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Author Topic: Anyone whose own some fair amount of bitcoins should also own a mining machine  (Read 500 times)
ranochigo
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January 13, 2018, 01:50:26 AM
 #21

What's your point? Who suggested you couldn't? The point was about hardening Bitcoin's network from attack. You conveniently omitted from the quote the statement about considering future nation-state attacks and censorship.
I was referring to the fact that it can't be a currency if users can't transact. Unless any entity can gain a large majority of control of the network, they cannot censor Bitcoin effectively. The point is, if an average joe can run a miner without any issues, cost, profitability, etc. Isn't it more likely for governments, who have vast amount of resources to be able to better obtain more hashpower than most people.

Yes. And marginal miners who can't cover their overheads shut down. The difficulty will only adjust downwards until an equilibrium is met and the trend reverses. That's the entire point of the difficulty adjustment algorithm. If mining speculation far outpaces price discovery, marginal miners shut down. This isn't a permanent situation.
The marginal miners who can't cover their overheads are likely the small-time miners first. Mining farms would make it such that unless one has a cheap electricity, they cannot profit.

Re-read what you quoted. Coins I mined years ago have ROI'd many times over. You're only thinking in terms of someone who immediately dumps to cover all overheads. You say you're talking about long term profitability when you're actually referring to short term profitability.
So that's under the assumption that Bitcoin will increase far above its current price point? Is it more profitable to buy ASICs and then mine than to just buy Bitcoins directly?
No one said it wasn't more profitable just to buy bitcoins. The theme of this thread is concentration within the mining ecosystem. Hence "consider it as an investment in the currency, since decentralized mining is required to secure Bitcoin from majority-miner attacks." The implication is that a casual mining investment will be less profitable than merely buying bitcoins. But merely holding bitcoins also gives you no say over the network. Only economically important (transacting) nodes and hash power is relevant to consensus change.
Yeah, I get the point. I still don't get why is it rational for normal users to be mining Bitcoins, at an economic loss without actually gaining anything. Big players have far too much hashpower than the users themselves. Sure, the network would be decentralised if everyone is mining with a significant hashpower but the cost of it makes it unreasonable for anyone to do so. There's no incentives for any mining farms to execute a 51% attack or anything similar.

Again, you are only thinking in terms of never-ending difficulty increase (sort of like a never-ending bull market). If you think mining speculation will always look like the 2013-2018 period, I think you are gravely mistaken. That's not how markets work.

It's predicted that ASIC fabrication will become more competitive in the future, as optimizations become increasingly difficult. That can significantly level the playing field vs. players like Bitmain. For example:

Quote
“[The 14nm chip] is a very good thing for decentralization,” explains Antonopoulos. “What it does is it extends the shelf life of mining equipment from 2-3 months of useable life cycle to almost two years, which levels the playing field among all participants in the system.”

You're also only thinking in terms of the current pool ecosystem, as if it's static. Pool incentives can certainly evolve over time to address the needs of miners. Like the exchange system, all current market participants flood to only a few entities. That may not always be true, especially if the interests of pool miners begin to diverge significantly from those of operators of prominent pools.
I don't get the last part; can't the miners themselves just run their own node? They never needed a pool for them, antpool is ran by bitmain and so on.

Yeah sure, it may attempt to level the playing field. However, you have to keep in mind that most farms have access to cheap hardware and electricity that makes it suitable for mining.

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January 13, 2018, 03:17:21 AM
 #22

What's your point? Who suggested you couldn't? The point was about hardening Bitcoin's network from attack. You conveniently omitted from the quote the statement about considering future nation-state attacks and censorship.
I was referring to the fact that it can't be a currency if users can't transact. Unless any entity can gain a large majority of control of the network, they cannot censor Bitcoin effectively.

Actually, it can be done with a third of network hash power. The reason that considering nation-states is especially important here is that their incentives are external to Bitcoin block rewards. Therefore, rational mining incentive (itself still unproven long term) isn't necessarily a strong enough deterrent to prevent censorship attacks.

The point is, if an average joe can run a miner without any issues, cost, profitability, etc. Isn't it more likely for governments, who have vast amount of resources to be able to better obtain more hashpower than most people.

