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Bitcoin => Bitcoin Discussion => Topic started by: FrankS on June 06, 2017, 06:51:01 PM



Title: Transaction fees
Post by: FrankS on June 06, 2017, 06:51:01 PM
I remember that back when Bitcoin was starting to get attention, one of the key arguments against eg Paypal was that you could transfer your money without paying any fee (and yes, the tx didn't get stuck). But now the network has reached the point where transaction fees are sometimes higher than Paypal or similar. Even worse, if you managed to collect a lot of Satoshis from various faucets or such, you have only accumulated so-called dust and are practically told to forget about it.

What's a solution for that? How would you explain to average John Doe that his efforts to collect Satoshis were useless? If several hundred people send one cent to your traditional bank account, you have a few dollars. The bank won't tell you to forget about that money because it came in as cents.

What about:
1. Increase blocksize so that more transactions can be included into a block to lower fees. Why isn't that done?
2. Transactions where all input addresses are the same as the output address are identical could be free to allow combining dust.
3. Transactions with low/no fees should be included if the sender is willing to wait long enough, like 2 weeks, or a month.
4. Low/no fee transactions could require extra work on the clientside so that spam attacks are not feasible (like a few mins requiring 100% CPU).


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: Qartada on June 06, 2017, 07:11:32 PM
I remember that back when Bitcoin was starting to get attention, one of the key arguments against eg Paypal was that you could transfer your money without paying any fee (and yes, the tx didn't get stuck). But now the network has reached the point where transaction fees are sometimes higher than Paypal or similar.
True.  That's very annoying.

Quote from: FrankS
If several hundred people send one cent to your traditional bank account, you have a few dollars. The bank won't tell you to forget about that money because it came in as cents.
That's misleading.  With PayPal for example, if you sell goods or services you have to accept a 3.4% + 20p fee for it, which makes all payments below 20p useless and all transactions below about £1/$1 impractical to take, or "dust".

The average Joe's attempt to collect satoshi was based on the gimmick of Bitcoin, not for what they regard as "real money".  You couldn't imagine traditional fiat currencies having pages like that, where you just fill in a captcha and get free fiat, because it would be just as dumb.

I agree that it should be possible to do things like that, which is part of the reason for faucets existing in the first place - for the sake of existing - but I don't think their tiny amount of Bitcoin was that meaningful anyway and they were just wasting time.
Quote from: FrankS
What about:
1. Increase blocksize so that more transactions can be included into a block to lower fees. Why isn't that done?
There's a lot of argument about that.  Some people argue that it would increase the cost of running full nodes too much, eventually leading to centralisation and thus leaving nodes too public and/or prone to attack.  I don't particularly agree with this for small increases, but I can see the argument that it's a "slippery slope" of sorts.

Some people go for SegWit paired with more offchain solutions like the Lightning Network, or for both of the two things at the same time.  The argument between the two "sides" is mainly what stops anything actually happening.
Quote from: FrankS
3. Transactions with low/no fees should be included if the sender is willing to wait long enough, like 2 weeks, or a month.
That would require cooperation.  Currently, a lot of transactions get rejected from mempools in that time (default Bitcoin Core time right now is 2 weeks, I think).
Quote from: FrankS
4. Low/no fee transactions could require extra work on the clientside so that spam attacks are not feasible (like a few mins requiring 100% CPU).
Spammers who are working hard or professionally wouldn't find this an issue if the actual cost in fiat was still low.  If it was high, there would be no point in sending the "low fee" transactions anyway.


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: Willeampere on June 06, 2017, 08:17:34 PM
This problem did not exist before, it takes a lot of time when there are too many small operations, certainly the block size needs to be increased.


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: coolcoinz on June 06, 2017, 08:30:23 PM
I don't think the fees are higher than PayPal's when it comes to overseas transfers + currency exchange. I'm an EU citizen and remember receiving some cash from a friend in the USA and it included normal overseas transfer + conversion to Euro, and it costed me about €20. Me, because my friend didn't even know it's going to consume so much, so he sent a full sum and when I got it it, the fees were deducted from the sent amount and I got much less than I had expected.
Bitcoin is much cheaper and you immediately know how much you're sending. Also the fees are paid by the sender, not deducted from the money being sent.


