An In-Depth Conversation With Coinbase Engineer Josh Ellithorpe
There’s been a lot going on within the crypto-ecosystem and this week news.Bitcoin.com chatted with Josh Ellithorpe, Senior Software Engineer at Coinbase. Ellithorpe explains to our readers how he got into bitcoin and about when he eventually joined the San Francisco-based cryptocurrency firm about a year and a half ago. The software developer is also a Bitcoin Cash (BCH) supporter and we discuss some of the reasons to why he likes the BCH environment. Ellithorpe chatted further with us about some of the hot topics concerning the BCH protocol, a few weeks before the proposed upgrade scheduled for this November. Also Read: Bitmain Unveils New 18 Terahash Water-Cooled Bitcoin MinerCryptocurrencies Offer an Even Playing Field That’s More Appealing Than the Current Monetary System
News.Bitcoin.com (BC): Can you tell our readers how you got into cryptocurrencies?
BC: Can you tell us why you decided to join the San Francisco firm Coinbase? JE: In 2012 you didn’t know if a cryptocurrency exchange would be shut down or not. So I started working at a couple of other startups here in San Francisco and spent a long time working on things like container infrastructure — Deployments for big companies doing infrastructure automation and I did that for a few years. But I kept loving crypto, kept using it, and I always had bitcoin on my phone. I always wanted it for utility and never really cared about it as an investment angle — Although I don’t mind it going up in value either, making money was never my motivation.Cryptocurrencies offered an even playing field which was more appealing than the current monetary system. But at the time, because the ecosystem was so volatile, I didn’t want to join the industry.

Then people started saying things that didn’t make sense to me. Like home-users will always need to run bitcoind and that raspberry pi node matters. I do agree that some people want to validate their own transactions and ideally, it would be nice if prosumers and higher end tech users still could run a node, I think that would be cool but not necessary. As long as there are enough validating nodes dispersed amongst enough businesses, and enough locations, then I’m fine with that.I got really disappointed with the roadmap for BTC — And I just disagreed. I wish them the best of luck with the Lightning Network but to me, that’s not Bitcoin. To me, Bitcoin was something that was going to scale on-chain. That would have higher resource requirements that would eventually go from the user-sphere to the business and data center-sphere and I was ok with that right from the beginning. That’s how I thought Bitcoin scaled from a ton of businesses building awesome products and having a business model that generated revenue and the whole world competing for mining.
When I start seeing companies getting demonized that was also another red flag. Like Bitpay has done a huge amount of groundwork for the space. They make it simple for people to easily take crypto and decide on how much of that crypto they want to hold and they get to split the price at point-of-sale. Those are very important features for a cryptocurrency to actually gain traction. To me, I saw the BTC community become extremely toxic, extremely anti-business, and to me anti-scale.If the network is lying to you already, the experiment has failed.

BC: Do you think that it will all work out? JE: Here’s a couple of facts. Bitcoin SV doesn’t exist — Does not exist. If people think that hash power is going to run and grab a full node client that has been on the market for less than a month that no one’s ever run then they don’t understand economics. Miners are not going to take a chance and run brand new software the day it comes out. To me, that makes no sense from a miners perspective. I understand points on both sides and I’m actually not a fan of any camp’s full proposal — So it makes it difficult for me. BC: How do you feel about Bitcoin Unlimited’s approach? JE: So I think that is a very smart approach and ultimately hash power is going to decide on the way it goes. No one’s talking replay protection so hash power and the market are going to decide. What do you think about our discussion with Josh Ellithorpe? Let us know what you think about this interview in the comment section below.I think there are constructive ways to talk about differences and non-constructive ways. Attacks on Twitter are really inexcusable behavior and this — let’s debate this on Twitter — is bullshit.
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