Sure. If vast amounts of wealth are transferred from fiat currencies to the Bitcoin economy, could that change the equation? If enough money flows from fiat currencies into Bitcoin/cryptocurrencies, surely governments will fear for their monetary sovereignty. Ideally, these events coincide such that governments actually have considerably less resources to attack the network.

The marginal miners who can't cover their overheads are likely the small-time miners first. Mining farms would make it such that unless one has a cheap electricity, they cannot profit.

Again, you are only talking about short-term profit. It's strange that people talking about mining as if it's not an investment. Your hardware and electricity costs are an investment. That doesn't necessarily entail immediately dumping to cover principal and overhead.

Re-read what you quoted. Coins I mined years ago have ROI'd many times over. You're only thinking in terms of someone who immediately dumps to cover all overheads. You say you're talking about long term profitability when you're actually referring to short term profitability.
So that's under the assumption that Bitcoin will increase far above its current price point? Is it more profitable to buy ASICs and then mine than to just buy Bitcoins directly?

Yes, of course that's the assumption. If it weren't, then why would you make a long term investment? I already addressed the fact that buying bitcoins directly can be more profitable in the previous two posts....

No one said it wasn't more profitable just to buy bitcoins. The theme of this thread is concentration within the mining ecosystem. Hence "consider it as an investment in the currency, since decentralized mining is required to secure Bitcoin from majority-miner attacks." The implication is that a casual mining investment will be less profitable than merely buying bitcoins. But merely holding bitcoins also gives you no say over the network. Only economically important (transacting) nodes and hash power is relevant to consensus change.
Yeah, I get the point. I still don't get why is it rational for normal users to be mining Bitcoins, at an economic loss without actually gaining anything.

At "an economic loss?" That's the nature of investing. How is that so different than buying BTC before it immediately dumps 50% in price? Investing involves a principal that can be lost. Mining investments entail USD principal/overhead and USD ROI. It's simply a form of investment in BTC where players like Bitmain currently have a big edge. That edge is disappearing, as discussed earlier.

Big players have far too much hashpower than the users themselves. Sure, the network would be decentralised if everyone is mining with a significant hashpower but the cost of it makes it unreasonable for anyone to do so. There's no incentives for any mining farms to execute a 51% attack or anything similar.

What makes the cost unreasonable, on a long term basis? You apparently think the uptrend in difficulty will never end. Similarly, then, the uptrend in price will never end (Roll Eyes) So, why is the cost unreasonable? You point to the difficulty trend but refuse to acknowledge the BTCUSD price trend that corresponds to it.

As pointed out above, the incentives of nation-states to attack Bitcoin go far beyond block rewards. I'm far more concerned about mining pools that are operated or co-opted by nation-states. The network needs to harden against this possibility.

Again, you are only thinking in terms of never-ending difficulty increase (sort of like a never-ending bull market). If you think mining speculation will always look like the 2013-2018 period, I think you are gravely mistaken. That's not how markets work.

It's predicted that ASIC fabrication will become more competitive in the future, as optimizations become increasingly difficult. That can significantly level the playing field vs. players like Bitmain. For example:

Quote
“[The 14nm chip] is a very good thing for decentralization,” explains Antonopoulos. “What it does is it extends the shelf life of mining equipment from 2-3 months of useable life cycle to almost two years, which levels the playing field among all participants in the system.”

You're also only thinking in terms of the current pool ecosystem, as if it's static. Pool incentives can certainly evolve over time to address the needs of miners. Like the exchange system, all current market participants flood to only a few entities. That may not always be true, especially if the interests of pool miners begin to diverge significantly from those of operators of prominent pools.

I don't get the last part; can't the miners themselves just run their own node? They never needed a pool for them, antpool is ran by bitmain and so on.

Yeah sure, it may attempt to level the playing field. However, you have to keep in mind that most farms have access to cheap hardware and electricity that makes it suitable for mining.

Sure, miners can run their own node. The reason they may not in the future is the same they don't now: hash pooling, orphan rates, optimal mining code, etc. None of that changes what I said.

