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Bitcoin Wallet Blockchain: ‘Buy Some Ether’ to Make Transactions After SegWit2x

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Crypto wallet Blockchain has announced its intention to join with Xapo in following the blockchain with the most accumulated difficulty following the proposed SegWit2x. The wallet service advised its users to “buy some ether” if they intend to make transactions immediately following the fork.

Blockchain Wallet to Follow Chain With Most Difficulty

In mid-November, the Bitcoin blockchain is expected to split into two, competing chains following SegWit2x, a hard fork designed to upgrade the Bitcoin network and enable it to scale more effectively. The proposal appears to have strong support from miners and crypto firms — although this support has steadily waned as the fork has gotten closer — but it is opposed by the Bitcoin Core developers, as well as many other businesses and users.

Consequently, bitcoin services have to decide how they will approach the hard fork. Some, such as Bitfinex, are treating the SegWit2x fork as a separate cryptocurrency, while others, including Xapo, state that they will assign the label “Bitcoin” to the blockchain with the highest accumulated difficulty.

Crypto wallet Blockchain — a SegWit2x supporter — has signaled its intent to follow Xapo’s example and determine which chain will receive the label “Bitcoin” based on the amount of accumulated difficulty each blockchain obtains.

Blockchain chief executive Peter Smith made the announcement in a blog post, stating that the service will provide users with access to the coins on the minority chain if they have “significant value”. Like Xapo, they will label the minority chain either BC1 (incumbent) or BC2 (SegWit2x)

‘Buy Some Ether’

Smith goes on to say that Blockchain may suspend outgoing bitcoin transactions following the fork until the networks have stabilized. He suggests users “buy some ether” if they plan to make transactions in late November following the fork.

During this period, it may be necessary to temporarily suspend outgoing bitcoin transactions for a period of time during network instability.  However, even in this scenario, your funds will remain safe and you’ll be able to monitor them from within the wallet. You’ll also be able to use all Ethereum related functionality.

“If you have transactions to make around late November,” he adds, “we suggest you buy some Ether in our wallet today.”

IBM’s Stellar Move: Tech Giant Uses Cryptocurrency in Cross-Border Payments

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Big Blue is making what could be considered its first public foray into cryptocurrency.

In the kind of unveiling that can only come before one of the biggest events in global finance, IBM is revealing today at Sibos 2017 the results of a partnership with blockchain startup Stellar in which it successfully settled real transactions using the company’s custom cryptocurrency, lumens.

While currently limited to cross-border payments involving British pounds and Fijian dollars, the early-stage platform is nonetheless designed to scale to handle seven fiat currencies in the South Pacific – including the Australian dollar, the New Zealand dollar and the Tonga pa’anga.

Perhaps the platform’s most distinguishing characteristic, however, is that the project showcases how private and public blockchain technologies are increasingly being used in tandem. While IBM’s blockchain solutions are designed to complete much of the workflow around transaction clearing, the actual settlement will be conducted using Stellar’s blockchain.

In this case, Stellar’s lumen serves to digitally connect fiat currencies, allowing for nearly instant exchange without the consumer or buyer ever touching the cryptocurrency itself.

Stellar founder Jed McCaleb told CoinDesk:

“When trading between multiple currencies, it helps to have a bridge currency to reduce the ledgers needed to maintain. Lumen provides that single ledger that can bridge currencies.”

New orbit

Taken together, however, this partnership goes beyond just technical implications.

Not only is the partnership an outside-the-box move for IBM, which has largely focused on its own blockchain platforms, it’s a big win for Stellar, which having emerged from the Ripple founding team hasn’t had quite the same growth, perhaps attributing in part to its focus on developing markets.

The partnership is also evidence of the extent of collaboration between blockchain firms and the wider financial world. To make the project work, IBM had help from partners including National Australia Bank, TD Bank and Wizdraw (HK) of WorldCom Finance.

The payments themselves are conducted for the Advancement of Pacific Financial Infrastructure for Inclusion (APFII), an organization of member financial institutions founded by the United Nations and Swift, and operated by KlickEx, a privately-held direct clearing provider that specializes in cross-border digital remittances.

According to IBM’s vice president of global blockchain development, Jesse Lund, getting all these players to work together is just an extension of IBM’s mission to collaborate with financial institutions to develop a blockchain ecosystem.

