becoin
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March 07, 2016, 03:28:46 PM |
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But about fees & spam: Miners, according to "rational self-interest" argument, are sufficiently incentivized by "thou shalt not shit where thee sleepeth" commandment. They should not debase bitcoin by bloating the blockchain, thus devaluing their rewards. Caveat: They sell BTC for USD -- their wealth is not in BTC, so that's why. So pushing for min fees brings attention to some serious shit, so not to be done.
STFU and FORK IT. Miners will follow you if you're right.
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ahpku
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March 07, 2016, 03:39:30 PM |
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But about fees & spam: Miners, according to "rational self-interest" argument, are sufficiently incentivized by "thou shalt not shit where thee sleepeth" commandment. They should not debase bitcoin by bloating the blockchain, thus devaluing their rewards. Caveat: They sell BTC for USD -- their wealth is not in BTC, so that's why. So pushing for min fees brings attention to some serious shit, so not to be done.
STFU and FORK IT. Miners will follow you if you're right. Also, sorry about being such a bitter douche all the time. I just really crave the D. Without one in my mouth balls-deep, I get real testy. Well, that's exactly what Classic is doing. And don't mention it, we cool. I figured it was somthin' like that
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craked5
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March 07, 2016, 03:48:41 PM |
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But about fees & spam: Miners, according to "rational self-interest" argument, are sufficiently incentivized by "thou shalt not shit where thee sleepeth" commandment. They should not debase bitcoin by bloating the blockchain, thus devaluing their rewards. Caveat: They sell BTC for USD -- their wealth is not in BTC, so that's why. So pushing for min fees brings attention to some serious shit, so not to be done.
STFU and FORK IT. Miners will follow you if you're right. Also, sorry about being such a bitter douche all the time. I just really crave the D. Without one in my mouth balls-deep, I get real testy. Well, that's exactly what Classic is doing. And don't mention it, we cool. I figured it was somthin' like that Not fair play ahpku
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AlexGR
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March 07, 2016, 03:51:31 PM |
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Sorry, missed this: What does ["However trying to understand the intent by code is unnecessary."] mean?
It means you only need to work with economic disincentives for those who are serious in transacting versus script kiddies. One man making one-five-ten transactions with, say, a 0.08$ fee won't go "bust" by paying these low fees. There you go again I agree with you that bad things are bad. Is your definition of spam "tx X is spam if X contains < 0.08$ tx fee?" That's just an example of a useful definition, what one might look like, because, sometimes, examples help. The number is an example. You can only code it in satoshi/byte, so what is currently 0.08$ will be 0.25$ by the time we are back at the ATH of 1200+$. That will still be below PayPal / CCs and probably in line with "top of the microtransaction range". Of course, that's just my number, another one might say 1$, another one might say 0.1$ - who cares. Opinions are like a$$holes and everyone has one... right? What counts is the intent of transacting. If one wants to transact then they'd have no problem paying a few cents for their transaction. It's not any serious burden. If they want to spam thousands/millions of txs => they'll have to pay some serious fees. Right now it's typically costing the spammers 0 to 2 cents. That's the width of the spamming range. If serious fees aren't used as a disincentive then it's an economic amplification attack against the system, in the sense that it costs me zero or near zero to burden the network and 7.000 nodes must then carry processing, bandwidth and storage costs for years and decades (which is not sustainable). Anyway, all these and more, the devs already know. They have to balance things between abuse and expansion as well as science and populism. We'll see how it goes.
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ChartBuddy
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March 07, 2016, 04:00:35 PM |
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ahpku
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March 07, 2016, 04:24:33 PM |
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Sorry, missed this: What does ["However trying to understand the intent by code is unnecessary."] mean?
It means you only need to work with economic disincentives for those who are serious in transacting versus script kiddies. One man making one-five-ten transactions with, say, a 0.08$ fee won't go "bust" by paying these low fees. There you go again I agree with you that bad things are bad. Is your definition of spam "tx X is spam if X contains < 0.08$ tx fee?" That's just an example of a useful definition, what one might look like, because, sometimes, examples help. The number is an example. You can only code it in satoshi/byte, so what is currently 0.08$ will be 0.25$ by the time we are back at the ATH of 1200+$. That will still be below PayPal / CCs and probably in line with "top of the microtransaction range". Of course, that's just my number, another one might say 1$, another one might say 0.1$ - who cares. Opinions are like a$$holes and everyone has one... right? Again, I'm not objecting to any definition, not asking for it to be "objectively great," merely one to use as a starting point. ... Edit: So let's go with the < 8c definition, for giggles. What would you like to see happen? Change in the protocol, so nodes running it would shitcan all tx < 0.08$ tx fee?
What do you think is preventing Core from implementing 8c min tx fee? 1. Lazy? 2. Haven't thought of it? 3. ? ? ?
Is it in the miners' rational self-interest to include < 0.08$ transactions now? 1. If not, why? 1a. how would raising the blocksize limit change this? 1b. how would lowering the blocksize limit change this? 2. What incentivized miners to include zero-fee tx in the past? 2a. What changed?