As pointed out above, subsequent generations of ASICS will reduce the "cheap hardware" edge as optimizations become fewer and further between. Bitmain will not dominate the market forever as they have for the past 3-4 years. Also, the days of government-subsidized mining in China seem to be coming to an end, which seems to be pushing miners to different localities including Canada, Switzerland and others. Indeed, miners need cheap electricity, but for example, all of Hydro Quebec cryptocurrency customers get the same rate across Quebec: $0.0394/kwh (3.94 U.S. cents).

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January 13, 2018, 07:15:31 AM
 #23

So, I think there is a huge misconception of so called 'greedy' miners. The issue of higher fees isn't really the miners fault. It is the rules of the protocol that is.  For example:

 In the protocol (disregarding the security aspect for a moment) It doesn't matter if there is 1 miner mining or 1 billion miners mining. The maximum number of transactions allowed in a block is exactly the same and the amount of time for that block to be mined will also be the same. 

I think maybe a solution to high fees would be to make a rule that would require a First In First Out system with a guaranteed minimum fee. Now this wouldn't decrease transactions or transaction time, but would remove user incentives to offer higher fees because they would have to wait their turn to be confirmed, creating a more level playing ground. This would also give businesses some reassurance that they will get paid once the transaction has been broadcasted in a somewhat predictable matter of time.

Just a thought.
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January 13, 2018, 12:50:45 PM
 #24

So, I think there is a huge misconception of so called 'greedy' miners. The issue of higher fees isn't really the miners fault. It is the rules of the protocol that is.  For example:

 In the protocol (disregarding the security aspect for a moment) It doesn't matter if there is 1 miner mining or 1 billion miners mining. The maximum number of transactions allowed in a block is exactly the same and the amount of time for that block to be mined will also be the same. 

I think maybe a solution to high fees would be to make a rule that would require a First In First Out system with a guaranteed minimum fee. Now this wouldn't decrease transactions or transaction time, but would remove user incentives to offer higher fees because they would have to wait their turn to be confirmed, creating a more level playing ground. This would also give businesses some reassurance that they will get paid once the transaction has been broadcasted in a somewhat predictable matter of time.

Just a thought.
What do you mean by "first in first out"?
Transaction relay times do not matter because nodes receive different transactions at different times.
That's why the blockchain is needed and why blocks are timestamped.
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January 13, 2018, 05:53:19 PM
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 #25

So, I think there is a huge misconception of so called 'greedy' miners. The issue of higher fees isn't really the miners fault. It is the rules of the protocol that is.  For example:

 In the protocol (disregarding the security aspect for a moment) It doesn't matter if there is 1 miner mining or 1 billion miners mining. The maximum number of transactions allowed in a block is exactly the same and the amount of time for that block to be mined will also be the same.  

I think maybe a solution to high fees would be to make a rule that would require a First In First Out system with a guaranteed minimum fee. Now this wouldn't decrease transactions or transaction time, but would remove user incentives to offer higher fees because they would have to wait their turn to be confirmed, creating a more level playing ground. This would also give businesses some reassurance that they will get paid once the transaction has been broadcasted in a somewhat predictable matter of time.

Just a thought.

You can't have a "first come first serve" policy (i think this is what you are talking about) because the system would collapse in an huge queue of transactions. At some point you need to make a cut and stop dropping transactions because resources are limited, this is why the fee market is the only solution thus far, as well as trying to decrease block weight with measures that some consider controversial or unsafe.

What is clear is, increasing the blocksize centralizes the network, but it's yet to be seen if Bitcoin can survive with the same blocksize forever. All these block weight decrease measures (MAST, Schnorr, and the now active segwit) must be tested a ton and would need to be on the mainnet for a couple of years before I would call anything other than legacy transactions safe.

Trying to increase the blocksize will always be an incredibly complex problem that will most likely always end up in 2 Bitcoins, one that wants to stay as it was, and one that wants to have a bigger blocksize.
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January 13, 2018, 05:58:25 PM
 #26

So, I think there is a huge misconception of so called 'greedy' miners. The issue of higher fees isn't really the miners fault. It is the rules of the protocol that is.  For example:

 In the protocol (disregarding the security aspect for a moment) It doesn't matter if there is 1 miner mining or 1 billion miners mining. The maximum number of transactions allowed in a block is exactly the same and the amount of time for that block to be mined will also be the same. 