To that end, the platform is already integrated with IBM’s Financial Transaction Manager, which itself is integrated with ACH, SEPA and other electronic transaction networks. Going forward, APFII’s confirmation receipts are expected to be published as MT103 Swift messages directly to the blockchain.

“This in many ways is just an extension of that, wherein we’re providing, in collaboration with banks, and in the process developing this blockchain ecosystem,” said Lund.

More support

For now, the new project is also a balancing act – at once both a small advancement of early-stage technology and an aspirational advance toward more lofty goals.

While the trial with APFII has been ongoing since last week, the CEO of ClickEx, Robert Bell, said it’s too early to provide any numbers about transaction volume. But still, he expects as much as 60 percent of the cross-border retail market in the region to be transacting on the platform once all seven currencies are added (the Australian dollar will be the next currency integrated).

“For the first time, blockchain is being used in production to facilitate cross-border payments in multiple integrated currency corridors,” Bell said.

IBM also sees the demo as one with implications for the digitization of central bank money – a concept that’s gotten a significant amount of attention recently as central banks around the world grow more interested in figuring out how the technology could create efficiencies.

“Our long game is to support multiple different types of digital assets,” said Lund, adding:

“And I’m very confident that you will be seeing central banks coming forward with their own digital asset issuances that will be a much more formidable construct of this model.”

Today, that future will be discussed in greater detail on stage at Sibos in Toronto, where a panel with representatives from IBM, TD Bank and CLS will discuss the project with the CEOs of both Stellar and KlickEx.

“It’s going to be a wild ride,” Lund said, concluding:

“We’ve got the bankers and the renegades altogether.”

Ethereum Executes Byzantium Blockchain Software Upgrade

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Ethereum has officially updated.

At 05.22 UTC, the fifth hard fork to occur on ethereum, the second largest cryptocurrency by market cap, enacted a batch of ethereum improvement protocols (EIPs) designed to enhance the platform. The price per dollar of ether oscillated wildly in the run up, before rising over 2 percent following activation to $348, according to CoinMarketCap data.

First introduced in the ethereum roadmap in 2015 under the name of Metropolis, that large-scale upgrade encountered some substantial delays, leading it to be broken into two phases – Byzantium and Constantinople (the latter still having no formal release date).

As Byzantium was a planned fork with minimally contentious changes, there’s been very little disagreement among the community about the merits of the code changes included in the upgrade. However, the fork is still notable in that it’s ethereum’s first major upgrade since interest in the technology skyrocketed this year, which has been largely correlated to the popularity of ICO tokens launched using ethereum’s ERC-20 token standard.

The process was at times a little sticky, though, with ethereum developers encountering some pretty nasty surprises in the run-up to the deadline.

Over the last few days, Byzantium-enabled ethereum software was continuously retracted due to critical bugs found in the code. Developers pushed out corrections just in time – but not without seriously considering postponing the fork.

According to blockchain analytics website Ether Nodes, nodes running faulty software are currently 65.3 percent Geth and 30.4 percent Parity, the two main ethereum clients. As previously detailed by CoinDesk, the faulty software could cause a consensus issue, leading the network to partition, or expose the platform to denial-of-service attacks.

However, so far, there is no sign of a minority fork according to current fork logs, and developers are celebrating the transition on social media.

JPMorgan Launches Interbank Payments Platform on Quorum Blockchain

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Wall Street banking giant JPMorgan Chase is launching a new interbank payments platform powered by blockchain, the firm announced today.

With the participation of two other banks – Australia-based ANZ and the Royal Bank of Canada (Australia) – the Interbank Information Network (IIN) will be built on Quorum, the ethereum-based blockchain network first unveiled last fall. Additional institutions are expected to join the initiative in the coming months, with a specific focus on the correspondent banking market.

Emma Loftus, head of global payments and foreign exchange for JPMorgan Treasury Services, said in a statement:

“IIN will enhance the client experience, decreasing the amount of time – from weeks to hours – and costs associated with resolving payment delays. Blockchain capabilities have allowed us to rethink how critical information can be sourced and exchanged between global banks.”

It’s a notable application for the bank, given that its treasury services clear trillions of dollars in transactions per day. Previous reports, including a February 2016 story from the Wall Street Journal, indicated that cross-border payments had emerged as a key use case area for the bank.

