| > Your point was that miners' cooperation is required to successfully upgrade I didn't say that. My point is that miners will decide which chain gets the bigger hashrate and that chain is likely to be adopted as the "real" chain by users, if it's the vast majority of the miners. Furthermore, the prospect that there is no miner support would make users reluctant to upgrade in the first place. > My point is that an upgrade can be implemented without any cooperation from miners. A change to PoS would be the exemplar of that. What do you mean by "upgrade" then? Bitcoin was "upgraded" to Bitcoin Cash, an arguably better blockchain. Some people even consider it the "real" Bitcoin, but that's a minority opinion. > A change to PoS would be the exemplar of that. You can't use an event that hasn't happened yet as evidence to support your argument. Maybe there will be a flawless transition to PoS in Ethereum, due to influence of developers and the prospect of lower transaction fees. Maybe there will be ETH2 and ETH at the end, traded as distinct assets. |
Miners follow money. Users "decide" about prices. Miners are subservient and largely irrelevant. "Don't talk to the staff".