I think maybe a solution to high fees would be to make a rule that would require a First In First Out system with a guaranteed minimum fee. Now this wouldn't decrease transactions or transaction time, but would remove user incentives to offer higher fees because they would have to wait their turn to be confirmed, creating a more level playing ground. This would also give businesses some reassurance that they will get paid once the transaction has been broadcasted in a somewhat predictable matter of time.

Just a thought.
What do you mean by "first in first out"?
Transaction relay times do not matter because nodes receive different transactions at different times.
That's why the blockchain is needed and why blocks are timestamped.

So yes, transactions are received at different times by different nodes, but that is not how transactions are entered into the mined block. What happens is when a block is mined, the transaction que is setup where the miner's software can accept the transaction into the block accepting the fee offered. It makes sense that the top fee amounts get included into the block first. This creates a competition which pushes fees higher. If instead  we assigned an order to the transaction when it was accepted by a node
based on first in first out and guarantee that the transaction(with a minimum transaction fee) then (if valid)  the transaction will eventually be added to the block chain, then this would have the effect of elimination of competition for the next block which would reduce transaction fees to the minimum. (There would be no reason to increase your fee because you que in line is based upon when the node broadcasts your transaction.)  This might also have the limited added effect of incentivizing running your own full node. Because then the faster you can broadcast a transaction the faster it would get to be mined...Once part of the FIFO que the business then can determine how long before the transaction will be added. Also businesses could do segwit themselves on the transaction to determine validity to decide whether to risk  giving the product and waiting for the confirmation or just waiting a predictable amount of time for the confirmation to come in before dispensing.
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January 13, 2018, 06:10:17 PM
 #27

So, I think there is a huge misconception of so called 'greedy' miners. The issue of higher fees isn't really the miners fault. It is the rules of the protocol that is.  For example:

 In the protocol (disregarding the security aspect for a moment) It doesn't matter if there is 1 miner mining or 1 billion miners mining. The maximum number of transactions allowed in a block is exactly the same and the amount of time for that block to be mined will also be the same.  

I think maybe a solution to high fees would be to make a rule that would require a First In First Out system with a guaranteed minimum fee. Now this wouldn't decrease transactions or transaction time, but would remove user incentives to offer higher fees because they would have to wait their turn to be confirmed, creating a more level playing ground. This would also give businesses some reassurance that they will get paid once the transaction has been broadcasted in a somewhat predictable matter of time.

Just a thought.

You can't have a "first come first serve" policy (i think this is what you are talking about) because the system would collapse in an huge queue of transactions. At some point you need to make a cut and stop dropping transactions because resources are limited, this is why the fee market is the only solution thus far, as well as trying to decrease block weight with measures that some consider controversial or unsafe.

What is clear is, increasing the blocksize centralizes the network, but it's yet to be seen if Bitcoin can survive with the same blocksize forever. All these block weight decrease measures (MAST, Schnorr, and the now active segwit) must be tested a ton and would need to be on the mainnet for a couple of years before I would call anything other than legacy transactions safe.

Trying to increase the blocksize will always be an incredibly complex problem that will most likely always end up in 2 Bitcoins, one that wants to stay as it was, and one that wants to have a bigger blocksize.

I gotcha. So I totally agree that is how it is, but creating this competition especially with the growing amount of transactions is going to make Bitcoin specifically hard for mass adoption as a money transport. (Which I believe is what was originally intended...only recently people have been saying it is an asset to hold on to as an argument for higher fees. Much like buying/selling a home has huge amount of fees in the neighborhood of $15,000 between both the buyer and seller...closing, realtor, inspections... )

So, my argument to you then, to be able to have a system with a first come first serve basis could be by having more nodes and giving them a slice of the transaction fees...allowing the network to accept more transactions..
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January 13, 2018, 06:47:27 PM
 #28

I guess what it really comes down to are a couple of things...if we want more decentralization then some of the resources should go to the full nodes or becoming node centric. Right now BTC is decidedly miner centric. Almost all the benefit goes to miners. I am not talking about usage benefit, just economic incentive benefit. That is not a bad thing, but it does tend toward having the network centralized...which in reality if you block all of China as 1, which essentially they are, then BTC is really centralized in China...which will not allow Bitcoin to become anything other than what it is now..so I guess our points are really mute. It is probably time to move on to some other coin...
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January 14, 2018, 01:33:24 AM
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 #29

So yes, transactions are received at different times by different nodes,

Correct.  So there is no way to know which transaction is "First In".  Since every node would have a different order.

but that is not how transactions are entered into the mined block.

