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Author Topic: After 2140 how will transactions be handled?  (Read 565 times)
jongameson (OP)
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December 12, 2013, 12:17:00 AM
 #1

Since there will be no more mining?     Smiley
deepceleron
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December 12, 2013, 12:18:51 AM
 #2

There will still be mining. Transaction fees will replace the diminishing block rewards as incentive for miners to do their work.

https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Myths#After_21_million_coins_are_mined.2C_no_one_will_generate_new_blocks
kaito
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December 12, 2013, 12:25:24 AM
 #3

Good question.
The usual answer is transaction fees but I don't think it'll be that simple.
One thing I consider certain. Fees high enough to satisfy the current amount of miners will be unacceptable for the users.

Fortunately, 2140 is inconceivably far away and I don't worry about it one bit.
Xenoph0bia
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December 12, 2013, 12:28:38 AM
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Since there will be no more mining?     Smiley

I highly doubt Bitcoin can still exist after 120 years. Look back 120 years and see how the world changed !
deepceleron
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December 12, 2013, 12:30:23 AM
Last edit: December 14, 2013, 12:22:40 PM by deepceleron
 #5

Good question.
The usual answer is transaction fees but I don't think it'll be that simple.
One thing I consider certain. Fees high enough to satisfy the current amount of miners will be unacceptable for the users.

Fortunately, 2140 is inconceivably far away and I don't worry about it one bit.

They will have had four years of mining .00000001 BTC block rewards before the reward becomes zero; the reward amount halves every year four years so there will not be a drastic and dire change at a particular date.
rammy2k2
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December 12, 2013, 12:36:08 AM
 #6

Since there will be no more mining?     Smiley

I highly doubt Bitcoin can still exist after 120 years. Look back 120 years and see how the world changed !

this might be true
kaito
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December 12, 2013, 12:41:03 AM
 #7

They will have had four years of mining .00000001 BTC block rewards before the reward becomes zero; the reward amount halves every year so there will not be a drastic and dire change at a particular date.
Heh, even if a bitcoin becomes 1M$ by then I doubt people will get used to mining 1 cent per block.
Anyways it's nothing to worry about. There's enough time to think of a proper solution.
vendetahome
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December 12, 2013, 12:49:42 AM
 #8

They will have had four years of mining .00000001 BTC block rewards before the reward becomes zero; the reward amount halves every year so there will not be a drastic and dire change at a particular date.
Heh, even if a bitcoin becomes 1M$ by then I doubt people will get used to mining 1 cent per block.
Anyways it's nothing to worry about. There's enough time to think of a proper solution.

As explained above, transaction fees will pay the mining
kaito
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December 12, 2013, 01:40:04 AM
 #9

As explained above, transaction fees will pay the mining
*sigh*
Ok. I'll take it slower for you.

The current block reward is 25k$ @ 1k$/BTC. Currently, there are 100-600 transactions in a block.
That means, if we were to sustain the current network with transaction fees alone, each user would have to pay a transaction fee of 25k$/0.6k = 41.67$ per transaction. Would you pay that?
10$ sounds to me like a barely acceptable transaction fee. At 10$ per transaction, 10$*600 = 6k$ block reward. Would you mine for that at the current difficulty? Not everybody has free electricity.
wileybooks
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December 12, 2013, 06:17:26 AM
 #10

If, high volatality prevails for a long time, bitcoins kill itself slowly.

Bitcoin must correct itself regularly and high volatality must be controlled.
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