And in spite of its CEO’s anti-bitcoin stance, the cryptocurrency’s underlying tech has been an area of growing focus for the bank in the past year, as seen in its work with Quorum as well as initiatives like the Hyperledger Project and the Enterprise Ethereum Alliance.

Bernanke at Ripple Event: Blockchain Has ‘Obvious’ Benefits in Payments

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Former Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke is bullish on blockchain.

Speaking at Ripple’s Swell conference in Toronto today, being held the same week and in the same city as Sibos, the annual gathering hosted by Ripple’s rival Swift, Bernanke told a room of several hundred attendees that he believes payments can be slow and expensive as designed using existing tools today.

Bernanke, who led the U.S. central bank during the 2008 financial crisis, outlined the complicated process it would take for a bank in Germany to send a payment to a bank in the U.S., before saying:

“It’s an obvious area where new technologies like blockchain or these electronic currencies can be used to improve the process.”

Bernanke, now a distinguished fellow in residence at the Brookings Institute, called out Ripple by name, saying that he’s read about the company’s work and thinks that any effort in payments to reduce cost, improve accuracy, speed and reliability and “bring the global economy closer together” is a good thing.

While the conversation mostly focused on monetary policy, Bernanke was asked to comment more on cryptocurrency and blockchain during the question-and-answer session, and his responses should come as no surprise as he gave bitcoin both muted praise and criticism as far back as 2015.

Echoing those past statements, Bernanke said, “bitcoin is meant to be an attempt to replace fiat currencies and evade government regulation and government intervention.”

And that attempt, he contends, won’t succeed because governments won’t allow it. “When bitcoin becomes a threat they’ll take whatever action” deemed necessary to quash it, he said.

Unlike bitcoin, which works against regulators, he continued, blockchain businesses that collaborate with governments will likely see more momentum in terms of innovating on the payments system. Central banks around the world (including in Singapore, the U.K. and Europe) have taken more of an interest in blockchain technology recently, trying to figure out how it might create efficiencies within their systems.

Case in point: earlier this month, senior vice president at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston Jim Cunha said blockchain and other fintech startups would be pushing incumbent financial institutions and middlemen to be more innovative in their approach.

When asked if bitcoin, other cryptocurrencies and blockchain might affect monetary policy, Bernanke said he doesn’t see that happening.

Bernanke said:

“It could be a lack of imagination, but I don’t think monetary policy has changed that much. [Central banks] are supportive of these new technologies because they’ll improve the payment system … but it won’t affect the ability of the Fed to require a certain amount of reserves of affect interest rates.”

Self-Replenishing Blockchain is Finding Implementation Everywhere

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In its early days, discussions around the Blockchain industry bordered mainly around Bitcoin and financial technology (fintech). The debate on Bitcoin as a currency or commodity lingered for some period of time, as did the question of whether Blockchain can become successfully implemented within the fintech ecosystem.

It’s now a few years down the road, and the explosive development of the Blockchain and its increasing role in various industries appears to have answered that question. Yes, Blockchain and Bitcoin are here to stay.

A casual observation of any exchange or crypto listing platform shows a litany of tokens and cryptocurrencies that represent various independent Blockchain-based products. These days, the attention is no longer concentrated on Bitcoin alone, but rather on the entire digital currency ecosystem and Blockchain technology’s encroachment into various major industries. Blockchain has so far found implementation in almost every major industry. Some of them are:

Banking and payments

This industry may be the most disrupted so far. A number of banks are already adopting Blockchain-based technology, an initiative that has proven to be cost effective and secure when compared to traditional methods. Peer-to-peer payment systems continue to grow, enabling individuals to send money across borders instantly at relatively low fees. Startups like Abra and Cashaa already implementing this system to enable remittance services across regions.

Real estate

Record keeping, bureaucracy, proximity, cost and lack of transparency are some of the issues involved in buying and selling real estate. Using Blockchain-based systems, companies like ATLANT now allow individuals to tokenize their assets and make them tradeable in fractions. This eliminates the aforementioned setbacks and opens up the real estate market on a global level where anyone from any part of the world can identify and purchase even a fraction of an available property without hassles.