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: Lizzie_Girl on June 06, 2017, 08:37:26 PM
I don't even understand what is going on. I sent 0.015 btc and paid close to 0.004 fee and still I wait after weeks. Yobit days it's coming through it's in the blockchain but nothing. Very annoying.  0.004 is $10 wtf. That's just under 30% of what I'm sending.


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: eaLiTy on June 06, 2017, 08:43:58 PM
I agree hundred percent with coolcoinz, it is not that simple as they sound,there is conversion charges for sending the coins and then there is transactions charges they are entirely different and people are crying about the fact that bitcoin fees have increased and mircro transactions are not possible,yes the days of micro transactions are over for good and now,it can be viewed as a total package of asset class to safe guard your assets with full control over it,i personally would like to see the old bitcoin days back where claiming from faucet was a good thing and the transaction charges are lower,things move on and i changed accordingly.


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: erikalui on June 06, 2017, 08:48:55 PM
PayPal fees have become relatively less compared to bitcoins. I am paying 0.0015 fixed fee for all my transactions irrespective of the amount which makes it very expensive to trade in BTC. BU/SegWit were trying to work on this issue but till now there has not been any updates. We need to have a solution for the transaction blocks so that more transactions could be added and confirmed faster with low fee to be paid but now everything is in the hand of the miners for which we need to pay over 300-400 sats/byte for a transaction to get confirmed or rely on viabtc. Also, spam transactions should be directly dropped from the network.


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: iluvpie60 on June 06, 2017, 08:51:46 PM
Paypal charges you a fee for using their services. All sellers who go through ebay or paypal have to pay somewhere around 2.9%.

While.it is true you can send money to others on paypal for free, that isnt the same thing as bitcoin. Using paypal uses worthless and inflationary USD. Bitcoin in long term would be better.


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: richardsNY on June 06, 2017, 09:01:50 PM
While.it is true you can send money to others on paypal for free, that isnt the same thing as bitcoin. Using paypal uses worthless and inflationary USD. Bitcoin in long term would be better.

Main point of importance is that PayPal gets the job done properly, instantly, for free, and that isn't something that goes up for Bitcoin currently. People are looking for convenience, certain form of security when it comes to purchases, a wide level of acceptance -- that's something PayPal is doing exceptionally well. It's pointless to deny that just because you have a bias towards Bitcoin....


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: pawel7777 on June 06, 2017, 09:17:12 PM
I remember that back when Bitcoin was starting to get attention, one of the key arguments against eg Paypal was that you could transfer your money without paying any fee (and yes, the tx didn't get stuck). But now the network has reached the point where transaction fees are sometimes higher than Paypal or similar. Even worse, if you managed to collect a lot of Satoshis from various faucets or such, you have only accumulated so-called dust and are practically told to forget about it.
...

For starters, promoting Bitcoin as a free way of transferring wealth was always a stretch. By design, transactions are not meant to be free. But I guess that was appealing to masses and people got carried away in promoting BTC this way.

Right now Bitcoin is far more expensive (and slower) on average than PayPal (with free non-purchase transfers in the same currency). But the biggest selling point was/is decentralisation and freedom from censorship - you're in full control of your own funds and can send them to whoever you want anywhere in the world.

Despite what some people think, insanely high txs fees are the issue and something will have to be done or Bitcoin will get replaced, that's how free market works. Hopefully we'll see SegWit + 2mb blocks in near future (as per NY agreement), not a pretty solution, but at least it breaks the stalemate.

...
What about:
1. Increase blocksize so that more transactions can be included into a block to lower fees. Why isn't that done?
...

There are literally hundreds of threads in this forum alone regarding this subject, don't start another one, do some research.

I don't think the fees are higher than PayPal's when it comes to overseas transfers + currency exchange. I'm an EU citizen and remember receiving some cash from a friend in the USA and it included normal overseas transfer + conversion to Euro, and it costed me about €20. Me, because my friend didn't even know it's going to consume so much, so he sent a full sum and when I got it it, the fees were deducted from the sent amount and I got much less than I had expected.
...

