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Today's Topics:
1. Re: Long-term mining incentives (Thomas Voegtlin)
2. Re: Long-term mining incentives (Tier Nolan)
3. Re: Long-term mining incentives (Alex Mizrahi)
4. Re: Proposed alternatives to the 20MB step function (Tier Nolan)
5. Re: Block Size Increase (Oliver Egginger)
6. Re: Block Size Increase (Angel Leon)
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Thomas Voegtlin <thomasv@electrum.org>
To: Gavin Andresen <gavinandresen@gmail.com>, Bitcoin Dev <bitcoin-development@lists.sourceforge.net>
Cc:
Date: Wed, 13 May 2015 11:49:13 +0200
Subject: Re: [Bitcoin-development] Long-term mining incentives
Le 12/05/2015 18:10, Gavin Andresen a écrit :
> Added back the list, I didn't mean to reply privately:
>
> Fair enough, I'll try to find time in the next month or three to write up
> four plausible future scenarios for how mining incentives might work:
>
> 1) Fee-supported with very large blocks containing lots of tiny-fee
> transactions
> 2) Proof-of-idle supported (I wish Tadge Dryja would publish his
> proof-of-idle idea....)
> 3) Fees purely as transaction-spam-prevention measure, chain security via
> alternative consensus algorithm (in this scenario there is very little
> mining).
> 4) Fee supported with small blocks containing high-fee transactions moving
> coins to/from sidechains.
>
> Would that be helpful, or do you have some reason for thinking that we
> should pick just one and focus all of our efforts on making that one
> scenario happen?
>
> I always think it is better, when possible, not to "bet on one horse."
>
Sorry if I did not make myself clear. It is not about betting on one
single horse, or about making one particular scenario happen. It is not
about predicting whether something else will replace PoW in the future,
and I am in no way asking you to focus your efforts in one particular
direction at the expenses of others. Various directions will be explored
by various people, and that's great.
I am talking about what we know today. I would like an answer to the
following question: Do we have a reason to believe that Bitcoin can work
in the long run, without involving technologies that have not been
invented yet? Is there a single scenario that we know could work?
Exotic and unproven technologies are not an answer to that question. The
reference scenario should be as boring as possible, and as verifiable as
possible. I am not asking what you think is the most likely to happen,
but what is the most likely to work, given the knowledge we have today.
If I was asking: "Can we send humans to the moon by 2100?", I guess your
answer would be: "Yes we can, because it has been done in the past with
chemical rockets, and we know how to build them". You would probably not
use a space elevator in your answer.
The reason I am asking that is, there seems to be no consensus among
core developers on how Bitcoin can work without miner subsidy. How it
*will* work is another question.
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Tier Nolan <tier.nolan@gmail.com>
To:
Cc: Bitcoin Dev <bitcoin-development@lists.sourceforge.net>
Date: Wed, 13 May 2015 11:14:06 +0100
Subject: Re: [Bitcoin-development] Long-term mining incentivesOn Wed, May 13, 2015 at 10:49 AM, Thomas Voegtlin <thomasv@electrum.org> wrote:
The reason I am asking that is, there seems to be no consensus among
core developers on how Bitcoin can work without miner subsidy. How it
*will* work is another question.The position seems to be that it will continue to work for the time being, so there is still time for more research.Proof of stake has problems with handling long term reversals. The main proposal is to slightly weaken the security requirements.With POW, a new node only needs to know the genesis block (and network rules) to fully determine which of two chains is the strongest.Penalties for abusing POS inherently create a time horizon. A suggested POS security model would assume that a full node is a node that resyncs with the network regularly (every N blocks). N would be depend on the network rules of the coin.The alternative is that 51% of the holders of coins at the genesis block can rewrite the entire chain. The genesis block might not be the first block, a POS coin might still use POW for minting.
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Alex Mizrahi <alex.mizrahi@gmail.com>
To: Bitcoin Dev <bitcoin-development@lists.sourceforge.net>
Cc:
Date: Wed, 13 May 2015 13:31:47 +0300
Subject: Re: [Bitcoin-development] Long-term mining incentivesWith POW, a new node only needs to know the genesis block (and network rules) to fully determine which of two chains is the strongest.But this matters if a new node has access to the globally strongest chain.If attacker is able to block connections to legitimate nodes, a new node will happily accept attacker's chain.So PoW, by itself, doesn't give strong security guarantees. This problem is so fundamental people avoid talking about it.In practice, Bitcoin already embraces "weak subjectivity" e.g. in form of checkpoints embedded into the source code. So it's hard to take PoW purists seriously.