Charity

The problem that most donors have with charity is that often the monies contributed are diverted and end up being used for different purposes rather than the original mission. Using Blockchain, organisations like Borderless Charity and BitGive have introduced transparent and traceable donation platforms, where donors can actually monitor donations to ensure that the monies get to their designated targets.

Entertainment

Startups like Ujo Music are using the Blockchain to rescue music artists and other entertainers from the setbacks that they have been confronted with since the expansion of the Internet. These days, Internet users rarely pay for music or other entertainment materials since they are readily available for download or streaming online. StreamSpace is offering independent producers a level playing field to compete with their counterparts.

Using the Blockchain, artists can distribute their products directly to their fans in a secure manner, thereby ensuring that they get adequately compensated for their works.

Cyber security

Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) is an attack that is becoming popular with “cyber terrorists” who focus on bringing down websites, sometimes for mischief, other times for political reasons and occasionally for ransom. Last year, an attack on domain name system (DNS) provider Dyn took down some of the Internet’s biggest websites, such as Twitter, Reddit and Amazon. Some startups are already working on Blockchain products that will use the combined unutilised bandwidth of connected computers around the world to make websites run faster and protect them from such attacks. In return, these contributors are paid for their services via a marketplace on the platform.

Education

Educational certificates are verifiable documents that should never be altered or manipulated. Sadly, cases of forgery are common. To prevent this, certain schools and colleges, for example the University of Nicosia, have started publishing students’ certificates on the Blockchain. Because of this, the authenticity of such document is not in doubt as the data represented becomes secure and immutable.

To be continued

The list can continue indefinitely, as almost every industry is experiencing the inevitable encroachment of Blockchain implementation. The influx of products offering various solutions is creating activity within the entire ecosystem.

The current wave of Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs) throughout the Blockchain industry is a result of the various products that are springing up and need funds to develop. Fortunately for the creators of these products, being able to raise funds from almost anyone in the world in an unregulated environment has turned out to be another way that the Blockchain is enabling the development of its own ecosystem. Apparently, the Blockchain can be referred to as a self-replenishing industry.


Crypto Mining Makes Millions for Gold Mining Maverick

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Frank Giustra, a well regarded Canadian mining magnate who created one of the world’s most successful mining companies is now moving his operation digitally to mine Cryptocurrency.

Giustra has backed a Blockchain technology company called Hive Blockchain Technologies, which is among the first publicly traded stocks to provide exposure to crypto mining, and for Giustra, he is seeing huge returns.

Six fold returns

The mining mogul has seen rapid growth since entering the Bitcoin market, backing Hive which was previously known as Leeta Gold Corp.

The decision to dig for data servers has paid off as Hive’s shares have soared about 633 percent, giving it a market value of $443 mln since it took over the listing.

Giustra’s foray into the crypto space has been a successful one as he has help drive Hive to be one of the pioneers in terms of a listed crypto mining company.

Hive paid Hong Kong-based Genesis Mining, builder of the world’s largest Ether mining facility, $9 mln and gave it a 30 percent stake to acquire a new data center in Reykjanes, Iceland.

Major mining operation

Hive’s mandate is to expand into other colder countries, such as Iceland and Sweden, in order to mine different coins and amass an inventory which they hope will appreciate. It is with the help of Giustra that they hope to achieve this.

Giustra helped build the company that would become Goldcorp Inc., then founded film studio Lions Gate Entertainment Corp. He counts Bill Clinton and George Soros among his close connections. Those connections may position him to grasp a nascent corner of finance and navigate Bitcoin’s uncertain regulatory waters.

Still a niche market

Despite the visible success seen from Giustra, companies like Hive are still very much in the minority, and while their pioneering moves are believed to make the market more open and available, there are still those who believed it is niche.

“I suspect the vast majority of accounts aren’t contemplating an investment in virtual currencies right now,” said Jeff Klingelhofer, managing director of Thornburg Investment Management Inc.


Blockchain and Smart Cities: On the Way to the Second Capital of China

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On Oct. 14, Peng Yijie, a powerful Chinese businessman, visited Chen Gang, the Communist Party Secretary of Xiong’an New Area and Vice Governor of Hebei Province.

Peng reported the potential of Blockchain technology to Secretary Chen, trying to persuade him to cooperate on promoting Blockchain innovation in Xiong’an New Area.

