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I know shit all about the technical stuff going on, but for those who don't know, but I can explain the politics behind it all the best I can.

The two main factions in the bitcoin community (concerning the recent segwit lock-in and the coming hard fork) are divided by their views of the core developer team, and how bitcoin updates should be handled, particularly scaling.

The BCC hardforkers are against the core dev team and segwit for many technical reasons that I have no business even attempting to explain, but they essentially just think it's bad for the bitcoin network. Occasionally, there's somewhat of a conspiracy to motivate this, that the core devs are corrupt and trying to deliberately sabotage bitcoin with harmful or inefficient protocol for political purposes.

On the other side, there's Bitcoin Core (and their supporters), who (unless you ask a hardforker) are the dominant/original programmers behind bitcoin. They recently implemented SegWit, which activates the lightning network, which the hardforkers are against. They're often (rightfully so) accused of censoring their opposition, and even (maybe rightfully so?) accused of DDoS attacks.

Censorship on Reddit's /r/bitcoin led to the creation of the /r/btc subreddit, where anti-core and pro BCC opinions were allowed. Other opinions were allowed as well, but they get heavily downvoted to the point of irrelevancy. As a result, the front page of /r/btc is almost all about the politics behind the recent/upcoming forks, while the front page of /r/bitcoin, while also heavily leaning one way (where politics are concerned) due to censorship, there's plenty of apolitical bitcoin talk about price, markets, widespread use, and of course, bitcoin memes.

/r/Bitcoin supported the UASF (User Activated Soft Fork) to activate SegWit, and recently locked in, essentially rendering it successful. /r/BTC supported a UAHF (User Activated Hard Fork) in response to this, which when activated, will create a new coin called Bitcoin cash, achieving a scaling solution without SegWit. So far, Bitcoin Cash has not been taken very seriously by most of the community, and only has some fringe supporters. There's actually been talk about a plan to deliberately crash the coin's value by selling them (they are copied over from the BTC blockchain) as soon as the UAHF goes through.

So to sum it up in the form of a classic internet fight:

/r/Bitcoin - Successful segwit lock in, less toxic/political community, but used dirty tactics like censorship and (maybe) DDoSing.

/r/BTC - Ridiculed for future hard fork plan, no censorship but still heavily leaning one way politically, toxic somewhat conspiracy driven community, but unlike /r/Bitcoin, they refused to use (moderator) censorship and DDoS attacks to further their cause, and unlike the core devs, they aren't diverging away from Satoshi's vision of bitcoin by activating segwit.

Does that remind you of anyone?

I know shit all about the technical stuff going on, but for those who don't know, but I can explain the politics behind it all the best I can. The two main factions in the bitcoin community (concerning the recent segwit lock-in and the coming hard fork) are divided by their views of the core developer team, and how bitcoin updates should be handled, particularly scaling. The BCC hardforkers are against the core dev team and segwit for many technical reasons that I have no business even attempting to explain, but they essentially just think it's bad for the bitcoin network. Occasionally, there's somewhat of a conspiracy to motivate this, that the core devs are corrupt and trying to deliberately sabotage bitcoin with harmful or inefficient protocol for political purposes. On the other side, there's Bitcoin Core (and their supporters), who (unless you ask a hardforker) are the dominant/original programmers behind bitcoin. They recently implemented SegWit, which activates the lightning network, which the hardforkers are against. They're often (rightfully so) accused of censoring their opposition, and even (maybe rightfully so?) accused of DDoS attacks. Censorship on Reddit's /r/bitcoin led to the creation of the /r/btc subreddit, where anti-core and pro BCC opinions were allowed. Other opinions were allowed as well, but they get heavily downvoted to the point of irrelevancy. As a result, the front page of /r/btc is almost all about the politics behind the recent/upcoming forks, while the front page of /r/bitcoin, while also heavily leaning one way (where politics are concerned) due to censorship, there's plenty of apolitical bitcoin talk about price, markets, widespread use, and of course, bitcoin memes. /r/Bitcoin supported the UASF (User Activated Soft Fork) to activate SegWit, and recently locked in, essentially rendering it successful. /r/BTC supported a UAHF (User Activated Hard Fork) in response to this, which when activated, will create a new coin called Bitcoin cash, achieving a scaling solution without SegWit. So far, Bitcoin Cash has not been taken very seriously by most of the community, and only has some fringe supporters. There's actually been talk about a plan to deliberately crash the coin's value by selling them (they are copied over from the BTC blockchain) as soon as the UAHF goes through. So to sum it up in the form of a classic internet fight: /r/Bitcoin - Successful segwit lock in, less toxic/political community, but used dirty tactics like censorship and (maybe) DDoSing. /r/BTC - Ridiculed for future hard fork plan, no censorship but still heavily leaning one way politically, toxic somewhat conspiracy driven community, but unlike /r/Bitcoin, they refused to use (moderator) censorship and DDoS attacks to further their cause, and unlike the core devs, they aren't diverging away from Satoshi's vision of bitcoin by activating segwit. Does that [remind](https://www.reddit.com/) you of [anyone?](https://voat.co/)

4 comments

[–] Mattvision [OP] 2 points (+2|-0) Edited

I'm completely torn here. My plan is to stay out of Bitcoin for now, and buy some of both coins a few days after the BCC fork.

[–] jobes 1 points (+1|-0)

I'm just sitting back and watching it. It's kind of like watching a roller coaster that hasn't finished being built yet.