* [Bitcoin-development] Blocking uneconomical UTXO creation
@ 2013-03-10 4:31 Peter Todd
2013-03-11 11:01 ` Jorge Timón
2013-03-12 7:49 ` Peter Todd
0 siblings, 2 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Peter Todd @ 2013-03-10 4:31 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: bitcoin-development
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As discussed endlessly data in the UTXO set is more costly, especially
in the long run, than transaction data itself. The fee system is per KB
in a block, and thus doesn't properly capture the long-term costs of
UTXO creation.
It's also been suggested multiple times to make transaction outputs with
a value less than the transaction fee non-standard, either with a fixed
constant or by some sort of measurement.
https://github.com/petertodd/bitcoin/tree/block-uneconomic-utxo-creation
The above patch that implements the latter approach, and thus will not
accept into the mempool any txout whose value is <= the fee per KB paid
by the transaction. That fee is then bounded between MIN_TX_FEE and
COIN_DUST, 0.0005BTC and 0.01BTC respectively. The former due to the
fact that the fee can be zero, and the latter so that delibrate high-fee
creation is still allowed. (provably unspendable txouts can of course be
handled specially later)
By basing the calculation on the fee per KB the transaction itself pays
the limit automatically adjustes as the market for blockchain space
changes, and the value of Bitcoins change.
Since scriptSigs greater than 500 bytes are non-standard the marginal
bytes required to spend a txout is always less than 540 bytes. For
standard transactions the marginal cost is usually just a 80+1 byte
signature, and a 33+1 byte pubkey, or 155 bytes. Thus the choice of the
fee for 1000bytes allows a margin to ensure a net positive return, even
if tx fees become more expensive. In particular I think a reasonable
margin is important to deter users from simply deleting wallets filled
with dust-spam, something which gets reported as happening frequently.
It also protects users who do not understand how Bitcoin works from
thinking that repeated small amounts of coins collected from sites
giving away small amounts will add up to an amount that they can
usefully use, and equally protects the long-term health of the network
from those services.
By basing the threshold for what is considered a too-low output value on
ensuring that spending outputs has a net positive return, rather than
trying to come up with some sort of model of UTXO cost, we make the
logic significantly easier to reason about. In particular, it means that
Bitcoin clients can use an unchanging rule based on fees paid, rather
than some constant subject to change as the economics of UTXO costs
change. Note how the total cost of maintaining the UTXO set is
determined by the number of validating nodes, and what that number will
be in the future heavily debated with a possible range spanning many
orders of magnitude.
Short-term
----------
SatoshiDice will have to change their betting system to have their
"failed bet" messages return enough coins to be economically spendable.
It's notable that Satoshidice seems to have already changed their system
to return what appear to be randomly chosen amounts, likely to get
around the users who have applied custom patches to consider 1 satoshi
output values non-standard. Because this patch does not block
SatoshiDice, nor do I expect it to result in less SatoshiDice traffic, I
expect pool operators to be open to applying it.
Other services such as CoinAd will also have to make changes to either
collect multiple payments together, or use off-chain transactions. I've
spoken with a person who runs one of these sites, CoinAd IIRC, and he
was open to opening an instawallet or easywallet account and using it to
do direct off-chain transactions for users who wanted to be paid
immediately.
Part of the patch includes code that sends change to fees if creating a
change output would produce an uneconomic txout. This will likely
occasionally generate confusion from users, especially as it will only
happen if they try to send almost all of their wallet.
Security
--------
For a non-upgraded client, accepting zero-confirmation transactions
becomes more risky as the change represents yet another way of creating
a transaction that won't be mined. Fortnately the nLockTime problem has
served to warn people yet again about those dangers.
Long-term
---------
If fees required on transactions go up in numerical value, the patch
adapts the minimum output size as required.
If fees go down numerically, the minimum output size is also adjusted as
required. If they go down sufficiently that MIN_TX_FEE requires
changing, only one constant needs to change. In particular, the
MIN_RELAY_TX_FEE blocks relaying small output values with small fees
anyway, and it's set to one fifth of MIN_TX_FEE. Additionally most
miners follow the MIN_TX_FEE default, so using that value ensures that
the logic holds true for the more likely case that fees numerically stay
stable or rise. In any case, Bitcoin will never be a good
microtransaction system.
