Key facts
- Bitcoin developer Peter Todd argues Zcash-style privacy tech is too risky for Bitcoin's consensus layer.
- Todd cited Zcash's history of more serious issues compared to Bitcoin's accounting model.
- A recent Zcash Orchard pool bug disclosure fueled the debate.
- Todd believes Bitcoin's transparent accounting makes supply bugs easier to detect and unwind.
- Zcash defenders argue that no such bug can affect the total ZEC supply.
- Approximately 30% of Zcash supply is shielded.
Bitcoin developer Peter Todd has voiced strong opposition to integrating Zcash-style privacy features into Bitcoin's base protocol, citing the inherent cryptographic risks. This stance emerged following the disclosure of an issue affecting Zcash's Orchard shielded pool, which briefly highlighted broader concerns about privacy, auditability, and the potential for catastrophic bugs in highly shielded systems. Todd argued that Bitcoin's transparent accounting model allows for easier detection and rollback of supply-related exploits, contrasting it with Zcash's shielded nature, which he believes makes such issues harder to observe and reverse. He pointed to Zcash's history of more serious technical problems compared to Bitcoin's, emphasizing that while Bitcoin has had bugs, they did not pose an existential threat to the currency's integrity. Defenders of Zcash countered that the "turnstile construct" prevents bugs from affecting total supply and that a significant portion of ZEC is already shielded. At press time, ZEC was trading at $532.
