The information received buried partly as a result of Trump’s inauguration and subsequent rumblings of a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve (SBR), however developer b10c just lately revealed analysis exhibiting that F2Pool — a mining pool representing ~11% of hash energy on the Bitcoin community — is censoring OFAC-sanctioned transactions… once more.
In case you don’t know what this implies: the US Division of the Treasury’s Workplace of International Asset Management (OFAC) maintains a listing of sanctioned entities, together with a lot of Bitcoin addresses; it’s unlawful to do enterprise with these entities below US regulation. It’s truly unclear if this implies miners can not embrace transactions to and from these addresses in blocks they produce — however F2Pool seems to be quite secure than sorry.
Now, so long as it’s simply F2Pool making use of this coverage, this isn’t actually a problem. Some transactions shall be delayed by about ten minutes or so, infrequently, however that’s about it.
If extra swimming pools begin doing it, the delays will get longer and extra frequent — however nonetheless not horrible. Not even when it’s a majority of swimming pools.
The actual situation will come up if a majority of mining swimming pools not solely censors transactions, but additionally refuses to construct on prime of blocks that do embrace these transactions. If this had been to occur, these transactions wouldn’t verify in any respect anymore… not for so long as these mining swimming pools stay a majority. Bitcoin would now not be censorship-resistant.
I can’t actually fault F2Pool for adopting their coverage. Though I might a lot desire it if no mining swimming pools censor, we sadly stay in a world the place even open supply software program builders might face jail time for enabling customers to transact freely.
Reasonably than flirting with an SBR, it might be nice if the brand new Trump administration first simply stopped such state assaults on Bitcoin.
This text is a Take. Opinions expressed are completely the creator’s and don’t essentially mirror these of BTC Inc or Bitcoin Journal.