Paypal rips you off on currency conversion, but if you want to be fair in comparing PayPal Vs BTC, you should compare cost of sending bitcoins + cost of converting BTC to fiat, which also doesn't look very good in most cases.


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: ekoice on June 07, 2017, 10:52:06 AM
I don't even understand what is going on. I sent 0.015 btc and paid close to 0.004 fee and still I wait after weeks. Yobit days it's coming through it's in the blockchain but nothing. Very annoying.  0.004 is $10 wtf. That's just under 30% of what I'm sending.
Heavy transaction fees is becoming a great issue in bitcoin.I too had suffered for even ten days before getting confirmed.But still,transaction fee is less compared to other payment options like paypal,etc.


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: Kakmakr on June 07, 2017, 11:28:24 AM
I had something similar happen to me, when I took my Coin Jar to the bank. It contained $300 worth of small change. The bank charged me $23 handling fees, because they had to count it. < Over the counter transactions in my country is very expensive > So this is not a Bitcoin problem only. ^hmmmmm^

If you used faucets linked to Xapo, you would not have had that problem. All off-chain "dust" transactions in Xapo is free, and you just pay miners fees, when you withdraw from these services. < The withdraw is basically a on-chain transaction >

Fees will come down after the Lightning network or something similar is introduced. ^smile^


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: TGJJ on June 07, 2017, 06:01:37 PM
One of the main unique selling points of btc is now  massive liability, and has been for years.

Its rendered btc useless for most commerce transactions, as the majority of transactions made in business are small


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: deisik on June 07, 2017, 06:15:51 PM
One of the main unique selling points of btc is now  massive liability, and has been for years.

Its rendered btc useless for most commerce transactions, as the majority of transactions made in business are small

I don't really know how true is this claim

But it is certainly not the primary reason why Bitcoin is mostly useless for commerce right now. It may play a certain role of course, but it is surely not the most important one. After all, merchants could just open their checking accounts in any reputable and reliable web wallet out there like Xapo or Coinbase and then start receiving payments to these wallets off-chain (from other such wallets), and thus break free from limitations imposed by high and higher transaction fees (if they were really interested in accepting Bitcoin as a means of payment in the first place)


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: mayax on June 07, 2017, 06:22:19 PM
I don't even understand what is going on. I sent 0.015 btc and paid close to 0.004 fee and still I wait after weeks. Yobit days it's coming through it's in the blockchain but nothing. Very annoying.  0.004 is $10 wtf. That's just under 30% of what I'm sending.
Heavy transaction fees is becoming a great issue in bitcoin.I too had suffered for even ten days before getting confirmed.But still,transaction fee is less compared to other payment options like paypal,etc.

why do you still use BTC while other e-currencies are MUCH cheaper?


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: FrankS on June 08, 2017, 07:33:52 PM
Quote from: FrankS
If several hundred people send one cent to your traditional bank account, you have a few dollars. The bank won't tell you to forget about that money because it came in as cents.
That's misleading.  With PayPal for example, if you sell goods or services you have to accept a 3.4% + 20p fee for it, which makes all payments below 20p useless and all transactions below about £1/$1 impractical to take, or "dust".
That's why I said traditional bank account. Paypal has always been rather greedy imho so it was a good target for "fee-free" Bitcoin.

Quote from: FrankS
What about:
1. Increase blocksize so that more transactions can be included into a block to lower fees. Why isn't that done?
There's a lot of argument about that.  Some people argue that it would increase the cost of running full nodes too much, eventually leading to centralisation and thus leaving nodes too public and/or prone to attack.  I don't particularly agree with this for small increases, but I can see the argument that it's a "slippery slope" of sorts.
It will grow nevertheless constantly, unless someone comes up with a smart idea to reduce size. On the other hand, storage space gets cheaper. It will just get more annoying to copy and/or do a fresh restart.

