If you have a link where there is a list of these reason that would be cool. I'm willing to change my mind (I'm pro SV coz of Metanet) if these reasons aren't "Craig is a scammer"
I'm not here to convince you, I wish you the best of luck on SV and Metanet. I'm looking for documentation / whitepaper on Metanet, couldn't find anything,
Seems to be just an idea for now (I believe some are writing their vision for that project on honest.cash or whatever). And maybe you are looking for unwritter slack room
No, I'm not looking for unwriter's slack room, thanks. I'll wait until something proper is published about Metanet - without that it has no hope of success.
How is it easier to use 100% network capacity in BSV than bch ? You can spam bch with random txs the same way you would do 100Kb op return tx, you'll pay the same amount of fees
What's the difference between a 100kb tx and 500 txs of 200b ? Maybe it's a bit harder because you need to code to do 500txs quickly but I think it's the same
Non-OP_RETURN scripts cost more CPU cycles and memory, that's the main difference. After network stress succeed, we need to stress test other hardwares, i.e. CPU, memory, bus and etc.
I agree but that's not work that the spammer has to do, right ? (It was about BSV is easier to spam than bch) Hopefully software will improve and validation won't be an issue anymore !
That's part of the "harder", but my original point was also that because it's non-standard, there aren't any apps that can just do that in the hands of script kiddies.
And swiping a button 1400 times sounds a lot easier than swiping it 500,000 (although of course, one could outsource it to a click farm if determined).
You can program your computer to sign them all and he'll do that in few minutes (or more) I agree swiping 1400 is ridiculous but you can do without that. As you said it's just for fun
There are doing that for stress test I believe, they have programs and we get huge blocks But maybe you're right and it's hard to propagate lot of small txs instead of few big ones