Smart city

During the meeting, Peng said that Xiong’an New Area is the best place to test Blockchain’s ability in city construction. With Blockchain, Xiong’an can better achieve its goal of being a “smart city”.

Peng Yijie, vice president of the Ant Financial Service Group and co-founder of the Alibaba Group Holding Limited, offered a design plan for Xiong’an. Blockchain would be used in the areas of community services, government affairs, and business. Yijie’s company would assist the local government in building a better city.

Secretary Chen approved Ant Financial’s work. He said that the plan made by the company will help the Xiong’an government to better organize the city. Nevertheless, he believed that there’s still room for improvement. He suggested to the company that they focus more on user experience and the credit system – in other words, the technology should always serve the people.

Largest Chinese company

Ant Financial Service Group, formerly known as Alipay, is an affiliate of Alibaba Group Holding Limited, which is one of the most important and largest companies in China. The market value of the Alibaba Group exceeded $400 bln in July 2017. Jack Ma, the executive chairman of Alibaba Group, is one of the most famous Chinese people in the world, and is ranked as the second most powerful man in China by CNN.

Second Chinese capital

Xiong’an New Area, the proud achievement of the President of China, Xi Jinping, is a state-level new area established in April 2017. It’s expected to be the development hub for the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei economic triangle, as well as the country’s second capital.

To be more precise, President Xi wants to migrate the “non-core” functions of the Chinese capital to Xiong’an New Area. Since Xiong’an New Area was established from the direct order from Xi, people normally see Xiong’an as a symbol of Xi’s accomplishments. Consequently, the development of Xiong’an is vital.

Powerful union

So, the largest company owned by the second most powerful man in China is planning to promote Blockchain in the “second capital” built by the most powerful man in China. Of course, the cooperation is still under negotiation.

But, if Blockchain plays a significant role in the construction of Xiong’an, will it be used in other Chinese cities in future?

Estonia – Just One of Global Cryptography ‘Factorization’ Victims

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A cryptography security flaw, present in 750,000 Estonian e-Residency cards and elsewhere, has a five-year history, researchers say.

Since news broke earlier this year that the code library by Infineon, the company responsible for dishing out multiple countries’ ID schemes, was vulnerable to hacking, attempts have been underway to assess the scale of the problem.

Now, experts have realized the weakness stretches back to 2012 and could affect citizens throughout the world, including Slovakia’s digital ID scheme.

“It means that if you have a document digitally signed with someone’s private key, you can’t prove it was really them who signed it,” Ars Technica quotes Graham Steel, CEO of encryption consultancy Cryptosense, as saying.

“Or if you sent sensitive data encrypted under someone’s public key, you can’t be sure that only they can read it.”

Known as ‘factorizing,’ the revelations mark a rare instance of mass failure of cryptographic technology issued on a wide scale.

Steel continued:

“In public key cryptography, a fundamental property is that public keys really are public – you can give them to anyone without any impact in security. In this work, that property is completely broken.”

Estonia’s e-Residency scheme has gained international praise as an example of liberal yet secure policy, with even non-Estonians able to procure a digital identity.

Meanwhile, international governments are increasingly considering Blockchain or distributed ledger-based national identity schemes.


History Repeated? Confidence High Ethereum Will Avoid Blockchain Split

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“There is no reason to believe that this one will be controversial.”

Just days away from making one of its biggest-ever upgrades, confidence is high among ethereum supporters that the world’s second-largest blockchain will avoid past mistakes and successfully navigate a coming change to its codebase, projected for Sunday night.

“I expect that nothing will happen,” Ethereum Foundation developer and designer Alex Van de Sande told CoinDesk. “Nothing happened with previous hard forks, except for one.”

Packing together a series of upgrades designed to make ethereum lighter, faster and more private, the update, called Byzantium, will be enacted at block 4,370,000 on the ethereum blockchain. Yet, it’s how the change will be enacted – using a hard fork – that has some mindful of possible issues.

A common (yet sometimes controversial) strategy for upgrading blockchains, ethereum has gone through three hard forks without complication. Still, the memory of the fork that didn’t go to plan is still top of mind.

Last summer, an emergency hard fork saw a contingent of the community continue mining on the old blockchain, creating a new asset, ethereum classic. In the aftermath, some users and companies lost funds, while ethereum was suddenly faced with a competing alternative in the market.