I don't think the fees are higher than PayPal's when it comes to overseas transfers + currency exchange. I'm an EU citizen and remember receiving some cash from a friend in the USA and it included normal overseas transfer + conversion to Euro, and it costed me about €20. Me, because my friend didn't even know it's going to consume so much, so he sent a full sum and when I got it it, the fees were deducted from the sent amount and I got much less than I had expected.
Bitcoin is much cheaper and you immediately know how much you're sending. Also the fees are paid by the sender, not deducted from the money being sent.
Just went to blockchain.info and took a look at the latest blocks and picked the USD values of some random transactions:
Code:
Amount  Fee     Ratio   Transaction-ID
 1,24   0,17    13,7%   7637e4cb225fbe5d549fb544e18ffcbd51267a46e3451eb7dafef25e3b3c60c4
22,04   3,07    13,9%   331f9bab79acf9489a6834a0f2b0c9c41f6f6153607d3ff75c5647c2a0839199
28,69   7,11    24,8%   c22624bb677b630a5635777860dee67bfa2bc321e64d784e416b1d898a934e6d
 2,19   2,92   133,3%   8c9a3646533c9141581c9ca15d82c94d2a1ad6b6b1b2ce981c99793c9138bc74
14,55   2,68    18,4%   1c0fdecbc5de6a2725d1b1ee4c9c6c5c58bd332962187bb6893cb825514d5f6b
Currency exchange aside, it's hard to explain those fees to average Joe; and he won't consider those amounts as dust either. With this, it won't be interesting for end-user and merchant adoption. Bitcoin will turn into a trading currency for people with bigger funds. Transactions need to stay below eg Paypal's fees to stay competitive. Milking users now will bring everything downhill.

Right now Bitcoin is far more expensive (and slower) on average than PayPal (with free non-purchase transfers in the same currency). But the biggest selling point was/is decentralisation and freedom from censorship - you're in full control of your own funds and can send them to whoever you want anywhere in the world.
In the long run even Bitcoin will centralize. People want convenience sadly, that's why webbased wallets are successful. They can easily drop fees for "inhouse" transactions and brake traceability in the blockchain.


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: kamina87 on July 08, 2017, 10:26:29 AM
I also think that the current Bitcoin transaction fee is really high and I feel this will hinder future Bitcoin


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: 1Referee on July 08, 2017, 10:36:35 AM
why do you still use BTC while other e-currencies are MUCH cheaper?

I have seen a large number of people 'threatening' to switch over to altcoins because they offer faster and cheaper confirmations, but these people are not backing up their words by any actions. It's just an empty threat. The reason that most of the altcoins offer faster and cheaper confirmations, is that their networks barely enjoy any sort of significant usage, like is the case with Bitcoin. Just look at what happened with Ethereum. Ether has been facing some serious network difficulties, as it couldn't cope with the increased demand. In other words, every altcoin that at some point ends up experiencing a decent bit of usage, will go through the same difficulties. People however don't seem to realize this. ::)


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: Renji Abarai on July 08, 2017, 10:41:59 AM
why do you still use BTC while other e-currencies are MUCH cheaper?

I have seen a large number of people 'threatening' to switch over to altcoins because they offer faster and cheaper confirmations, but these people are not backing up their words by any actions. It's just an empty threat. The reason that most of the altcoins offer faster and cheaper confirmations, is that their networks barely enjoy any sort of significant usage, like is the case with Bitcoin. Just look at what happened with Ethereum. Ether has been facing some serious network difficulties, as it couldn't cope with the increased demand. In other words, every altcoin that at some point ends up experiencing a decent bit of usage, will go through the same difficulties. People however don't seem to realize this. ::)

That is true sir. Some are hating bitcoin because of this speed but is it really a good alternative? Maybe like in other altcoins, its faster but when it has many user, will it be the same? Its correct also regarding with Ethereum, that is why some ICO's are moving to waves since it is still new. Transaction fees in bitcoin is affordable. If you are in hurry, then you can increase the fees its understand. There is also standard fees but of course, you have to wait until your turn to be processed.


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: mackenzied on July 08, 2017, 10:44:20 AM
I remember that back when Bitcoin was starting to get attention, one of the key arguments against eg Paypal was that you could transfer your money without paying any fee (and yes, the tx didn't get stuck). But now the network has reached the point where transaction fees are sometimes higher than Paypal or similar. Even worse, if you managed to collect a lot of Satoshis from various faucets or such, you have only accumulated so-called dust and are practically told to forget about it.