What counts is the intent of transacting.
Again, Bitcoin can't know the intent behind transactions, so intent should not enter into the discussion unless you propose to have each tx be approved/denied by an ethics committee. Intent could be, and is codified into h00man law, but that's why h00man law is not overseen cybernetically. It's very nuanced and involves h00man judges & h00man juries, and is very time-consuming. That's why my ATM doesn't deny me my $400 @ 2am & swallow my card, while its little speaker chides me, in old-lady voice, "I just know you're gonna buy dope with that money, you filthy degenerate. You always do, I know your type. Why would a decent human need cash at 2 am? You tell me, shitstick, and no more excuses -- I already called the cops." Guessing intent is just too much for current AI, tho that ATM does have somewhat of a point, won't lie.
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ahpku
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March 07, 2016, 04:32:15 PM |
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^^^ Lowered Expectations~ time passes ~ ~ time passes ~ Yep, third month of 2016, no $500 Next Coindesk poll: 46% of Bitcoin Experts Believe Bitcoin Will Be Worth Over $275 by 2017Prob'ly miss that by a shitload, per usual.
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Ibian
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March 07, 2016, 04:56:46 PM |
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Your definition is bunk. We can't cryptographically verify intent for any given transaction, and until that becomes possible you will have to come up with something better. You asked me about my definition of spam, not how we can limit it by using code. I also asked why anyone should take your definition seriously. See, it is not enough to have a definition. Of course you have one, that's unavoidable, even if it is vague and changing over time. But in order for others to care about it, it must be useful in some way. This does not appear to be the case here.
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ChartBuddy
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March 07, 2016, 05:00:43 PM |
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LFC_Bitcoin
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#1 VIP Crypto Casino
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March 07, 2016, 05:40:46 PM |
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500$ btc when?
Probably as a result of the block reward halving, so in the summer. Nobody can unequivocally tell you that though.
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JayJuanGee
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Self-Custody is a right. Say no to"Non-custodial"
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March 07, 2016, 05:51:48 PM Last edit: March 07, 2016, 06:04:50 PM by JayJuanGee |
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500$ btc when?
Probably as a result of the block reward halving, so in the summer. Nobody can unequivocally tell you that though. Yeah...... I agree generally summer-ish. Based on current market dynamics, I would predict going above $500 to be anywhere between 1 day and 2 years. In my current thinking, the range of probabilities of going above $500 would look something like this. 1-5 days = less than 2% 6-15 days = less than 8% 16-30 days = about 20% 31-60 days = about 30% 61-120 days = about 50% 121-364 days = about 80% 1 year to 2 years = about 95% Any better predictions? By the way, I would think that at this current moment and these current market conditions, most regular and somewhat knowledgable bitcoiners would also place the odds of bitcoin prices going above $500 first to be better than the odds of going below $300 first, but I'm sure that there are a number of outlier opinions on that.
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ChartBuddy
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March 07, 2016, 06:00:38 PM |
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Andre#
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March 07, 2016, 06:31:48 PM |
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Bitcoin looking healthy again.
Yes, and blocks are still maxxed out. The blocks are hardly maxed out ----- unless you are just making up shit in order to attempt to exaggerate some problem that is not even close to what the loud mouth FUDsters are attempting to portray. Blocks floating around 65% at the moment... ... but they had experienced some peaks approaching 90% in recent days (within the past week) At the time of writing, these were the latest blocks. 401423: 0 MB 401422: 976.48 MB 401421: 974.79 MB 401420: 974.77 MB 401419: 906.65 MB 401418: 0 MB 401417: 974.64 MB 401416: 912.66 MB 401415: 976.45 MB 401414: 974.72 MB 401413: 965.86 MB 401412: 974.55 MB 401411: 974.74 MB Looks pretty maxed out to me (with thousands tx waiting in tradeblock's mempool). I guess I must be making it up, then. BTW, you also could have looked at ChartBuddy. ChartBuddy knows his shit -- I'm only making it up. I've cited my sources as blockchain.info charts, and you cited your sources as chartbuddy? If someone could explain why blockchain.info is lacking in credibility, then that may be helpful. I really do not understand the significance of chartbuddy because I put through several transactions during supposed congested periods last week, and my experiences reflected those described in blockchain.info, which was relatively quick confirmations and finalization of transactions (in spite claims of fulblocalypse). So, yeah, I don't think that these various claims of fullblocks really materialize into real world problems, and yes, I think that the blockchain is suffering from various spam/ddos attacks yet is still functioning pretty fucking well in spite of attempts to make it seem full and in spite of attempts to describe some kind of supposed tragedy in the alleged clogged up nature of the blockchain. Those list of block sizes, I actually got them from blockchain.info as well. So I don't think that blockchain.info lacks credibility. I don't know about the average block sizes chart, though. The chart says the all time high was 876 B, which doesn't tell the whole story regarding block fullness if empty blocks and soft limited blocks are counted as well. Of course, the "real world problems" of delayed transactions can be solved for a big part once all people are properly trained to guess the right fee, and wallets are updated to make as good a fee advise as possible. And sooner or later the use cases which require cheap transactions will be dropped. And all will be fine. I just hope it doesn't come to that. I don't want Bitcoin's