By using third parties separate from individual miners that do bidding on your behalf you get a mechanism that allows QoS guarantees and shifting the complexity and risk from the wallet with little computational resources to a service with abundance of them. Using timelocked contracts it’s possible to enforce the guarantees. Negotiating directly with miners via smart contracts seems difficult at best. > On Jul 23, 2015, at 6:03 PM, Jean-Paul Kogelman via bitcoin-dev wrote: > > Doesn't matter. > > It's not going to be perfect given the block time variance among other factors but it's far more workable than guessing whether or not your transaction is going to end up in a block at all. > > jp > > >> On Jul 24, 2015, at 8:53 AM, Peter Todd wrote: >> >> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- >> Hash: SHA256 >> >> >> >>> On 23 July 2015 20:49:20 GMT-04:00, Jean-Paul Kogelman via bitcoin-dev wrote: >>> >>> And it's obvious how a size cap would interfere with such a QoS scheme. >>> Miners wouldn't be able to deliver the below guarantees if they have to >>> start excluding transactions. >> >> As mining is a random, poisson process, obviously giving guarantees without a majority of hashing power isn't possible. >> >> >> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- >> >> iQE9BAEBCAAnIBxQZXRlciBUb2RkIDxwZXRlQHBldGVydG9kZC5vcmc+BQJVsYyK >> AAoJEMCF8hzn9Lnc47AH/28WlecQLb37CiJpcvXO9tC4zqYEodurtB9nBHTSJrug >> VIEXZW53pSTdd3vv2qpGIlHxuYP8QmDSATztwQLuN6XWEszz7TO8MXBfLxKqZyGu >> i83WqSGjMAfwqjl0xR1G7PJgt4+E+0vaAFZc98vLCgZnedbiXRVtTGjhofG1jjTc >> DFMwMZHP0eqWTwtWwqUvnA7PTFHxdqoJruY/t1KceN+JDbBCJWMxBDswU64FXcVH >> 0ecsk9nhLMyylBX/2v4HjCXyayocH8jQ+FpLSP0xxERyS+f1npFX9cxFMq24uXqn >> PcnZfLfaSJ6gMbmhbYG5wYDKN3u732j7dLzSJnMW6jk= >> =LY1+ >> -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- >> > _______________________________________________ > bitcoin-dev mailing list > bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org > https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev