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VeriBlock announces alpha SegWit-enabled PoP miner; warns it’ll take more space on Bitcoin

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VeriBlock’s team announced today that it is releasing an alpha SegWit-enabled Proof-of-Proof (PoP) miner. While doing so, the team cautioned users to only deposit very small amounts of BTC as they are actively working on its robustness and stability, volunteer community testers experienced hiccups in testnet mode.

The team also went into the details of how individual PoP transactions will consume less weight on Bitcoin, meaning that transaction fees will be lower for those transactions (~29% lower). This, rather counter-intuitively however, will mean that VeriBlock transactions will take more space on the on-disk Bitcoin blockchain.

PoP miners compete for rewards by publishing fingerprints of a PoP-secured blockchain to another blockchain, in order to inherit its security. VeriBlock uses PoP to secure itself to Bitcoin, acting as a security aggregation layer. According to the VeriBlock team,

“SegWit transactions are actually roughly the same size as their non-SegWit counterparts, but their witnesses are counted differently towards the block weight limit.”

Besides this, the team stated that SegWit improves decentralization of PoP mining by enabling more miners to participate per unit time, while maintaining Bitcoin’s level of security in higher fee markets than before.

On a side note, former contributor to Bitcoin Core, Jeff Garzik, who led the development of the abandoned SegWit2x hard fork attempt back in 2017, is part of VeriBlock’s team.

Previously, Sergej Kotliar, CEO of Bitrefill, had published tweets that he’d been looking into the entity responsible for the surge in SegWit transactions, and found the culprit to be VeriBlock.

Bitcoin Core developer, Luke Dashjr, tweeted that spammers were abusing the block size of SegWit to gain advantages over “legit Bitcoin users.”

Some users acknowledged Dashjr’s points, but reiterated that the problem would be worked out when BTC fees inevitably went up. Some users defended the transactions, suggesting that they were as valid as any other ones.

According to Bitcoin advocate Andreas Antonopolous, there really isn’t any way to determine what is a legitimate use of the blockchain and what isn’t. 

In his video addressing this issue, he had said,

“The market based mechanism of the network allows the sender of a transaction to signal the network how important that transaction is to them. This in turn affects how fast a transaction is verified and added to the blockchain. If VeriBlock is using 25% of the blockchain, apparently that’s how much of the capacity the market is pricing to allocate that particular application.”

Back in January, developer Jameson Lopp had discovered something similar happening,

OP_RETURN is a kind of transaction used to embed data on the blockchain and can also be used to prove the existence of some data at any point in time in order to issue new assets.

As of now, VeriBlock is making money transfers on the Bitcoin blockchain more expensive due to the limited availability of space. That being said, not much can be done to improve the situation, but alternatives to PoP such as Komodo’s Delayed Proof-of-Work would require fewer transactions on the Bitcoin blockchain.

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