What's a solution for that? How would you explain to average John Doe that his efforts to collect Satoshis were useless? If several hundred people send one cent to your traditional bank account, you have a few dollars. The bank won't tell you to forget about that money because it came in as cents.

What about:
1. Increase blocksize so that more transactions can be included into a block to lower fees. Why isn't that done?
2. Transactions where all input addresses are the same as the output address are identical could be free to allow combining dust.
3. Transactions with low/no fees should be included if the sender is willing to wait long enough, like 2 weeks, or a month.
4. Low/no fee transactions could require extra work on the clientside so that spam attacks are not feasible (like a few mins requiring 100% CPU).


That's right, what you put out is really accurate, but it's in the past, when bitcoins are still uncommon and it carries a low value. However, when too many people use bitcoin, it becomes slow and costs more.


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: reflector on July 08, 2017, 10:52:25 AM
why do you still use BTC while other e-currencies are MUCH cheaper?

I have seen a large number of people 'threatening' to switch over to altcoins because they offer faster and cheaper confirmations, but these people are not backing up their words by any actions. It's just an empty threat. The reason that most of the altcoins offer faster and cheaper confirmations, is that their networks barely enjoy any sort of significant usage, like is the case with Bitcoin. Just look at what happened with Ethereum. Ether has been facing some serious network difficulties, as it couldn't cope with the increased demand. In other words, every altcoin that at some point ends up experiencing a decent bit of usage, will go through the same difficulties. People however don't seem to realize this. ::)

That is true sir. Some are hating bitcoin because of this speed but is it really a good alternative? Maybe like in other altcoins, its faster but when it has many user, will it be the same? Its correct also regarding with Ethereum, that is why some ICO's are moving to waves since it is still new. Transaction fees in bitcoin is affordable. If you are in hurry, then you can increase the fees its understand. There is also standard fees but of course, you have to wait until your turn to be processed.

I checked that recent days fees seems revised on most the of the online wallet also. Moving to altcoins will destroy the bitcoin's place in future. Since they are also using the blockchain technology to create a new ICOs.
If you move that alts and reduce the supply of bitcoin by just holding it will take bitcoin fees to high rate only. Please use whenever you can.


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: deisik on July 08, 2017, 12:07:55 PM
why do you still use BTC while other e-currencies are MUCH cheaper?

I have seen a large number of people 'threatening' to switch over to altcoins because they offer faster and cheaper confirmations, but these people are not backing up their words by any actions. It's just an empty threat. The reason that most of the altcoins offer faster and cheaper confirmations, is that their networks barely enjoy any sort of significant usage, like is the case with Bitcoin. Just look at what happened with Ethereum. Ether has been facing some serious network difficulties, as it couldn't cope with the increased demand. In other words, every altcoin that at some point ends up experiencing a decent bit of usage, will go through the same difficulties. People however don't seem to realize this. ::)

I don't know whom you are talking about

But I think I made it pretty clear that I consider Bitcoin as a very risky asset right now (potentially turning into a toxic one in the near future), and presently I'm mostly in cash with part of my capital invested in Litecoin. So I actually put my money where my mouth is. For example, today I just missed buying a few more litecoins at a little below 44 dollars per coin. Somehow I expected the price to go a bit lower than that (likely to 40 dollars). And I have massive buy orders placed at prices below 35 dollars all the way down to 15 dollars though I don't think that the price is actually going to fall lower than 30 dollars any time soon. I'd rather expect it to surge to over 100 dollars in the next few months


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: Netnox on July 08, 2017, 12:11:28 PM
I don't know whom you are talking about

But I think I made it pretty clear that I consider Bitcoin as a very risky asset right now (potentially turning into a toxic one in the near future), and presently I'm mostly in cash with part of my capital invested in Litecoin. So I actually put my money where my mouth is. For example, today I just missed buying a few more litecoins at a little below 44 dollars per coin. Somehow I expected the price to go a bit lower than that (likely to 40 dollars). And I have massive buy orders placed at prices below 35 dollars all the way down to 15 dollars though I don't think that the price is actually going to fall lower than 30 dollars any time soon. I'd rather expect it to surge over 100 dollars in the next few months

That is interesting. Could you please tell me the reasons why you chose Litecoin over the other alts (such as Ethereum, Ripple, Nemcoin, Stellar Lumens, and ETH Classic)? LTC is a bit too expensive now (it is trading at almost BTC0.02 per coin), and I am a bit afraid to purchase it at the current prices.


