We don't need to Hardfork: a questionable story about Tezos. - [ICO July 1st]

in #tezos7 years ago

With the classic "fundraiser" (ICO...) scheduled for June 1st, I feel it is time to give my feedback for what might be an interesting project. Can it live up to its claims in this chaotic crypto industry?


Tezos and hardforks lets see


Tezos is an interesting project that describes itself as "the self-amending cryptographic ledger". Bold claims for a blockchain that "governs itself"; even bolder are the claims of formal verification. Tezos allows for smart contracts and all modern blockchain jazz. Tezos is doing work to incorporate governance into the core layer of the blockchain to mitigate the risks of chain-splits (hardforks) and ensure humans do a better job at clarifying the governance structure of the blockchain. Tezos uses DPoS consensus for the moment.

You can read much more about what Tezos' claimed ambitions are in this overview. Details on the funding and crowdfunding are also included. More details of the crowdfunding campaign on July 1st can be found here.

Tezos is written in the niche programming language Ocaml. This language provides functional and object-oriented concepts together with static type systems. Basically, this unique language offers lots of protections at runtime at the tradeoff of more "sophistication" and attention to detail required by the programmer. This language allows for the Tezos team to make their bold claims regarding formal verification. A formally verified program has been examined using formal methods of mathematics and proven to adhere to certain specifications. Plainly, you can prove mathematically that your program will operate in a specific way - an interesting concept when it comes to consensus protocols and blockchain indeed.

What all the technical stuff boils down to is: it is harder to write code for Tezos. This is not like writing in Java, it will require time to become comfortable. Whether or not the extra security and the ability for formal verification are actually worth the extra effort is yet to be seen. I envision many systems could run in parallel, with only the most vital services operating on the most secure and formally verified networks.




Okay so no hardforks? Is that even possible?

No. It isn't. Humans can always disregard rules. Even if there are "rules" for breaking rules, those can be broken.

Tezos has their claim to existence founded on the ledger's ability to self-govern and deploy upgrades without hardforking. Why do hardforks happen in the first place? - there are rules and when some users break those rules and start following new rules, you have a hardfork. Hardforks can be messy because of the difficulties associated with coordinating such a change in the rules. Still, this process is very important for the sake of governance in the first place. See Hardfork: the tale of the full node referendum for some more reading.

Sure, so the Tezos system provides another set of rules for how to amend its own rules. Okay, what happens if the community doesn't like those?

Yes, there is no need to hardfork Tezos in a potentially controversial way to incorporate innovation and new features. This has the potential to eliminate the "stalemate" type of situation happening right now regarding Bitcoin scaling. Don't let this post be a complete criticism of the idea. I think systems like this are the future. Although, systems like this do not need to be exclusive to Tezos, this style of consensus could be implemented inside of Ethereum for example.

Tezos hopes to mitigate the pressure points that lead to hardforks. If there is a detrimental bug somewhere in the consensus code, maybe something like the 2010 overflow bug and fork will need to happen to Tezos, let's just hope it is not controversial. - sometimes there won't be time to vote.

Hardforks can happen.




Some potential worries.

Inspired by this Reddit post and this telegra.ph post by ibanker, I think it is important to point out some potential issues. If you are planning on investing in this project, it might be worth digging deeper.

The author of the Tezos white paper is L.M. Goodman. Goodman later handed the project over to Arthur and his wife according to his pinned tweet.

Apparently there is evidence to believe that L.M. Goodman was Arthur Breitman and his wife Kathleen all along. Goodman apparently a pen name poking fun at the reporter Leah McGrath Goodman who falsely claimed to have found the real Satoshi Nakamoto.

Why would Arthur use a pseudonym to release Tezos? The concern is it was used to create unique intellectual property without having to disclose anything to Morgan Stanley, Arthur's employer. Take a look at this quote from ibanker, previously an employee of MS.:

but bank contracts are usually written such that employees and contractors like Arthur need to disclose projects that are related to their day job. And Arthur apparently worked on financial algorithms for trading systems. And Tezos, through its affiliate company, Dynamic Ledger Solutions (DLS), was originally pitched as trading system.
What is that?
DLS, my sources at other banks and companies who have seen the pitch, tried to raise money as one of those banker blockchains like Digital Asset or Paxos, but for OTC markets of some kind a year ago. Maybe Morgan Stanley probably could make the case that they have a claim to the DLS intellectual property assuming Arthur worked on it while employed at Morgan Stanley.