General optimism

That said, most users and developers are embracing this particular hard fork, in part, because it aims to execute changes that have been etched into ethereum’s roadmap since the protocol launched in 2015. When contacted, developers largely agreed with this outlook, expressing excitement by the changes to be included in the upgrade.

Stephen King, the principal and co-founder of ethereum-based real estate app RexMLS, parroted Van de Sande’s optimism, emphasizing the successful testing that has been completed.

“The fork is pretty uneventful. Everything went smooth on Ropsten, and it appears like all else is on track for a healthy transition,” he told CoinDesk.

Ropsten is ethereum’s test network, and although the network suffered a spam attack, making transactions impossible and moving some developers to a private testnet, overall, developers said everything moved along as expected. The team was even able to verify a transaction using the technology behind privacy-oriented cryptocurrency zcash, a mechanism which was added to the Byzantium roadmap earlier this summer.

And this possibility of private transactions and smart contracts is something many, including King, are particularly enthusiastic about.

Van de Sande stressed the privacy implications as well, arguing that additions that accommodate the technology underlying zcash are the most user-facing upgrade in the mix.

“It’s cool if you think about the new possibilities,” he said, painting a picture of a blockchain voting app with privacy built in, shielding who voted for which candidate.

That said, Byzantium is a “very technical fork,” said Van de Sande. Most of the changes, he contends, will be difficult to grasp for users, but a relief for developers who will have more options for building applications on top of ethereum.

Rumblings of opposition

But while, for the most part, the changes aren’t controversial, one ethereum improvement protocol (EIP) has generated some controversy over the past several months.

By reducing how much ether is issued in each block, the EIP has the potential to reduce mining profits, and, as is to be expected, some miners aren’t too happy about it. At least one visible protest movement, called Etherite, has sprung up in response, and its lead developer Dylan Young believes the changes could turn off miners driven by profit.

“The problem is that there are a lot of miners and pools who solely mine for the revenue and do not actually know what they are contributing to,” Young said, adding that some miners he talked to are “completely unaware” of the changes.

Others, he said, felt that they had “no choice” over the block reward reduction.

A representative from mining pool Nanopool, representing about 9 percent of the ethereum hashrate, seemed to concur. “Block reward is a secondary issue, that is under control of Ethereum Foundation. Let’s be honest. Ethereum history is written by developers and investors, not by miners now,” the representative said.

Still, they didn’t seem very interested in the debate, arguing that the benefits and drawbacks of these economic changes are “hard to predict.”

Further, Etherite doesn’t seem to be gaining much momentum, with only one Reddit post and one GitHub contributor. And the mining pool operators that responded to CoinDesk’s requests for comment were not interested in joining the movement.

One possible reason for this, according to Van de Sande, is that really most miners understand that while Byzantium will reduce each block reward from 5 ETH to 3 ETH, the change also boosts how often those blocks are created, giving miners more chance to earn the reward.

With that, Van de Sande argued, miners should still make about the same amount of money as they did before the fork.

The difficulty bomb

But even if there was substantial dissent, Young seems right about one thing: miners don’t have much choice.

And that’s because ethereum developers have built in a so-called “difficulty bomb” – a piece of code that gradually slows down the rate that ethereum blocks are issued on its blockchain in order to convince users to move over to a new chain.

So, even if miners continue to mine the old version of ethereum, they’ll be economically disincentivized to keep doing so.

Van de Sande said:

“If they continue to mine it, the fork will die on its own.”

And this trick of sorts is one reason why Young is concerned that miners aren’t getting enough say in the decision. At least, not as much say as they got during The DAO fork, where miners were polled as a way to vote on the measure.

“This time miners were excluded from the decision,” Young said.

Young argued EIP 649 should be split off into a separate hard fork so “people can assess it on its own merits.”

“I think that a controversial change should stand on its own,” he continued.

Though it’s worth noting that others, such as Bitfly founder and CEO Peter Pratscher, operator of ethereum’s mining pool Ethpool, don’t see it that way. “Our miners have not yet asked us to organize a vote up to now,” he remarked.

Either way, with less than three days to go before the hard fork executes, it’s unlikely Young, and any potential supporters will get to debate the argument.