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: Kronos21 on July 08, 2017, 12:19:15 PM
Perhaps it is too optimistic forecast. It has long been rumored that the government will start to legalize bitcoin. If we assume that it does happen then the demand for bitcoin may increase and this will cause the outflow of investments from altcoins that will lead to a drop in their prices.


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: muf18 on July 08, 2017, 12:38:13 PM
Litecoin is the only alternative now for cheap transactions, I only made my transactions in LTC, because it uses 0.07-0.2USD fees, instead of 5-20$ of bitcoin.
Also Litecoin is the second most widely accepted crypto in the world. It's on the most exchanges, since it's almost the same as BTC, and in 2013 after great pump, most of exchanges start to accepted for fiat currencies across the world. I missed the opportunity (I knew that LTC will go up, thought I didn't know so fast) in march this year, when I wanted to buy for 4$, and predicted to be traded for 50$ in future (to reply great pump of 2013-14)


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: PELELE on July 08, 2017, 12:53:30 PM
Many people particular about Transaction fees in today's market. Compare to other payment gateways and banking transactions, bitcoin transaction fees are normal and reasonable.


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: Sniper44 on July 08, 2017, 01:06:36 PM
Many people particular about Transaction fees in today's market. Compare to other payment gateways and banking transactions, bitcoin transaction fees are normal and reasonable.

it is because transaction fees has been very low recently. and also it is because they have gone up because of the fact that miners has been postponing activation of segwit and allowing us to scale up bitcoin.


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: deisik on July 08, 2017, 01:24:04 PM
I don't know whom you are talking about

But I think I made it pretty clear that I consider Bitcoin as a very risky asset right now (potentially turning into a toxic one in the near future), and presently I'm mostly in cash with part of my capital invested in Litecoin. So I actually put my money where my mouth is. For example, today I just missed buying a few more litecoins at a little below 44 dollars per coin. Somehow I expected the price to go a bit lower than that (likely to 40 dollars). And I have massive buy orders placed at prices below 35 dollars all the way down to 15 dollars though I don't think that the price is actually going to fall lower than 30 dollars any time soon. I'd rather expect it to surge over 100 dollars in the next few months

That is interesting. Could you please tell me the reasons why you chose Litecoin over the other alts (such as Ethereum, Ripple, Nemcoin, Stellar Lumens, and ETH Classic)? LTC is a bit too expensive now (it is trading at almost BTC0.02 per coin), and I am a bit afraid to purchase it at the current prices

I was telling people to buy Litecoin when it had been well below 30 dollars per coin

My reasoning is in fact quite simple. If Bitcoin is set to kick the bucket (we will learn that in a couple of weeks), Litecoin is likely to take its place (basically, it is the same Bitcoin but with its issues already fixed). So Litecoin seems to be a pretty obvious choice. Ethereum is a scam created specifically to push other scams (known as ICO's), Ripple is a corporate coin with heavy premine (basically, the same scam as Ethereum), the rest are not known to me. You could have bought Litecoin today as low as 44 dollars at Bitfinex (one of my buy orders got triggered at 43.7)


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: zevtev9 on July 08, 2017, 01:40:02 PM
There are technical difficulties for that, increasing the block size seems simple and reasonable but that would require changing the whole bitcoin system to implement it in a wallet and would require every wallet/Blockchain etc... to have some change in it and that SHOULD be very difficult.


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: Vishnu.Reang on July 08, 2017, 02:03:05 PM
I was telling people to buy Litecoin when it had been well below 30 dollars per coin

My reasoning is in fact quite simple. If Bitcoin is set to kick the bucket (we will learn that in a couple of weeks), Litecoin is likely to take its place (basically, it is the same Bitcoin but with its issues already fixed). So Litecoin seems to be a pretty obvious choice. Ethereum is a scam created specifically to push other scams (known as ICO's), Ripple is a corporate coin with heavy premine (basically, the same scam as Ethereum), the rest are not known to me. You could buy Litcoin today as low as 44 dollars at Bitfinex (one of my buy orders got triggered at 43.7)

Hmmm... I have also noticed one important thing about LTC. When BTC goes down, most of the other alts also go down. But not Litecoin. I have noticed this at least 3-4 times in the past. The Litecoin exchange rates are not very dependent on the BTC prices.


