These articles break the common Bitcoin rumors

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Some Bitcoin Cash (BCH) proponents wrote a series of rumour articles describing bitcoin technology that is often considered real but not factual.Articles published on the read.cash blog review topics such as 10-minute confirmation times, SPV wallets, PoW energy usage, and rising network costs. 

Bitcoin Rumor Buster

 BCH supporters have been participating in a series of editorial events called "Mythbusting" aimed at eliminating misinformation about the bitcoin protocol from sophistors throughout the crypto community over the past decade. These articles have been posted to read.cash, a BCH-centric blog site, and have been translated into Spanish, French, and Arabic which will attract more readers.

BCH transaction fees won't go up like BTC

Because BCH network is not limited by artificial 1MB

 An article written by Zwets called " Breakthrough : As the usage increases, BCH fees will also be very high." Many people think that because the cost of BTC increases with the amount of use, when the amount of use increases, the same thing will happen to BCH. But Zwets wrote: "This argument is untenable because of a lack of understanding." Zwets said that as usage increased, the reason for the surge in BTC fees was the 1MB block size limit. He explained in the article: "Keeping this limit is the biggest change in Bitcoin's history without change ... Bitcoin Cash has a cap of 32MB, so it won't hit it in the foreseeable future. " 

Fork.lol calculated the average number of transactions per block on September 1, 2018. Orange is BTC and blue is BCH. At this time on September 1, 2018, although BCH processed 2.4 million transactions that day, its fees fell from an average of $ 0.003 per transaction to $ 0.001.

 In fact, some data show that when the BCH chain is overloaded, the fees will not increase like the fees on the BTC network. In 2018, the BCH community participated in a stress test, processing 2.4 million transactions on September 1. Throughout the week, the BCH network conducts stress tests day by day, and the transaction volume processed is 2 to 4 times the average daily transaction volume of BTC. In this week's test, some observers pointed out that the network fees actually decreased from $ 0.003 per transaction to $ 0.001. The Zwets article highlights the fact that the main problem with BTC networks is due to artificially limited block sizes. Zwets' article highlights that the root cause of the high transaction cost of using BTC is the artificial limit on the amount of transactions that can be processed, and this limit is lower than the amount of transactions that people want to conduct. 

PoW energy consumption is not a problem

 Another rumor that was broken on read.cash was "Bitcoin will inevitably be energy inefficient due to PoW " , saying that Bitcoin's workload proved to be a waste of energy and was "meaningless." The rumor article was written by read.cash user Alanone: "The sole purpose of this statement is to put Bitcoin (BTC) and PoW in a bad situation. " He analyzed that the best way to consume energy is to compare it with other energy-consuming The system compares.

Alanone pointed out in the article: "For example, the energy cost of video game consoles is higher than that of the Bitcoin network, but of course not for security purposes, but for entertainment purposes." It  also added at the end of the article: See, the related issue of Bitcoin (BTC) cost is a non-existent issue for the environment. At the end of this article, an interesting fact indicates that the consumption of idle home devices can provide the Bitcoin network for more than three years. Electricity.

10 minute block time and RBF debate

 BCH supporter Cain wrote down his thoughts, and he believes that the 10-minute confirmation time will make the Bitcoin network difficult to use for daily payments. Cain wrote in the article "Rumors: 10 minutes of confirmation time makes Bitcoin unsuitable as a 'cash' payment method" : " Bitcoin supporters say that Bitcoin is not used to buy coffee. "  Some people admire One reason for this rumor is that they believe that a 10-minute "block time" can make double spending easier. Cain mentioned in a recent video "Using Double Spend Vulnerabilities" that Hayden Otto used the RBF protocol to demonstrate how easy it is to make double payments on the BTC chain. Proponents of BTC cover up the problem with RBF, claiming it is due to a block interval of 10 minutes. They also claim that all zero confirmation transactions are not secure. Cain article refutes this fallacy, saying that BCH does not have RBF, and BTC supporters do not realize that it is much more difficult to demonstrate a real example of Otto on the BCH network. Click for technical point of view | Is it easy to implement BTC dual payment with RBF protocol?  Cain article stressed: "On the contrary, [Bitcoin cash] network follows 'FirstSeen' principle, that the miners to first deal they see as a criterion, rather than charging the highest transaction costs. " This means that to the BCH Successful double spend on the network is much more difficult. Cain pointed out that because BCH does not have RBF, people who want to pay double must almost remit at the same time. If the transaction is sent only after a few seconds, the chance of double spending will be greatly reduced. Born in Bitcoin, the RBF protocol gives miners more incentive to accept "higher fees" instead of following the original design of Satoshi's "First Seen" rules. 

