Oh, now you decided to step in too with your own portion of half-truths?
Indeed, faster blocks mean less security. Provided all other things are kept the same which is obviously not the case between Bitcoin and Litecoin. The harsh truth is that the higher security due to slower confirmation times is completely offset by heavy monopolization of Bitcoin mining. So the net effect is that it is Bitcoin which is less secure overall than Litecoin since its mining is by far more centralized, and this might have more severe consequences than just a double-spend attempt. But you should know that yourself. Anyway, Litecoin has been there for 5 years already, and its faster confirmations have never been an issue
I didn't mean to interrupt, it's just that it's tiring to see that the myth of faster settlement due to shorter block intervals is still so prevalent.
Regarding the monopolization of Bitcoin mining -- I'm sorry to say, but ever since the arrival of Scrypt ASICs, Litecoin and Bitcoin have been more or less in the same boat. Currently Litecoin's hashrate distribution looks far worse than that of Bitcoin actually. Holy shit. So much for "harsh truth"
Again, you are not telling the whole truth
Wtf, is there anyone over here who actually does? If Litecoin miners had that complete control over the network as you claim they have, why Segwit and Lightening Network had been activated in Litecoin without much ado and beating around the bush, unlike what we have seen with Bitcoin and will likely see again in the nearest future? Regarding the myth of faster settlements, it seems that it has more to do with the myth of orphaned blocks flooding the network due to faster block generation times. But that's remained only that, i.e. just a myth or an urban legend of sorts. As I said already, Litecoin has been around for quite some time by now, the point which you chose to ignore somehow in your reply
I'm not trying to misinform in any way and I definitely don't know the whole truth, whatever the definition of that may be; so feel free to correct me or supplement information that I may have missed. That's what public discourse is for.
So, about your statements:
If Litecoin miners had that complete control over the network as you claim they have, why Segwit and Lightening Network had been activated in Litecoin without much ado and beating around the bush, unlike what we have seen with Bitcoin and will likely see again in the nearest future?
I was not talking politics, merely numbers. Compared to Bitcoin, the hashrate distribution of Litecoin unfortunately doesn't look so good right now:
https://www.litecoinpool.org/poolshttps://www.blocktrail.com/BTC/poolsRegarding politics, my educated guesses why there was less friction with the Segwit deployment on Litecoin would be as follows:
1) No noteworthy competing developer team that would continue to maintain a non-Segwit Litecoin fork.
2) Smaller community, leading to less of of a divide and a smaller chance of splinter groups. Let's not forget that it's not just miners that oppose Segwit.
3) Less economic relevance (for the moment being), leading to a lesser incentive of leading a battle against Segwit on Litecoin.
Apart from that, let's not forget that Segwit got activated after all. A Segwit-less altcoin emerged, whose value is reflected by the choice of the community to stand by Bitcoin Core. The miners are kept in check by market forces which reflect the sentiment of the Bitcoin community.
With Segwit2x it won't be much different. Miners alone by themselves can't decide to simply change the network rules. They need a supporting developer team and the approval of at least part of the community, lest they mine a worthless alt coin. What complicates matters with Segwit2x is that in this case there's also significant support by Bitcoin companies.
So in concusion, Segwit vs big-blocks never was simply about miners vs users. There are many economic actors involved, one of them being the community itself. In the end people still vote with their wallets.
Regarding the myth of faster settlements, it seems that it has more to do with the myth of orphaned blocks flooding the network due to faster block generation times.
I was not referring to increased orphan rates, but rather to computation attacks by forcing a double-spend via a secretly mined longer chain. However upon deeper research I found that the matter is not as clear-cut as I initially thought, meaning that faster settlement may indeed be possible without a compromise in security. I didn't find any conclusive information on what Litecoin confirmation count equals the security of Bitcoin confirmations however. Like you said, there's a lot of half-truth out there.
As I said already, Litecoin has been around for quite some time by now, the point which you chose to ignore somehow in your reply
Because Litecoin's lifetime is irrelevant to the argument. I never argued that Litecoin is not working or that a short block interval is a bad thing in itself.