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: Ayers on July 08, 2017, 02:09:36 PM
One of the main unique selling points of btc is now  massive liability, and has been for years.

Its rendered btc useless for most commerce transactions, as the majority of transactions made in business are small

you mean the size of the transaction in byte or in btc? i think the size in byte is on average high, and the size in bitcoin is high because no people will send few satoshi just to lose the transaction on fee, people ar enow doing high bitcoin transaction to have amrgin on fee


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: audaciousbeing on July 08, 2017, 02:15:50 PM
Its just so annoying that it has gotten to this point just not too long ago I want to make some transfer and I have to part away with over $40 as fees if I want my transaction to confirm within the hour compared to less than 5$ which might even take forever, this is really annoying that I had to just shelve the idea and either way it will reduce the market capitalization considering the total number people who took the same decision as mine due to the high rate of fees we have to face these days and hopefully this can come to a logical conclusion from August 1 implementation.


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: deisik on July 08, 2017, 02:21:40 PM
I was telling people to buy Litecoin when it had been well below 30 dollars per coin

My reasoning is in fact quite simple. If Bitcoin is set to kick the bucket (we will learn that in a couple of weeks), Litecoin is likely to take its place (basically, it is the same Bitcoin but with its issues already fixed). So Litecoin seems to be a pretty obvious choice. Ethereum is a scam created specifically to push other scams (known as ICO's), Ripple is a corporate coin with heavy premine (basically, the same scam as Ethereum), the rest are not known to me. You could buy Litcoin today as low as 44 dollars at Bitfinex (one of my buy orders got triggered at 43.7)

Hmmm... I have also noticed one important thing about LTC. When BTC goes down, most of the other alts also go down. But not Litecoin. I have noticed this at least 3-4 times in the past. The Litecoin exchange rates are not very dependent on the BTC prices

This tendency has emerged only recently. In the past (i.e. a few months ago and before that), Litecoin had been following Bitcoin's lead like it was on a leash (aside from short-lived pumps and dumps). Now it's got unleashed. This hasn't yet become a rule since last time when Bitcoin went down over 400 dollars, Litecoin seriously dropped too (so we are not there yet). But if things continue to develop along this path, more and more people will start looking into this coin since in that case it will offer larger profits at a greater consistency (something which only Bitcoin had been enjoying in the past). Though I don't know what this has to do with transaction fees but Litecoin's transaction fees are certainly way cheaper than Bitcoin's

And they will likely remain cheap in the future


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: 1Referee on July 09, 2017, 02:23:09 PM
I don't know whom you are talking about

But I think I made it pretty clear that I consider Bitcoin as a very risky asset right now (potentially turning into a toxic one in the near future), and presently I'm mostly in cash with part of my capital invested in Litecoin. So I actually put my money where my mouth is. For example, today I just missed buying a few more litecoins at a little below 44 dollars per coin. Somehow I expected the price to go a bit lower than that (likely to 40 dollars). And I have massive buy orders placed at prices below 35 dollars all the way down to 15 dollars though I don't think that the price is actually going to fall lower than 30 dollars any time soon. I'd rather expect it to surge to over 100 dollars in the next few months

Wow, lolz. I wasn't even referring to you (didn't even had you in mind), but yet I seem to have touched one of your sensitive spots. It's one of your habits to cut off a certain part of the text that people write, and then go in depth about why you do or do not agree with a certain statement.

This was the original statement;

I have seen a large number of people 'threatening' to switch over to altcoins because they offer faster and cheaper confirmations

And this is how you bolded the part that you probably was fixated on.

I have seen a large number of people 'threatening' to switch over to altcoins because they offer faster and cheaper confirmations

It was obviously clear that I was solely referring to those that are looking for faster and cheaper confimations.