Breaking the view that simplified payment verification is unsafe

 An article by Tomz (Thomas Zander, maintainer of Flowee the Hub), "Spoiler: SPV is not secure" breaks the rumor that simplified payment verification is not secure. Tomz believes that despite the good description of this process in the Bitcoin white paper, people still have “misunderstandings about the SPV wallet”, which is a “shame”. "SPV wallets can be verified, but rarely verified ... The rumor we hear is that this kind of postponement check is not secure-if you don't check 100% of the transactions, people might somehow take your money . " the developer added. Tomz said that with full nodes, miners verify every transaction and if they try to create a block that costs UTXO twice, the entire network will reject them. SPV wallets are verified through a tracking chain. Since SPV does not check every transaction, they trust the network of complete nodes.

 SPV described in Satoshi Nakamoto's Bitcoin white paper.  The Tomz article emphasizes: " SPV wallets don't just trust miners, they trust every company observing those miners to have enough selfish reasons to keep the chain healthy and sane. Because the moment one of those 1000s of miners starts to cheat, it is cheaper to eject that one miner from the ecosystem than to just declare all your money in that chain lost due to the value and trust drop that would follow".

Developers also said: Therefore, the SPV wallet has all The investor trusts the ecosystem of coins. Frankly, this is no different from the coins used by any other company or individual. The only difference is the risk-the risk is not that your single payment is stolen, but that the entire chain is destroyed and loses value. This can be easily avoided by running full nodes and running business on them. Just like companies like exchanges and Bitpay. The only risk of an SPV wallet is that there are not enough people to control the miners. 

Larger blocks are not equal to smaller nodes

 Finally, Mr. Zwets wrote another refutation article, " Breakthrough : Larger Blocks Mean Fewer Complete Nodes" , which refutes the idea that larger blocks will harm the entire number of nodes. Essentially, because these blocks are very large, rumors believers believe that users will choose not to run full nodes because the chain is too large. Zwets used Bitcoin Unlimited's chief scientist Dr. Peter Rizun's speech "Block Propagation and Z Parameters" to justify his point. Basically, Zwets emphasizes that users run full nodes because of low cost and "because they find them useful and care about the network."

 Slideshow from Dr. Peter Rizun's speech "Block Propagation and Z Parameters".  The Zwets article insists: "This means that the more people there are, the more complete the network is to nodes. This may sound obvious, but some people seem to think that the only way to get more Bitcoin nodes is to reduce the cost of running Bitcoin. " He also added that if costs increase exponentially, protocol developers should not ignore the rapid decrease in full nodes. One example is the "huge node cost" associated with 200+ MB blocks. "This will cause nodes to crash and force operators to upgrade to more expensive hardware. " Zwets believes that the BSV chain is perfect for this type of "node cost" Examples. Being a large block "broken many BSV block browsers and asked Bitmex to double its node memory." 

Santa rewards Myth-Busting with 1 BCH

 Overall, the BCH community seems to appreciate editorials aimed at rumors and historical revisionism.  In addition, because all the rebuttals were caused by an article written by Btcfork entitled " Rolling Through the Roadmap of Bitcoin's Little Blocker Rumors" , the author can also obtain a Token called "Mythbuster" based on SLP.

 Santa gave bitcoin cash for the best Mythbusting article.  Active contributors may get Mythbuster Token for their efforts, and Btcfork hopes that this work will provide a complete and detailed list of objections to these false claims.

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$ 2.10
$ 2.00 from @Read.Cash
$ 0.10 from @ichundes
Sponsors of arslankhalid
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Comments

Very informative topic

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4 years ago

This article is vague and not straight to point. It should have been better summarised and point to the salient points regarding BTC and BCH, with correct references.

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4 years ago

You have applied for this article to be included in "Mythbusting (8b0b)" community.

As moderator, I would be inclined to accept, but your article misquotes the titles of other posts, for example, the article by Mr-Zwets is called "Mythbusting:"BCH fees would also be high with increased usage", and not "Breakthrough : As the usage increases, BCH fees will also be very high."

This bad misquoting of easily available article titles is not something I will stand for. It takes hardly any effort at all to copy and paste the correct title of someone's post.

Correct the misquotes everywhere in your article, or I will reject your post from the moderation queue.

It would be much better if you not only provide the correct titles, but also make them into links to the actual posts.

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4 years ago