growth to stop. It seems we differ in that wish, and that's fine. Time will tell which crypto can deliver the desired volume, and how. You are suggesting that we differ in a wish regarding whether bitcoin's growth stops or not. I don't think so. With that assertion you seem to be implying some untrue assertion that I am not interested in growth of bitcoin... which is pure bullshit to read that into anything that I am saying. In essence, I provided you an actual link regarding the source within blockchain.info in which I was getting my information regarding both average block size and also regarding transaction times. You did not provide me any link. I was suggesting that both those chart links that I provided and also my real world experiences had demonstrated to me that there really does not seem to be an urgent problem concerning the blocks being full and the amount of time that it takes for a paid for transaction to go through (with the .0001BTC per kilobyte fee). Accordingly, if there is some information that I am missing (on blockchain.info), then why can't you provide a link that shows that information regarding blocks being maxed out as you asserted??.. You could also, if you so choose, provide some kind of factual information that would support your assertion that this is some kind of major problem that cannot wait a little bit for the implementation of seg wit and the thereafter further considerations of possible block size limit increases that may follow within a year or so thereafter, if that seems necessary after seg wit. Most technical people in bitcoin seem to agree that some kind of additional block size increase will still be necessary after the implementation of seg wit.. but there remains some uncertainties still regarding the extent to which an actual schedule of block size limit increases is going to be necessary after the implementation of seg wit. and what the timeline for that increase is going to be (or does it need to be pre-established rather than adaptive based on circumstances). Perhaps the CEO of blockchain.info can convince you? https://medium.com/@OneMorePeter/bitcoin-scaling-and-choices-bed96a76e637#.laj905178At Blockchain.info, where I am CEO, we have historically seen very few tickets related to transaction times or fees. Now however, we are setting new records for the number of tickets we receive in this category daily — indeed, the tickets are growing by a factor of 10 every week. It is now our top support issue by ticket volume.
His analysis on the recent so-called "spam attack" is also worthwhile.
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aztecminer
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March 07, 2016, 06:33:15 PM |
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lol.. well i guess u guys didnt fix the blocks being full while i was away from bitcoin all weekend #GimpedCoin
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aztecminer
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March 07, 2016, 06:45:30 PM |
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On top of that, Segwit is not a scaling solution. Neither is the raise to 2MB blocks. Both do temporarily fix the current full blocks issue though.
There is no full block issue. There is spam issue. As soon as spam attack stops everything is perfectly normal. Increasing blocksize does nothing to solve spam issue. You can not solve spam issue by giving spammers more free space to spam! Hmm... I don't understand you. 1MB blocks allow a really low amount of tx and btc is spreading. Of course there is a block size issue! Simply because the adoption of btc is rising and numbers of allowed tx is the staying the same! or... it might just be manipulators.. they require keep up the illusion of bitcoin while pms are rising. they are in the same predicament with pms as they are with bitcoin .. they went as far as have goldman sachs deliver a warning that pms were going to drop, and then another fool came out trying to convince All of US that gold was going to $700 or even $250 . yeah uh huh sure they are.. bring it on biatches.. pms aint going down anytime soon due to the huge demand for pms.. bring it down see if i buy some.. maybe is a trick to get us all to sell our pms betting on a pull back when instead it will rise leaving everyone buying back at a loss like they did during the 'Marshall's Auction Bitcoin Pump'.. except people arent buying the fud they have been spreading. as we can all see, true to my analysis, bitcoin continues to trade within the $350 - $500 range. to debunk my analysis of bitcoin they will need to pump it above $500, because there is no chance they going to crash it below $300 again. my analysis is right because it is not based on normal chart analysis, instead, it is based upon the manipulations by the US federal govy of "their" crypto-currency. ETH is now trading higher than ripple. that is hard to understand atm.
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ChartBuddy
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March 07, 2016, 07:00:37 PM |
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gentlemand
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March 07, 2016, 07:15:20 PM |
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This is the most meaningful sentence from that for me - 'we should plan for success. Not survival, not previous growth rates, but for an outcome in which millions and millions more people decide to join our economy and community rapidly.' And it could've been done when it was far tinier than it is now. It would've been a shit ton easier and nipped everything in the bud before it got going.
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Ibian
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March 07, 2016, 07:25:56 PM |
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Too much politics. Is there some technical reason we can't have both bigger blocks and better blocks? Is this more than jockeying for power?
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BitconAssociation
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March 07, 2016, 07:35:31 PM |
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Too much politics. Is there some technical reason we can't have both bigger blocks and better blocks? Is this more than jockeying for power?
>bigger blocks and better blocks Other than the fact that there's no "bigger better" solution is on the table right now? No. >Is this more than jockeying for power? More than jockeying for power in a system predicated on jockeying for power? No. If our premises are correct, jockeying should be sufficient for the best possible outcome.
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