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Tier Nolan <tier.nolan@gmail.com>
To:
Cc: Bitcoin Development <bitcoin-development@lists.sourceforge.net>
Date: Wed, 13 May 2015 11:43:08 +0100
Subject: Re: [Bitcoin-development] Proposed alternatives to the 20MB step functionOn Sat, May 9, 2015 at 4:36 AM, Gregory Maxwell <gmaxwell@gmail.com> wrote:An example would
be tx_size = MAX( real_size >> 1, real_size + 4*utxo_created_size -
3*utxo_consumed_size).This could be implemented as a soft fork too.* 1MB hard size limit* 900kB soft limitS = block sizeU = UTXO_adjusted_size = S + 4 * outputs - 3 * inputsA block is valid if S < 1MB and U < 1MB
A 250 byte transaction with 2 inputs and 2 outputs would have an adjusted size of 252 bytes.The memory pool could be sorted by fee per adjusted_size.Coin selection could be adjusted so it tries to have at least 2 inputs when creating transactions, unless the input is worth more than a threshold (say 0.001 BTC).This is a pretty weak incentive, especially if the block size is increased. Maybe it will cause a "nudge"
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Oliver Egginger <bitcoin@olivere.de>
To: bitcoin-development@lists.sourceforge.net
Cc:
Date: Wed, 13 May 2015 12:37:17 +0200
Subject: Re: [Bitcoin-development] Block Size Increase
08.05.2015 at 5:49 Jeff Garzik wrote:
> To repeat, the very first point in my email reply was: "Agree that 7 tps
> is too low"
For interbank trading that would maybe enough but I don't know.
I'm not a developer but as a (former) user and computer scientist I'm
also asking myself what is the core of the problem? Personally, for
privacy reasons I do not want to leave a footprint in the blockchain for
each pizza. And why should this expense be good for trivial things of
everyday life?
If one encounters the block boundary, he or she will do more effort or
give up. I'm thinking most people will give up because their
transactions are not really economical. It is much better for them to
use third-partys (or another payment system).
And that's where we are at the heart of the problem. The Bitcoin
third-party economy. With few exceptions this is pure horror. More worse
than any used car dealer. And the community just waits that things get
better. But that will never happen of its own accord. We are living in a
Wild West Town. So we need a Sheriff and many other things.
We need a small but good functioning economy around the blockchain. To
create one, we have to accept a few unpleasant truths. I do not know if
the community is ready for it.
Nevertheless, I know that some companies do a good job. But they have to
prevail against their dishonest competitors.
People take advantage of the blockchain, because they no longer trust
anyone. But this will not scale in the long run.
- oliver
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Angel Leon <gubatron@gmail.com>
To: Oliver Egginger <bitcoin@olivere.de>
Cc: Bitcoin Dev <bitcoin-development@lists.sourceforge.net>
Date: Wed, 13 May 2015 07:25:47 -0400
Subject: Re: [Bitcoin-development] Block Size Increase> Personally, for privacy reasons I do not want to leave a footprint in the blockchain for each pizza. And why should this expense be good for trivial things of everyday life?
Then what's the point?
Isn't this supposed to be an Open transactional network, it doesn't matter if you don't want that, what matters is what people want to do with it, and there's nothing you can do to stop someone from opening a wallet and buying a pizza with it, except the core of the problem you ask yourself about, which is, the minute this goes mainstream and people get their wallets out the whole thing will collapse, regardless of what you want the blockchain for.
Why talk about the billions of unbanked and all the romantic vision if you can't let them use their money however they want in a decentralized fashion. Otherwise let's just go back to centralized banking because the minute you want to put things off chain, you need an organization that will need to respond to government regulation and that's the end for the billions of unbanked to be part of the network.
On Wed, May 13, 2015 at 6:37 AM, Oliver Egginger <bitcoin@olivere.de> wrote:08.05.2015 at 5:49 Jeff Garzik wrote:
> To repeat, the very first point in my email reply was: "Agree that 7 tps
> is too low"
For interbank trading that would maybe enough but I don't know.
I'm not a developer but as a (former) user and computer scientist I'm
also asking myself what is the core of the problem? Personally, for
privacy reasons I do not want to leave a footprint in the blockchain for
each pizza. And why should this expense be good for trivial things of
everyday life?
If one encounters the block boundary, he or she will do more effort or
give up. I'm thinking most people will give up because their
transactions are not really economical. It is much better for them to
use third-partys (or another payment system).
And that's where we are at the heart of the problem. The Bitcoin
third-party economy. With few exceptions this is pure horror. More worse
than any used car dealer. And the community just waits that things get
better. But that will never happen of its own accord. We are living in a
Wild West Town. So we need a Sheriff and many other things.
We need a small but good functioning economy around the blockchain. To
create one, we have to accept a few unpleasant truths. I do not know if
the community is ready for it.
Nevertheless, I know that some companies do a good job. But they have to
prevail against their dishonest competitors.
People take advantage of the blockchain, because they no longer trust
anyone. But this will not scale in the long run.
- oliver
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