Correct.  The protocol does not have ANY rules about the order. Every miner can choose any valid order they want.  This is because it is the blockchain that decides the order of the transactions.  This is the WHOLE REASON THE BLOCKCHAIN EVEN EXISTS AT ALL.  Without the blockchain, there is no way to know what the order is, and that makes a decentralized cryptocurrency impossible to use).  With the blockchain, you can wait until your transaction is in the blockchain, and then you can know exactly what the order is.

What happens is when a block is mined, the transaction que is setup where the miner's software can accept the transaction into the block accepting the fee offered.

Nope. That's not what happens at all.  You should probably take some time to learn a bit more about how bitcoin works, and what problems it solves before you try and suggest changes that will break it.

It makes sense that the top fee amounts get included into the block first.

Correct.  The miners are free to choose any valid transactions when they build their blocks.  Since they must spend money on equipment, electricity, and a place to put the equipment, it makes sense that they would want to choose the transactions that pay them the most.

This creates a competition which pushes fees higher.

Until people aren't willing to pay the fee anymore.  Then the number of transactions drops, and the miners are forced to include cheaper transactions in their blocks in order to fill the blocks and increase their revenue.  The system will reach an equilibrium when the number of transactions that are willing to pay a specific fee is equal to the amount of space available in a block.  Then the blocks stay full, and the transaction fees stop increasing.

If instead we assigned an order to the transaction when it was accepted by a node based on first in first out and guarantee that the transaction(with a minimum transaction fee) then (if valid)  the transaction will eventually be added to the block chain, then this would have the effect of elimination of competition for the next block which would reduce transaction fees to the minimum.

How do you know what order my mining node receives the transactions?  How can you assign an order to the transactions that my mining node receives?  Since there is no way for you to know the order that transactions are received at EVERY MINING NODE in the world, there is no way for your node to enforce a rule about it on those mining nodes.  You could solve this by having the mining nodes group some transactions together and declare the order.  To keep anyone else from lying about that order, you could require every mining node that groups transactions together to do some provable work before they can broadcast their group of transactions. Then you can require everyone to accept the queue of groups of transactions that has the most work.  Of course if you do that, you'll have invented the blockchain, and we already have one of those.  You still have no control over the order that mining nodes group those transactions in that blockchain that you are using as a queue, so you still haven't really solved your problem.

(There would be no reason to increase your fee because you que in line is based upon when the node broadcasts your transaction.

So, I can bribe a mining node to claim they got my transaction first? That way I can get into a block earlier?  And the higher my bribe, the more likely that a mining node will be willing to claim that my transaction was received first?  How is this any different than the fee competition that we already have?

This might also have the limited added effect of incentivizing running your own full node. Because then the faster you can broadcast a transaction the faster it would get to be mined...

You do understand that a node just sends the transaction to the nodes that it is directly connected to, right?  That's no different than a non-node wallet which also just sends the transaction to the nodes that it is directly connected to.  What about that is "faster"?  You still have no control over how quickly the nodes that you send to relay the transaction to the nodes they are connected to.

Once part of the FIFO que

"The FIFO Queue"?

Where is this all-knowing queue found?  You do understand that there isn't a single queue somewhere that miners go to for transactions, right?  Each miner just keeps track for itself of the transactions that it has heard about from its peers.  Then it chooses from those transactions that it knows about.  You have no control over how that miner stores those transactions, no control over what it does with those transactions, and no way to know what order it received those transactions.  There may be transactions that you know about that the miner has never heard of, and there may be transactions that the miner has received which you know nothing about. If you don't know what transactions a miner has, then you aren't able to enforce your rules on their transaction selection.  They can just lie and claim that the only transactions they've heard of so far are the ones with the highest fees.  You wouldn't be able to prove otherwise.

the business then can determine how long before the transaction will be added.

