It probably could be noted, although it is well known, pools, in some views, act as one large individual miner, not just when separately considering the actions of pools.
Given the operation of pools, would a pool be required to mine the new-miner-blocks, or would you propose operation in a pool be restricted individually? How would this operate?
Regards,
Damian Williamson
Now, questions:
How is N determined? By a wave of the hands?
How could miner anonymity be preserved under a scheme whereby each “next-coinbase” address can be linked to a previous “next-coinbase” address? The only way to start fresh would be with a prohibitively expensive no-payout block. Mining can be totally anonymous at present, and must so remain. Miners are only identified by certain information they choose to put in a block header, which they could choose to change or omit—or by IP address, which is trivially changed and is never a reliable identifier.
Further observations:
This scheme drastically increases the upfront investment required for a new miner to start mining. To mine even one new block all by oneself, without a pool, already requires a huge investment.
I have not even tried to imagine what oddball attacks might be possible for any miner with sufficient hashpower to deliberately cause a small reorg.
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nullius@nym.zone | PGP ECC: 0xC2E91CD74A4C57A105F6C21B5A00591B2F307E0C
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“‘If you’re not doing anything wrong, you have nothing to hide.’
No! Because I do nothing wrong, I have nothing to show.” — nullius