On Thu, Jul 23, 2015 at 5:23 PM, jl2012 via bitcoin-dev <bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
2) Full nodes and SPV nodes following original consensus rules may not be aware of the deployment of a hardfork. They may stick to an economic-minority fork and unknowingly accept devalued legacy tokens.

This change means that they are kicked off the main chain immediately when the fork activates. 

The change is itself a hard fork.  Clients have be updated to get the benefits.

3) In the case which the original consensus rules are also valid under the new consensus rules, users following the new chain may unexpectedly reorg back to the original chain if it grows faster than the new one. People may find their confirmed transactions becoming unconfirmed and lose money.

I don't understand the situation here.  Is the assumption of a group of miners suddenly switching (for example, they realise that they didn't intend to support the new rules)?
 
Flag block is constructed in a way that nodes with the original consensus rules must reject. On the other hand, nodes with the new consensus rules must reject a block if it is not a flag block while it is supposed to be. To achieve these goals, the flag block must 1) have the hardfork bit setting to 1, 2) include a short predetermined unique description of the hardfork anywhere in its coinbase, and 3) follow any other rules required by the hardfork. If these conditions are not fully satisfied, upgraded nodes shall reject the block.

Ok, so set the bit and then include BIP-GIT-HASH of the canonical BIP on github in the coinbase?

Since it is a hard fork, the version field could be completely re-purposed.  Set the bit and add the BIP number as the lower bits in the version field.  This lets SPV clients check if they know about the hard fork.

There network protocol could be updated to add getdata support for asking for a coinbase only merkleblock.  This would allow SPV clients to obtain the coinbase.

Automatic warning system: When a flag block is found on the network, full nodes and SPV nodes should look into its coinbase. They should alert their users and/or stop accepting incoming transactions if it is an unknown hardfork. It should be noted that the warning system could become a DoS vector if the attacker is willing to give up the block reward. Therefore, the warning may be issued only if a few blocks are built on top of the flag block in a reasonable time frame. This will in turn increase the risk in case of a real planned hardfork so it is up to the wallet programmers to decide the optimal strategy. Human warning system (e.g. the emergency alert system in Bitcoin Core) could fill the gap.

If the rule was that hard forks only take effect 100 blocks after the flag block, then this problem is eliminated.

Emergency hard forks may still have to take effect immediately though, so it would have to be a custom not a rule.