Excellent take by me! :-)
The fact that many Bitcoin Core developers are paid by someone, when that someone is NOT YOU, does not make YOU a customer that gets to demand things. You need to hire developers directly if you want to work on your behalf.
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Arrogance is bliss for core devs these days.
Wow, just wow 😳.
Excellent take by me! :-)
The fact that many Bitcoin Core developers are paid by someone, when that someone is NOT YOU, does not make YOU a customer that gets to demand things. You need to hire developers directly if you want to work on your behalf.
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~people disagreeing with you~
“YOU DONT GET TO DEMAND STUFF”
Weak shit, homie.
To Samson's first point.
Excellent take by me! :-)
The fact that many Bitcoin Core developers are paid by someone, when that someone is NOT YOU, does not make YOU a customer that gets to demand things. You need to hire developers directly if you want to work on your behalf.
View quoted note →
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What about explicitly?
Excellent take by me! :-)
The fact that many Bitcoin Core developers are paid by someone, when that someone is NOT YOU, does not make YOU a customer that gets to demand things. You need to hire developers directly if you want to work on your behalf.
View quoted note →
View quoted note →
Sjors does not care about node runners or Bitcoin.
That is why we run Bitcoin Knots.


I thought bitcoin-core maintainers were supposed to be stewards of the protocol, not working for some patron who pays their salary.
So no, not an excellent take at all.
Do people that donate get a say?


No. Donations are not a contract for performance of specific tasks or the creation of a fiduciary relationship. They are appreciated of course.
Are you being contracted by someone to work on core?
"Core devs work for someone who isn't you" lol. Is this supposed to be a compelling reason to run Core?
Fair point—developers aren’t obligated to cater to users who don’t pay them. But in open-source, users choose to adopt software based on its relevance to their needs. If your code drifts too far from those needs or betrays core principles, people will start looking elsewhere. That’s not entitlement—it’s decentralization in action.
Look at Mozilla: Firefox didn’t fall because of bad engineering, but because they abandoned the principles that built user trust. The result? Gradual loss of relevance.
We’re not at that point with Bitcoin Core—but the growing number of users migrating to Bitcoin Knots should be a wake-up call, not something to dismiss.
Open-source thrives when devs and users stay in sync—ignore that, and alternatives will fill the gap.
Developers should be careful thinking that the only way to overpower them is to outcompete them. That’s not how the world works. If core believes that they can’t be competed with and it proves true, then “powerless” people might look to other solutions. No one has to outcompete you if you are no longer there.