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Ocean mining pool refutes claims of censoring certain Bitcoin transactions

Ocean mining pool refutes claims of censoring certain Bitcoin transactions

Bitcoin (BTC) wallet provider Samourai Wallet has accused Bitcoin mining pool Ocean of censoring Whirlpool CoinJoin transactions and BIP47 notification transactions from Dec. 6. However, Ocean’s top executive has denied the claims while asking the Bitcoin wallet provider to fix a bug in their software.

On Dec. 7, Samourai Wallet claimed that a new policy enacted by Ocean mining pool censors certain Bitcoin transactions. In addition, the wallet provider accused X (formerly Twitter) and Block co-founder, Jack Dorsey, who is also an investor at Ocean, of a “hostile action.”

In the thread, Samourai Wallet further accused Bitcoin Core dev and Ocean founder Luke Dashjr of censoring transactions and deploying blacklists for transactions in the past and suggested his long-standing intent to do so.

The latest accusation from Samourai Wallet blames Dashjr for imposing a 46-byte limit to OP_RETURN function as opposed to 80 bytes, which came into effect in Bitcoin Core version 0.12. As a result, Samourai Wallet claims that Ocean allegedly excludes privacy-enhancing transactions and advised miners to “reconsider and point your hash power to another pool.”

Related: Jack Dorsey’s ₿trust acquires African Bitcoin organization Qala

Dashjr refuted Samourai Wallet’s claims against Ocean, stating:

“This is a bug in your software, not an intentional policy on our end.”

In addition, he appeared unsure about the concerns raised by the wallet provider as he asked, “What is this data even for? I’ve looked at trying to work around it, but can’t find any technical details.”

Luke Dashjr responds to Samourai Wallet’s accusation on censoring certain Bitcoin transactions. Source: X

Dashjr took no blame and asked Samourai Wallet to “fix it on your end.” The conversation split the crypto community into supporting the disparate schools of thought. While some supported the wallet provider with an “80 Bytes is 80 Bytes” narrative, others advised them to fix the bug. One community member, who was a former ASIC and iOS developer,  believed the new policy that enforces censorship was “unintentional”

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