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From: LORD HIS EXCELLENCY JAMES HRMH <willtech@live.com.au>
To: Bitcoin Protocol Discussion <bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org>
Thread-Topic: [bitcoin-dev] OP_CODESEPARATOR Re: BIP Proposal: The Great
	Consensus Cleanup
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Date: Sun, 10 Mar 2019 14:25:47 +0000
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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 perso=
n does not put their transaction through by then, try for global presses. U=
se the opportunity to get rid of it while you are able. Once gazetted anyth=
ing is public knowledge.

Regards,
LORD HIS EXCELLENCY JAMES HRMH

________________________________
From: bitcoin-dev-bounces@lists.linuxfoundation.org <bitcoin-dev-bounces@li=
sts.linuxfoundation.org> on behalf of Matt Corallo via bitcoin-dev <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 Con=
sensus 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. Oth=
erwise, in the crazy case that such a user exists, they should have no prob=
lem claiming the funds before activation of a soft-fork (and just switching=
 to the swgwit equivalent, or some other equivalent scheme). Thus, adding a=
dditional restrictions like tx size limits will equally break txn.

> On Mar 8, 2019, at 14:12, Sjors Provoost <sjors@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 tod=
ay, and (3) lots of effort has gone into attempting to find practical use-c=
ases for OP_CODESEPARATOR's specific construction, with no successes as of =
yet. I strongly, strongly disagree that the highly-unlikely remote possibil=
ity that someone created something before which could be rendered unspendab=
le is sufficient reason to not fix a vulnerability in Bitcoin today.
>>
>>> I suggest an alternative whereby the execution of OP_CODESEPARATOR incr=
eases the transactions weight suitably as to temper the vulnerability cause=
d 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 reasona=
ble.
>>
>> 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 mine=
d is rather difficult in any case.
>
> Although I'm not a fan of extra complicity, just to explore these two ide=
as 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 t=
o nLockTime. Anything more specific than the above, e.g. counting the numbe=
r 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 usi=
ng OP_CODESEPARATOR reads this list.
>
> Sjors
>

_______________________________________________
bitcoin-dev mailing list
bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org
https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev

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ns-serif,serif,EmojiFont">
<div style=3D"font-family:Calibri,Helvetica,sans-serif,serif,EmojiFont">Opi=
nion: 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 d=
oes not put their transaction through
 by then, try for global presses. Use the opportunity to get rid of it whil=
e you are able. Once gazetted anything is public knowledge.<br>
</div>
<div style=3D"font-family:Calibri,Helvetica,sans-serif,serif,EmojiFont"><br=
>
</div>
<div style=3D"font-family:Calibri,Helvetica,sans-serif,serif,EmojiFont">Reg=
ards,</div>
<div style=3D"font-family:Calibri,Helvetica,sans-serif,serif,EmojiFont">LOR=
D HIS EXCELLENCY JAMES HRMH</div>
</div>
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<br>
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<div id=3D"appendonsend"></div>
<hr tabindex=3D"-1" style=3D"display:inline-block; width:98%">
<div id=3D"divRplyFwdMsg" dir=3D"ltr"><font style=3D"font-size:11pt" face=
=3D"Calibri, sans-serif" color=3D"#000000"><b>From:</b> bitcoin-dev-bounces=
@lists.linuxfoundation.org &lt;bitcoin-dev-bounces@lists.linuxfoundation.or=
g&gt; on behalf of Matt Corallo via bitcoin-dev &lt;bitcoin-dev@lists.linux=
foundation.org&gt;<br>
<b>Sent:</b> Saturday, 9 March 2019 7:14 AM<br>
<b>To:</b> Sjors Provoost<br>
<b>Cc:</b> Bitcoin Protocol Discussion<br>
<b>Subject:</b> Re: [bitcoin-dev] OP_CODESEPARATOR Re: BIP Proposal: The Gr=
eat Consensus Cleanup</font>
<div>&nbsp;</div>
</div>
<div class=3D"BodyFragment"><font size=3D"2"><span style=3D"font-size:11pt"=
>
<div class=3D"PlainText">Aside from the complexity issues here, note that f=
or a user to be adversely affect, they probably have to have pre-signed loc=
k-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 swgw=
it equivalent, or some other equivalent scheme). Thus, adding additional re=
strictions like tx size limits will equally break txn.<br>
<br>
&gt; On Mar 8, 2019, at 14:12, Sjors Provoost &lt;sjors@sprovoost.nl&gt; wr=
ote:<br>
&gt; <br>
&gt; <br>
&gt;&gt; (1) It has been well documented again and again that there is desi=
re to remove OP_CODESEPARATOR, (2) it is well-documented OP_CODESEPARATOR i=
n non-segwit scripts represents a rather significant vulnerability in Bitco=
in today, and (3) lots of effort has gone
 into attempting to find practical use-cases for OP_CODESEPARATOR's specifi=
c 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.<br>
&gt;&gt; <br>
&gt;&gt;&gt; I suggest an alternative whereby the execution of OP_CODESEPAR=
ATOR increases the transactions weight suitably as to temper the vulnerabil=
ity caused by it.&nbsp; Alternatively there could be some sort of limit (ma=
ybe 1) on the maximum number of OP_CODESEPARATORs
 allowed to be executed per script, but that would require an argument as t=
o why exceeding that limit isn't reasonable.<br>
&gt;&gt; <br>
&gt;&gt; You could equally argue, however, that any such limit could render=
 some moderately-large transaction unspendable, so I'm somewhat skeptical o=
f this argument. Note that OP_CODESEPARATOR is non-standard, so getting the=
m mined is rather difficult in any case.<br>
&gt; <br>
&gt; Although I'm not a fan of extra complicity, just to explore these two =
ideas a bit further.<br>
&gt; <br>
&gt; What if such a transaction:<br>
&gt; <br>
&gt; 1. must have one input; and<br>
&gt; 2. must be smaller than 400 vbytes; and<br>
&gt; 3. must spend from a UTXO older than fork activation<br>
&gt; <br>
&gt; Adding such a contextual check seems rather painful, perhaps comparabl=
e to nLockTime. Anything more specific than the above, e.g. counting the nu=
mber of OP_CODESEPARATOR calls, seems like guess work.<br>
&gt; <br>
&gt; Transaction weight currently doesn't consider OP codes, it only consid=
ers if bytes are part of the witness. Changing that to something more akin =
to Ethereums gas pricing sounds too complicated to even consider.<br>
&gt; <br>
&gt; <br>
&gt; I would also like to believe that whoever went through the trouble of =
using OP_CODESEPARATOR reads this list.<br>
&gt; <br>
&gt; Sjors<br>
&gt; <br>
<br>
_______________________________________________<br>
bitcoin-dev mailing list<br>
bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org<br>
<a href=3D"https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev">=
https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev</a><br>
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