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Question: How many nodes are operated by Bitcoin biased businesses and Bitcoin developers?
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Author Topic: How Many Bitcoin Full Nodes Are Operated By Businesses?  (Read 1382 times)
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CoinCidental
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December 15, 2016, 12:17:06 AM
 #21

my node uploads about 700MB a day .... i wouldnt call that a lot of bandwidth
You probably aren't accepting inbound connections, or are potentially in a /16 with many other nodes so you are connected to less often.   About 300GB/month transfer is not atypical for a node with inbound connections.

BIP152 reduces the data used to send blocks, but that data was only about 12% of the overall.

actually i am accepting inbound connections on port 8333,running the node with 30 -80 connections
and i dont use BIP152 (i keep default bitcoin unlimited settings )

not sure why the upload bandwidth isnt higher but it seem to run fairly efficient as is
Yakamoto
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December 15, 2016, 12:37:53 AM
 #22

I think there are maybe a few portions of the entire node network that are run by businesses, but for a lot of them it doesn't make sense for them to do such a thing because it's just an energy sink for the most part, unless I'm woefully uneducated when it comes to the pros and cons of running a node.
coins101 (OP)
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December 15, 2016, 10:04:14 AM
Last edit: December 15, 2016, 10:31:15 AM by coins101
 #23

I think there are maybe a few portions of the entire node network that are run by businesses, but for a lot of them it doesn't make sense for them to do such a thing because it's just an energy sink for the most part, unless I'm woefully uneducated when it comes to the pros and cons of running a node.

I know Greg is stalking me on this thread ( Cheesy), but while I do want to know how many ordinary users are out there running full node and can't be easily caught up in some coordinated take down by governments, most likely through some weird legislation, I am also interested in how businesses can expand their use of full nodes and still have the benefit of SPVs.

As I provide enterprise level services and support on a couple of apps, I know users just want to be users (as Satoshi put it). Quite a lot of my customers are looking at moving to the cloud, a fair number going to Azure.

So I have also been doing some research on enabling businesses to run full nodes and linking them to SPVs. As it turns out, Jonas Schnelli with the help of Mr. Maxwell (hence my stalking jest) has been doing some work on encryption between SPVs and full nodes (BIP150 and 151). For the past year, I was thinking about something similar but coming at it from a business and noob user point of view, using something like (as it turns out) BIP 150 / 151 to launch a secure full node by simply running a particular type of commercial grade SPV (it would have fees and therefore SLA's).

So on a number of issues, this thread is very helpful.
franky1
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December 15, 2016, 10:34:30 AM
 #24

so you want to run a cluster of full nodes so that litenode users can have what you deem as a whitelist of trustable full nodes the litenodes connect to.

like a next gen multibit. by just removing random node connection and replacing it with whitelist cluster of fullnodes.
interesting. but as soon as you put a pricetag on it.. you'll start to see alot of community resentment and lack of desire for it.

for instance multibit is free. but the number of users using it is limited so expect maybe 20x less people using a paid for service compared to a free service of similar concept.

i think your concept would only work if its not just a litenode. but does lots of other fancy things not found in any 'free' lite/web/full node available today.

im not sure what niche that can be(im sure your going to integrate your 'enterprise level services and support on a couple of apps'). whatever that may be.. so i hope you add in some services/features not available elsewhere.. or it wont take off.

simply reinventing multibit but with a usage charge wont really take off, lets hope thats not all your conception is

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coins101 (OP)
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December 15, 2016, 11:45:22 AM
 #25

..
simply reinventing multibit but with a usage charge wont really take off, lets hope thats not all your conception is

You are right and (hopefully) wrong.

People that want free, well they can use one of the many free wallets out there.

What I see all day every day is the need for support. Businesses run things, but when they go wrong, they don't want their staff to be on google trying to find answers. They need: call this number > get a ticket > get a resolution > close ticket.

What you also have to do is take a look at the world from outside the day to day Bitcoin bubble.

You would have no trouble running an SPV with a full node attached, with encryption enabled. Would an ordinary worker at a utility company have that level of skill? And why should they have to learn it? They are there to do a job at the company they work for, and they are expert at that job. They don't want to have to become expert at running something their employer wants them to use.

