Difference between revisions of "Segregated Witness"

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During 2016 and 2017 activation of segregated witness was blocked by miners for political reasons by exploiting a flaw in the [[BIP 9]] activation mechanism.
 
During 2016 and 2017 activation of segregated witness was blocked by miners for political reasons by exploiting a flaw in the [[BIP 9]] activation mechanism.
 
On a technical level, the consensus rules of bitcoin are controlled by the [[economic majority]] not the [[Bitcoin is not ruled by miners|miners]], so the deadlock was possible to solve by creating a [[user activated soft fork]] [[BIP 148]] where the [[economic majority]] would bypass the blocking miners and activate segregated witness on their own.
 
On a technical level, the consensus rules of bitcoin are controlled by the [[economic majority]] not the [[Bitcoin is not ruled by miners|miners]], so the deadlock was possible to solve by creating a [[user activated soft fork]] [[BIP 148]] where the [[economic majority]] would bypass the blocking miners and activate segregated witness on their own.
This required some coordination amongst the economic majority, but was ultimately successful, activating Segwit on Bitcoin soon after 1st August 2017.<ref>[https://bitcoinmagazine.com/articles/long-road-segwit-how-bitcoins-biggest-protocol-upgrade-became-reality/ BitcoinMagazine: The Long Road to SegWit: How Bitcoin’s Biggest Protocol Upgrade Became Reality]</ref>
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This required some coordination amongst the economic majority, but was ultimately successful, activating Segwit on Bitcoin soon after 1st August 2017.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20210224032019/https://bitcoinmagazine.com/articles/long-road-segwit-how-bitcoins-biggest-protocol-upgrade-became-reality// BitcoinMagazine: The Long Road to SegWit: How Bitcoin’s Biggest Protocol Upgrade Became Reality (Archived February 2021)]</ref>
  
 
==See Also==
 
==See Also==

Latest revision as of 06:16, 14 March 2021

SegWit

Segwit.png

Segregated Witness (abbreviated as SegWit) is an implemented protocol upgrade intended to provide protection from transaction malleability and increase block capacity. SegWit separates the witness from the list of inputs. The witness contains data required to check transaction validity but is not required to determine transaction effects. Additionally, a new weight parameter is defined, and blocks are allowed to have at most 4 million weight units (WU). Non-witness and pre-segwit witness bytes weigh 4 WU, but each byte of Segwit witness data only weighs 1 WU, allowing blocks that are larger than 1 MB without a hardforking change.

After the successful activations of OP_CLTV and OP_CSV, SegWit was the last protocol change needed to make the Lightning Network safe to deploy on the Bitcoin network.

Because the new witness field contains Script versioning, it is also possible to make changes to or introduce new opcodes to SegWit scripts that would have originally required additional complexity to function without SegWit.

History and Activation

During 2016 and 2017 activation of segregated witness was blocked by miners for political reasons by exploiting a flaw in the BIP 9 activation mechanism. On a technical level, the consensus rules of bitcoin are controlled by the economic majority not the miners, so the deadlock was possible to solve by creating a user activated soft fork BIP 148 where the economic majority would bypass the blocking miners and activate segregated witness on their own. This required some coordination amongst the economic majority, but was ultimately successful, activating Segwit on Bitcoin soon after 1st August 2017.[1]

See Also

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