Imagine a piece of software which does the following exchange:You send this exchange 1 Satoshi The exchange sends you back 1 new "swap" coin
This continues until 1000 Satoshis have been sent and 1000 new "swap" coins have been created.
The "price" then increases to 2 Satoshis to get 1 "swap" coin until another 1000 more have been exchanged.
The price then goes to 3 Satoshies to get 1 "swap" coin.. etc
What happens to all the Bitcoin which has been sent to the exchange? They are instantly
destroyed.
This hypothetical software would obviously be completely automated, transparent and open it what it is programmed to do so no one can argue that it is stealing Bitcoin.
What do you think would happen?I think in most likelihood nothing. But say some people risk a few Satoshi each knowing that the price will soon effectively double. Others see this rapid increase and join in knowing that the price will soon be much higher again. Soon the price is increasing fast as many new users send Bitcoin to the exchange for this new coin. An ecosystem soon appears around this coin and more people migrate over all the time Bitcoin is being destroyed. Eventually the "swap" coin is dominant and the remaining Bitcoin are minded and swapped.
There would be no set cap on the amount of "swap" coins in existence and this was only determined by the amount of Bitcoin in existence so people would be effectually mining Bitcoin and swapping them instantly for "swap" coin at an ever increasing (per 1000 coins) "cost" in Bitcoin. You would eventually have nearly all Bitcoin swapped for "swap" coin and the "swap" coin network could be run much more efficiently then the Bitcoin one.
Hope that made sense, the vague idea has been bugging me all day so it would be good to know what you think.