Ethereum’s hard fork receives endorsement from ETC Cooperative Exec
The DAO hack that took place in 2016 on the Ethereum network caused commotion in the network and led to several steering towards the idea of a hard fork. Towards the end of the dispute, the Ethereum network divided into two where the forked blockchain was occupied by the Ethereum network and Ethereum Classic continued on the original blockchain. Since then, the hard fork has been questioned time and again by various members of the community. Recently, the executive director of the ETC Cooperative, Bob Summerwill expressed his stance on the fork in a podcast.
Summerwill pointed out that the fork highlighted the different groups present within the Ethereum network. A subset of people who wanted to do more in terms of smart contract functionality was discovered through this event, he added. The hack gave rise to people speculating their role of interfering or intervening in the scenario. Summerwill further went on to say,
“So you just had a bunch of people who were more progressive, you know, more risk-tolerant.”
Furthermore, he went on to highlight how the Ethereum founders and the early adopters of the network were “social dreamers” and “mainstream technologists” who weren’t hardcore cycle constant. Summerwill said,
“They weren’t, radical libertarian, crypto-anarchists, and government haters. It was a bunch of people that were like, it’s a good technology and we can maybe make that a world.”
However, he revealed how people still stuck on to believe that instability is the whole purpose and nobody tampers with the chain.
The DAO hack that caused the loss of about $60 million Ether was one of the primary reasons for the hard fork. Summerwill later went on to compare the Mt Gox hack with and DAO hack and highlighted how the Mt Gox hack did not cause people to hard fork Bitcoin to store all the funds.
Summerwill concluded by suggesting that the fork was the right thing to do as it was a point of succession from the union. He went on to compare the same to a bad marriage and said,
“It’s the right to a divorce. The alternative is to be stuck in a miserable marriage for the rest of your life.”
OhNoCrypto
via https://www.ohnocrypto.com
Mark Prestwood, Khareem Sudlow