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I'm trying to understand a @petertoddbtc tweet about Chinese miners making a controversial stance. According to the accompanying article https://www.cryptocoinsnews.com/bitcoin-market-needs-big-blocks-says-founder-btc-top-mining-pool/, the Chinese miners advocate Bitcoin Unlimited. Bitcoin Unlimited allows large blocks (>1MB?). In contrast, Bitcoin Core Developers are considering limiting to smaller blocks (300KB).

There are quotes from Zhuoer who controls 8% of total hashrate and is rallying the Chinese miners:

Who goes against the market will be destroyed, unless he can show more money.

In regards to Luke-Jr's (Core developer) threat of hardfork, there is the reaction:

We have prepared $100M USD to kill the small fork of CoreCoin.

Isn't change supposed to be with the agreement of all developers, miners, and consumers? Can the mining pool group force this change on the Core developers? Why is Bitcoin Unlimited so different from Core, and what makes it incompatible to Core in that now there is a rift between miners and the Core developers?

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In Bitcoin to understand who can make or break the rules you have to understand how they are enforced.

Bitcoin is decentralized, so there is no company that has veto power over anything. It is the people that run a full node that actually enforce the rules in Bitcoin. When I say people, I also mean companies that run an exchange, companies that provide services to merchants etc. And naturally miners.

If someone sends out a block that doesn't follow the rules, this means that the software all those people run will reject the block. Therefore making it impossible to change.

The effect is that making a change like this in Bitcoin requires you to make the case for your change and make sure that most of the full nodes run software that supports your change. Because if all the important people run software that supports bigger blocks, then a miner sending out a big block will not get his block rejected anymore.

Isn't change supposed to be with the agreement of all developers, miners, and consumers?

No, there is no such need. If you need 100% agreement, I can guarantee no change will ever be made. In reality, people that don't agree will not be able to stop the rest from making changes. It is more likely that the people that initially disagreed will end up supporting the new change because the alternative is to completely leave Bitcoin.
More specifically, they would get left behind if they refuse to follow the change.

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In contrast, Bitcoin Core Developers are considering limiting to smaller blocks (300KB).

First of all, for these kinds of changes, Bitcoin Core only merges things with very wide consensus. There was a proposal for 300kB blocks by one individual developer, which I think everyone considers to be very controversial.

Furthermore, these kinds of changes are not proposals for changing Bitcoin Core's behaviour and forking off. They're proposals for changing Bitcoin, and that's not something that is to be decided by the authors of one piece of software.

Then, on to answering your question:

The (collection of) economically relevant full nodes on the network determine the network's rules. I say economically relevant, because someone running 1000 nodes in a cluster, and have them do nothing but connect to the network and relay transactions and blocks is not going to affect anyone. I also say collection, because I'm ignoring the issue of how those nodes' operators come to an agreement.

Miners' job is to build blocks that satisfy those rules. They can choose to not do so, but their blocks will be rejected by the network if they do, and they'll lose their income from those.

However, miners can always choose to enforce extra rules on top of those demanded by the network. That's the first step towards a soft fork, but it's not enough. It's just a collusion of miners agreeing among each other to only build on top of other blocks that satisfy some extra criterion. They could even do this without telling anyone.

That is not yet a softfork, because they could just as easily agree to stop doing something like this. To make it a successful softfork, economically relevant full nodes in the network need to start enforcing the same rules at the same time. That is what makes the change lock in. Because if full nodes are in on it, miners can no longer back out - doing so would either invalidate their blocks, or cause an irreconcilable fork in the chain. BIP9 is a mechanism for allowing miners to coordinate the activation of a new feature, and having full nodes activate it simultaneously.

So in short: softforks are subject to a majority of the hashrate plus significant adoption of enforcing code on economically relevant nodes. Developers of particular software do not directly control either, but obviously do have an influence by providing the means to deploy such software.

Disclaimer: I'm a Bitcoin Core developer.

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  • Fascinating, thanks. BIP9 seems to already address miner concerns. Also, allowing that developers do not directly control is what I didn't see, but am beginning to accept.
    – 杜興怡
    Feb 15, 2017 at 5:25

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