Also, banning of ALL ENCRYPTED TRAFFIC by ALL GOVERNMENTS SIMULTANEOUSLY ?
To be fair, their premise is that encrypted traffic wouldn't be banned, so a 1 MB block limited Bitcoin network could operate encrypted, but that all countries in the world would require a license to run a Bitcoin node, so it would only be possible to run an uncensored Bitcoin node if blocks are small enough where they can be encrypted. In this scenario, only a 1 MB block limit could save Bitcoin.
Not true in my case, but I am way out on the edge compared to most people.
Getting rid of encryption on the public internet won't fly. It is far to critical for security. What could fly, however, would be only allowing encryption which was 'certified' in some manner. Namely, in a manner which would provide a back-door which would allow analysis and capture.
While it's an interesting topic, it doesn't change any point I made. From my understanding of how encrypted traffic is blocked, whether encrypted traffic is banned, or merely restricted to prevent BTC use, either way, such a global measure would make Bitcoin impossible regardless of what the block size limit is.
My point is that if the unlikely scenario of governments all deciding to require node operators to be licensed came to be, then there would be very little stopping them from taking it a step further and also banning/restricting encrypted traffic. Based on this assumption, I believe it's unlikely that there will ever be a reaction by every government in the world that would affect a large block version of Bitcoin, but not one with small blocks.
And I don't see an option for "It will stay in the geeks' mode, because the core devs will betray Satoshi's ideas for a corporation's 40 silvers, while the people's (hashing) power will stand up to them, in order to protect the actual values behind their Bitcoins".
Though, even then, I barely ever participate in polls that have more than a Yes/No answer.
This is very very dishonest. I have posted quotes from Satoshi in which he states he wanted a high-bandwidth Bitcoin.
You're also once again not responding to my argument for why we have no reason to worry about Bitcoin centralization due to high-bandwidth requirements for running a node:
Regarding centralization: the advantage Bitcoin has is that the blockchain is open source. This significantly reduces the costs of running the transaction database, since there is no need to prevent unauthorized access, no need for backups, no need for 99.99% uptime, and readily available mirrored databases to restore from in case there is a server failure. What this means is that the cost of running a node will never be that high, no matter how many transactions are processed a second, and there will always be many nodes active.