# Why are unbound version constraints a bad idea? A version constraint without an upper bound such as `*`, `>=3.4` or `dev-master` will allow updates to any future version of the dependency. This includes major versions breaking backward compatibility. Once a release of your package is tagged, you cannot tweak its dependencies anymore in case a dependency breaks BC - you have to do a new release, but the previous one stays broken. The only good alternative is to define an upper bound on your constraints, which you can increase in a new release after testing that your package is compatible with the new major version of your dependency. For example instead of using `>=3.4` you should use `^3.4` which allows all versions up to `3.999` but does not include `4.0` and above. The `^` operator works very well with libraries following [semantic versioning](https://semver.org). **Note:** As a package maintainer, you can help your users by providing an [alias version](../articles/aliases.md) for your development branch to allow it to match bound constraints.