Unless the miner lies and claims that they never heard about the businesses transaction.

Also businesses could do segwit themselves on the transaction to determine validity to decide whether to risk giving the product and waiting for the confirmation or just waiting a predictable amount of time for the confirmation to come in before dispensing.

Do segwit themselves?  To determine validity?  You are using words, but I don't think they mean what you seem to think they mean?  Perhaps they could just do orange juice themselves to determine the cleanliness of the transaction?  Bah, why am I even engaging with this nonsense?

So, my argument to you then, to be able to have a system with a first come first serve basis

Which we've now established can't work.

could be by having more nodes and giving them a slice of the transaction fees...

How will you identify a node?  How will you make sure that they get paid? How will you prevent someone from running a few million pretend nodes to collect all the fees while contributing nothing useful to the network?

allowing the network to accept more transactions..

The number of nodes has no effect on how many transactions fit into the blockchain.

I guess what it really comes down to are a couple of things...if we want more decentralization then some of the resources should go to the full nodes or becoming node centric.

I've not heard of any good ways to do this that aren't disastrously unstable.

Right now BTC is decidedly miner centric. Almost all the benefit goes to miners.

Miners perform the VERY IMPORTANT job of choosing the order of the transactions, and cementing that order into the blockchain with the proof-of-work.  In exchange for performing this service to the community, we pay them.  Are you suggesting they shouldn't be paid to do this work for us?  If they aren't paid to do it, then why would they bother?  If they don't bother, then we don't have a usable system. The mining process is the reason we have a decentralized system.  Without the miners, we would need a single trusted entity that we could all go to to find out what the official order of transactions is.

I am not talking about usage benefit, just economic incentive benefit. That is not a bad thing, but it does tend toward having the network centralized...

Actually, it is the ONLY reason that the network is decentralized.

which in reality if you block all of China as 1,

Which is a very racist and prejudiced thing to do.  To say that people that all live in the same country (or people that all have some similar physical features) are therefore identical and will all make identical decisions and automatically conspire together is beyond ridiculous and really ought to disqualify you from participating in any technical discussion, ever.

which essentially they are,

Your racism is showing again.

then BTC is really centralized in China...

Even more so, we could say it is REALLY centralized in the northern hemisphere!  Perhaps we need to do something about that!  OMG! It is completely 100% centralized on the EARTH!

Get over it.

which will not allow Bitcoin to become anything other than what it is now..so I guess our points are really mute.

Yours certainly are.

It is probably time to move on to some other coin...

Bitcoin probably would be better off if you would, please.
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January 14, 2018, 03:15:32 AM
 #30

First of all. I meant that China's government could be considered one collective miner. It was merely a point to show how much their government has subsidized mining with cheap electricity prices. I had no intention of saying that any individual was the same as any other. I am sorry if I was miss understood.

My point about more nodes was not about how many transactions were in a single block, but rather how many transactions the network could support before they started dropping.

I definitely did not say that Miners are not important or should not be incentivized..I am merely saying that full nodes are just as important, and should be incentivized as well.

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January 14, 2018, 06:54:37 AM
 #31

First of all. I meant that China's government could be considered one collective miner. It was merely a point to show how much their government has subsidized mining with cheap electricity prices. I had no intention of saying that any individual was the same as any other. I am sorry if I was miss understood.

My point about more nodes was not about how many transactions were in a single block, but rather how many transactions the network could support before they started dropping.

I definitely did not say that Miners are not important or should not be incentivized..I am merely saying that full nodes are just as important, and should be incentivized as well.



Where and when electric heat is needed or useful, there is no cost for mining.
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January 14, 2018, 10:10:30 AM
 #32

...BTW...nodes take a lot of work these days by inserting and removing these 100,000 1.44MB floppys I have storing the blockchain...
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January 14, 2018, 10:51:58 AM
 #33

Like mentioned in responses above it will not make any difference. It will cost alot more then what you might gain.