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: AGD on July 09, 2017, 02:33:38 PM
OP is wrong.
Fees are low and this topic is outdated.


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: madcoinfarmer on July 09, 2017, 02:34:54 PM
You know, everything changes. If in the beginning of Bitcoin-thing they needed to say "we don't have fees", but now, when Bitcoin is already a brand, they can take as much fees as they want. You should get even with it.


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: Taki on July 09, 2017, 02:38:16 PM
I don't even understand what is going on. I sent 0.015 btc and paid close to 0.004 fee and still I wait after weeks. Yobit days it's coming through it's in the blockchain but nothing. Very annoying.  0.004 is $10 wtf. That's just under 30% of what I'm sending.

You paid such high fee and waiting for the transaction to be approved for weeks? It's just strange. With such high fee everything should be managed in a moment. Is there any information about "avaiting deposit" on that place where you have sent your founds?


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: Aratatat on July 09, 2017, 02:42:41 PM
You know, everything changes. If in the beginning of Bitcoin-thing they needed to say "we don't have fees", but now, when Bitcoin is already a brand, they can take as much fees as they want. You should get even with it.

There were always fees, but very small ones. Current fees have nothing to do with "brand", they are caused by high transaction volumes.


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: LeGaulois on July 09, 2017, 03:00:44 PM

Litecoin is the only alternative now for cheap transactions, I only made my transactions in LTC, because it uses 0.07-0.2USD fees, instead of 5-20$ of bitcoin.

There are cheapest fees: Right now I am thinking about Ripple, last time i tried I got $0.00X fees. There are surely others altcoins like this, Doge maybe? But anyway paying 10 cents or 20 cents for fees who gives a f**k to save pennies. No need to be always greedy. You can also pay a fee of 10 cents with bitcoin and get the transaction confirmed in decent time


Title: Re: Transaction fees
Post by: deisik on July 09, 2017, 03:18:54 PM
I don't know whom you are talking about

But I think I made it pretty clear that I consider Bitcoin as a very risky asset right now (potentially turning into a toxic one in the near future), and presently I'm mostly in cash with part of my capital invested in Litecoin. So I actually put my money where my mouth is. For example, today I just missed buying a few more litecoins at a little below 44 dollars per coin. Somehow I expected the price to go a bit lower than that (likely to 40 dollars). And I have massive buy orders placed at prices below 35 dollars all the way down to 15 dollars though I don't think that the price is actually going to fall lower than 30 dollars any time soon. I'd rather expect it to surge to over 100 dollars in the next few months

Wow, lolz. I wasn't even referring to you (didn't even had you in mind), but yet I seem to have touched one of your sensitive spots. It's one of your habits to cut off a certain part of the text that people write, and then go in depth about why you do or do not agree with a certain statement.

This was the original statement;

I have seen a large number of people 'threatening' to switch over to altcoins because they offer faster and cheaper confirmations

And this is how you bolded the part that you probably was fixated on.

I have seen a large number of people 'threatening' to switch over to altcoins because they offer faster and cheaper confirmations

It was obviously clear that I was solely referring to those that are looking for faster and cheaper confimations.

That was one of the reasons why I switched to Litecoin eventually

I was looking for a cheap alternative to Bitcoin in respect to transferring value right after Coinbase introduced transaction fees (I also wrote about that a few times). I first thought about Dogecoin since it seemed to be the cheapest among more or less decent coins (in respect to fees), but it is not listed on major exchanges like Bitfinex or Btc-e, so I quickly discarded it. Then I tried Ethereum (when it was cheap yet), but I was scared off since I didn't quite understand how it worked. Exchanges were mentioning something about contracts which I didn't have a slightest clue about back then so I tried Litecoin next. People were overall contemptuous of it (just like you) since it was basically a Bitcoin copycat (which I essentially agree with), and at first I wasn't really going to use it for anything other than a vehicle for transferring value. Then the debates and quarrels about Bitcoin future started to escalate rapidly, and Litecoin had been updated to SW and LN (that was in April), so it struck me that if Bitcoin was going to bite the dust due to tensions rising, Litecoin could potentially take its place. Hope this helps