And think about running full nodes from an enterprise point of view. An organisation of 1,000 people decides they want to run Bitcoin and they need 200 full nodes. That, like it or not, will slow down their already congested networks. Bitcoin wouldn't last a week once deployed on production environment. Scale that up to 100,000 strong business needing 1,000 full nodes and you can pretty much hear the CTO laughing you out the door.

talkbitcoin
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December 15, 2016, 12:19:49 PM
 #26

for instance multibit is free. but the number of users using it is limited so expect maybe 20x less people using a paid for service compared to a free service of similar concept.

since you mentioned multibit, i'd like to add a little bit of history regarding this.

Multibit was free, and some day the developers decided to release a new version and add a little bit of fee to this new version called Multibit HD and that fee was going to the developers. this little feature was called BRIT
this caused lots of resentment and eventually people stopped using Multibit HD and either switched to classic or Electrum and other wallets.

the developers finally gave up on that (IMO stupid) idea and removed it in version 0.3.0 eventually.

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.....
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December 15, 2016, 02:37:33 PM
 #27

..
simply reinventing multibit but with a usage charge wont really take off, lets hope thats not all your conception is

You are right and (hopefully) wrong.

People that want free, well they can use one of the many free wallets out there.

What I see all day every day is the need for support. Businesses run things, but when they go wrong, they don't want their staff to be on google trying to find answers. They need: call this number > get a ticket > get a resolution > close ticket.

What you also have to do is take a look at the world from outside the day to day Bitcoin bubble.

You would have no trouble running an SPV with a full node attached, with encryption enabled. Would an ordinary worker at a utility company have that level of skill? And why should they have to learn it? They are there to do a job at the company they work for, and they are expert at that job. They don't want to have to become expert at running something their employer wants them to use.

And think about running full nodes from an enterprise point of view. An organisation of 1,000 people decides they want to run Bitcoin and they need 200 full nodes. That, like it or not, will slow down their already congested networks. Bitcoin wouldn't last a week once deployed on production environment. Scale that up to 100,000 strong business needing 1,000 full nodes and you can pretty much hear the CTO laughing you out the door.



The financial investment should be compared to complex "Point of Sale" and data archiving for the finance division of the company. Most of these

companies will only run a few nodes to support decentralization {out of principle, if they understand the importance} but the rest would be API's.

Previously many of these companies dumped millions into complex mainframes & networks, so this should not be a real issue. I know our IT

guys are running a few nodes, just to experiment and to learn about the technology.  Roll Eyes ... The rest are hosted by the Finance division.

 

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CoinCidental
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December 18, 2016, 12:25:01 AM
 #28

..
simply reinventing multibit but with a usage charge wont really take off, lets hope thats not all your conception is

You are right and (hopefully) wrong.

People that want free, well they can use one of the many free wallets out there.

What I see all day every day is the need for support. Businesses run things, but when they go wrong, they don't want their staff to be on google trying to find answers. They need: call this number > get a ticket > get a resolution > close ticket.

What you also have to do is take a look at the world from outside the day to day Bitcoin bubble.

You would have no trouble running an SPV with a full node attached, with encryption enabled. Would an ordinary worker at a utility company have that level of skill? And why should they have to learn it? They are there to do a job at the company they work for, and they are expert at that job. They don't want to have to become expert at running something their employer wants them to use.

And think about running full nodes from an enterprise point of view. An organisation of 1,000 people decides they want to run Bitcoin and they need 200 full nodes. That, like it or not, will slow down their already congested networks. Bitcoin wouldn't last a week once deployed on production environment. Scale that up to 100,000 strong business needing 1,000 full nodes and you can pretty much hear the CTO laughing you out the door.



What kind of company do you envisage using 200  full nodes per 1k staff??
Also a node that's fully synced uses so  little resources and bandwidth that it can run in the background of a standard desktop and you would be unaware its even running so I don't know how it would "bog down their already conjested networks"

Why is their network already conjested anyway? 
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