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January 15, 2018, 12:42:21 AM
Last edit: January 15, 2018, 01:13:04 AM by Anarc Senior
 #34

so many misconceptions about bitcoin and blockchain in one topic (for TS)
you can own the goods but not the tools,so there is no need to own a miner if you have bitcoins
10 bitcoins is more than 130.000$ at current prices,do you think every single holder bothers with mining?
as it has been mentioned above,the number of miners and the increased difficulty doesn't solve the uncofirmed backlog

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if you have bitcoins
10 bitcoins is more than 130.000$ at current prices,do you think every single holder bothers with mining?

It's actually exactly my point, currently they don't and they should !

 
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so many misconceptions about bitcoin and blockchain in one topic

My simple point is to decentralized the mining pool - the simple fact is that if there are more private miners, the lesser mining groups will control bitcoin blockchain.  It's happening now, miners are pick and choose which tx are worth while for them to mine...and yes, I'm talking about people whose has larger investment are at stake - and they better do something to protect their investment
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January 15, 2018, 01:08:48 AM
 #35


....
If you want lower fees then use segwit and tell others to use it also.

Segwit does not solve the fee problem. This is simply mis information. A reduction in fees of 30-40% is not material.
To rephrase your statement: "Reduction of fees does not solve the fee problem."

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The levels of fees have utterly destroyed large parts of the bitcoin economy, and segwit does not change that. Cutting fees to 1/10 of current levels does not change this.

Fees would have to go to 1/100 - 1/1000 of current levels for the old bitcoin economy to arise again.
Segwit DOES cause fee reduction in the long run: because segwit transactions are smaller, more of them can fit in a block.

To better illustrate the point, assume that all transactions in the block are segwit transactions with 1 input and 1 output.
There will be ~12,195 transactions that can be contained in that block, compared to ~5,208 non segwit transactions of the same type
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I'm talking buying beers, pizzas, tipping on line, Starbucks gift cards, etc.
You forgot to add coffee...

Please read before you post. But I'll repeat and rephrase.

Even if Segwit enables reductions in fees by 30-70%, this does not solve the problem with Bitcoin's fees having killed the entire ecosystem of transactions in the 0.01-$100.00 price range.

However, should Segwit enable more transactions and hence fees tend downward, strong evidence exists that a huge latent demand would enter in and simply push the fees back up. The resulting equilibrium would be something like double the activity with fee levels the maximum that would be tolerated by an open market in such conditions.

LN does seem to address this issue because people are "able to transact with bitcoin at low fees and huge volume." Although they are not interacting with the blockchain, end users don't care. The nerdy crypto nerds want to go in and buy their coffee with Bitcoin.


I am so sick of the whining about the pizza, beers and coffee...technologies cannot be built over night !  I have a simple solution for everyone for now - I repeat:  for now ! Go buy your beers and pizza with the fiats- you've been doing that for hundred and thousands of year.  Another six months or a year will not hurt anybody!

And why the heck are you in such a hurry to validate and confirm the stupid coffee and beers ??  Hold your horses it will come soon enough...let's start with the higher priorities - like decentralization and keeping the big governments and the bankers away from our money !!  The whole reason why we are all here in the first place isn't it ??  

Same as I don't get why we so absolutely need smarter contracts ??  Yes, I understand it would be nice to have...but people:  prioritize yourself of what is more important !  You cannot have it all - at least not right now - soon - soon !!

Here are the key words:  priorities and patience !!!

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January 15, 2018, 11:27:27 AM
 #36

Mining is profitable in Antarctic
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January 15, 2018, 11:42:41 AM
 #37

My simple point is to decentralized the mining pool - the simple fact is that if there are more private miners, the lesser mining groups will control bitcoin blockchain.  It's happening now, miners are pick and choose which tx are worth while for them to mine...and yes, I'm talking about people whose has larger investment are at stake - and they better do something to protect their investment
For Bitcoin to be truly decentralised, each of the miners have to solo mine and not be mining for any other people. Mining pools can push for their own agendas and it is difficult for anyone else to detect. The fact is that, sure you can decentralise Bitcoin but it would have to come at a cost of people not being able to gain their investment back. And of course, who does the investment go to? Those mining companies that control a significant portion of the hashpower.

I certainly won't be mining, no matter how much I own. Because I know that the current price trend is not a direct relation to the monopolistic scene of mining. Miners aren't stupid, they would obviously try to pick those with higher fees.

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