MINERS HAVE BECOME LESS ACTIVE IN TECHNICAL BITCOIN DISCUSSIONS These days, there tends to be a wall between the mining, development, and other sectors of the greater Bitcoin network, almost as if they operate in completely different industries. This was a view shared by Blockspace Media’s Colin Harper and Charlie Spears in an episode of Bitcoin Season 2 that was recorded at the North American Blockchain Summit in Texas earlier this month. According to the duo, 30% of the network hashrate was at the event, and no one had been discussing the recent release of Bitcoin Core v30, which included a policy change that is at the heart of the “spam” controversy. “Bitcoin has become incredibly siloed, and it’s very hard to be a subject matter expert in all of these different siloes,” said Harper. “And miners are mostly worried about making money.” Spears added that most BTC miners would probably not know what version of Bitcoin Core their mining pool runs. “They’re not thinking about it,” said Harper. To this point, many miners and mining pools who Protos reached out to for this article appeared uninterested in commenting on the controversies around “spam” and “illegal content” on Bitcoin. Some respondents indicated they weren’t the right entity to comment on potential soft forks related to spam, while others stated that they simply did not want to get involved with the drama. Earlier this month, LayerTwo Labs CEO Paul Sztorc also claimed that Foundry, which operates the largest BTC mining pool on the network, plans to never have any opinion about anything going forward due to a previous controversy related to Ordinals Inscriptions. “I think miners have mostly cared about one thing: the Bitcoin price,” said Sztorc when reached by Protos for comment. “Secondly, they have learned that if they get involved, people will be upset.” This is an excerpt from a new article on how miners are thinking about the "spam" controversy and the recent associated soft fork proposal. Read the full article over at Protos: https://protos.com/bitcoin-mining-industry-mostly-uninterested-in-spam-controversy/