we're technologists we should be trying to move the technology >> forward, not just changing parameters which run into an O(n^2) scaling >> wall or break decentralisation security. And we shouldnt take the >> above state of affairs as an immutable reality. It can not persist >> for bitcoin to reach maturity on scale nor security. >> >>> I still think you guys don't recognise what you are actually asking for here >>> - scrapping virtually the entire existing investment in software, wallets >>> and tools. >> >> As I said I dont think we can expect Bitcoin to scale with no further >> algorithmic improvements. Algorithmic improvements take code. There >> is reasonable scope to build in an incrementally deployable way, >> there's plenty of time for people to code, test and opt-in to things, >> the sky is not falling. Companies do care about scaling, and can >> invest in the integration and coding implied to improve their products >> scalability, they have an economic incentive to do it and there is no >> scalable and safe way todo it without this work. >> >>> Computational complexity for the entire network is O(nm) where >>> n=transactions and m=fully validating nodes. There is no fixed relationships >>> between those two variables. >> >> I am referring to global bandwidth O(n^2) with n=users, or O(n) per >> user bandwidth cost to the system, while O(nm) is accurate nodes is an >> internal system concept. Anyway suffice to say the network does not >> scale O(1) in per user cost. >> >>> "Exposing the companies to back-pressure" sounds quite nice and gentle. Let >>> me rephrase it to be equivalent but perhaps more direct: you mean "breaking >>> the current software ecosystem to force people into a new, fictional system >>> that bears little resemblance to the Bitcoin we use today, whether they want >>> that or not". >>> >>> As nothing that has been proposed so far (Lightning, merge mined chains, >>> extension blocks etc) has much chance of actual deployment any time soon, >>> that leaves raising the block size limit as the only possible path left. >> >> A hard-fork takes a long period of time to deploy due to the >> non-upgrade risk, people are working on things in the mean-time. >> There can be a case for some increase to create some breathing room to >> work on scaling and decentralising tech, I just mean to say that if we >> do it in isolation, we're not focussing on the big picture. >> >> Adam >> >> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ >> _______________________________________________ >> Bitcoin-development mailing list >> Bitcoin-development@lists.sourceforge.net >> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bitcoin-development >
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