Not very formal

Another problem is they haven't actually formally verified any of their code. This is a problem as they are essentially marketing their platform as being formally verified. When asked, "why would someone formally verify the amendments if NONE of the other code is formally verified?", Arthur responded that "OCaml is easier to verify down the line".

Okay so yeah duh. OCaml is easier to verify; great nobody was questioning that. The problem comes with the actual verification in programs like Coq - not a simple task for logic as complex as blockchain consensus.

I sure hope the Tezos team makes more progress on the formal verification front. It might turn out to be a very important technology for blockchain ledgers.


Should you invest? I don't know. Maybe because of the hype?

Stay enlightened,
Kyle

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https://np.reddit.com/r/ethtrader/comments/6am251/what_are_everyones_thoughts_on_tezos_coinss_ico/dhhemcg/

I wrote about this at length after "beta"ing governance in Tezos by interacting with the principals. There are many flaws and it starts with the people involved, a structure which could turn it into a chain dominated by billionaires and captive to a small cabal, and it ends with the uncapped ICO structure which will ensure bad returns for ICO investors but far worse, be the first time where the founders will cash out in actual cash not just tokens. Founders are paying them 8% of the raise in cash, plus 10% of the tokens. So if they raise $200-300mm as expected, the founders will have $20-30mm in tokens AND $16-24mm in cash. They will be extremely wealthy even if Tezos fails to ever matter. If Tezos becomes as big as Ethereum is today, the founders will be worth $3 billion dollars.

They have also called me a "liar" in public, which is not very cool, but I can handle that. I am not the one about to pocket $50mm off an ICO so you can weigh my opinion vs theirs in terms of incentives.

Yeah really not digging the Silicon Valley money already in there.

Not cool about the "liar" comment. Yikes.

Your reddit post is nuanced. Worth the read to anyone else stopping by.

Oh damn, that was you that had written that post. Saw it elsewhere and was impressed by the thoroughness.

You do lay out a pretty good case in there.

First glance over Tezos, I wasn't convinced. Too theoretical - feels to lack substance and the strategic vision & entrepreneurial component to accelerate it beyond just a technical innovation into a a solid value proposition that can be successfully integrated into the marketplace. Maybe I'm wrong and just don't understand it. And because I don't really understand it clearly as they haven't laid out well where they plan to take this beyond the lab, just expecting to throw money at business development and marketing people - and especially after your perspectives in the Reddit post - I'm gonna sit this one out and put more weight into EOS...

There is such a hype about Tezos, just like with BAT, that you can't go wrong buying it and offloading it straight after. Like I said before in other comments: Most ICO's have great ideas on paper and it gets people very excited but the real work starts after the money is received. A lot can happen and issues will arise. Expect some of those companies that are having their ICO this year to be a lot less interesting for investors in 2 or 3 years.

Traders will always take advantage of the bubble.

Traders will take advantage of the hype surrounding ICO's and if, like IOTA, the valuation becomes 1.5 billion you can call it a bubble. But it did go down 38% so at least we are at a more 'realistic' number now lol.

Lol all for untested DAG. Not even sound technology by most accounts.

The thing that worries me the most about this project is that the vast majority of programmers and developers have zero familiarity with the mathematical ideas of formal verification and that the barrier to entry for this platform could be quite high.

Barriers are certainly very high.

This is great information, thank you. I finally learned what Tezos is actually about, while learning about the possible dangers of investing in this project! Bravo.

Could still be really cool! Don't let my post turn you away too much.
I am here to provide some balance to the table.

l_m_goodman L.M. Goodman tweeted @ 06 May 2016 - 18:55 UTC

From now on, @ArthurB (my ideological doppelganger) will be leading development of #tezos.

Disclaimer: I am just a bot trying to be helpful.

Great post! Thanks for the info

Thanks for sharing!

Yea I want to get into this ico but waiting 4 months until the network is ready is a lifetime in crypto. I still think I'm going to get in but not too much.

Thanks @kyle.anderson for this excellent analysis. I don't see why OCAML could not be implemented in EOS eventually, along with Tau and other langages, including solidity and WebAssembly. I put all my eggs in the EOS basket. I am kind of allergic to hype.

Sure EOS can do a lot, but nothing more than Ethereum. Saying 'well just port it to eos' is not the catch all answer.

I put all my eggs in the EOS basket. I am kind of allergic to hype.

What? kinda the opposite of hype free.

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