Ouputs representing other assets; "colored coins" and "smartcoins"
------------------------------------------------------------------
The colored coin ideas being passed around on the forums often used
fixed representations of assets, that is 1 bond unit == 1 satoshi or
similar. Since proving the state of a colored coin to an SPV client
requires providing the full transaction history changing these protocols
to allow a floating numerical ratio Bitcoins to assets is always
possible by allowing for ordinary, non-marked, transaction inputs and
outputs to add or remove coins as required. This has the additional
advantage of making divisibility easy.
If the asset itself is worth less than a tx fee, moving it will still
incur a net loss. Equally if the asset is worth more than a tx fee, the
quickly the burden of requiring an additional tx fee to be locked up by
the asset becomes minor.
Testing Required
----------------
To be written after more consensus. Essentially a UI testing script, and
unittests in wallet_tests.cpp need to be written.
--
'peter'[:-1]@petertodd.org
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Bitcoin-development] Blocking uneconomical UTXO creation
2013-03-10 4:31 [Bitcoin-development] Blocking uneconomical UTXO creation Peter Todd
@ 2013-03-11 11:01 ` Jorge Timón
2013-03-11 15:36 ` Gavin Andresen
2013-03-11 20:08 ` Rune Kjær Svendsen
2013-03-12 7:49 ` Peter Todd
1 sibling, 2 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Jorge Timón @ 2013-03-11 11:01 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Peter Todd; +Cc: bitcoin-development
On 3/10/13, Peter Todd <pete@petertodd•org> wrote:
> It's also been suggested multiple times to make transaction outputs with
> a value less than the transaction fee non-standard, either with a fixed
> constant or by some sort of measurement.
As said on the bitcointalk thread, I think this is the wrong approach.
This way you effectively disable legitimate use cases for payments
that "are worth" less than the fees like smart property/colored coins.
While the transactions pay fees, they should not be considered spam
regardless of how little the quantities being moved are.
Then your only concern are unspent outputs and comparing fees with
values doesn't help in any way. Just activate a non-proportional
demurrage (well, I won't complain if you just turn bitcoin into
freicoin, just think that non-proportional would be more acceptable by
most bitcoiners) that incentives old transactions to be moved and
destroys unspent transactions with small amounts that don't move to
another address periodically. This has been proposed many times before
too, and I think it makes a lot more sense.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Bitcoin-development] Blocking uneconomical UTXO creation
2013-03-11 11:01 ` Jorge Timón
@ 2013-03-11 15:36 ` Gavin Andresen
2013-03-11 16:45 ` Jorge Timón
2013-03-11 17:18 ` Jeff Garzik
2013-03-11 20:08 ` Rune Kjær Svendsen
1 sibling, 2 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Gavin Andresen @ 2013-03-11 15:36 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Jorge Timón; +Cc: bitcoin-development
> Just activate a non-proportional demurrage
demurrage of any kind will never, ever happen, just give up on that idea.
The negative publicity of "the bitcoin developers are destroying YOUR
coins!" would be devastating.
--
--
Gavin Andresen
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Bitcoin-development] Blocking uneconomical UTXO creation
2013-03-11 15:36 ` Gavin Andresen
@ 2013-03-11 16:45 ` Jorge Timón
2013-03-11 16:46 ` Jorge Timón
2013-03-11 17:18 ` Jeff Garzik
1 sibling, 1 reply; 23+ messages in thread
From: Jorge Timón @ 2013-03-11 16:45 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Gavin Andresen; +Cc: bitcoin-development
"The Bitcoin network will destroy your coins IF you don't move your coins"
Is pretty different. By the way, doesn't have to destroy them, can
just give them to miners.
In any case, what's wrong with my reasoning?
Smart property/colored coins are not spam transactions because they pay fees.
The problem for the network are not transactions that move less coins
than they pay fees, but old UNSPENT OUTPUTS. So why don't you focus on
that instead of a formula to check what transactions make "economic
sense"?
I even prefer the sudden "destruction" (or re-generation by miners) of
the account after the X period (killerstorm's proposal) instead of
just rejecting great potential use cases for the chain.
I mean, I still prefer a small fixed demurrage fee after those X
blocks without moving them, but since this community is demurrage
allergic and that possibility cannot even be considered (doesn't
matter what reflects better the costs for miners/the network I guess),
I'll go with the second best option IMO.
This would be just a fee for a resource that users are enjoying and
has real costs for the network. Why would constant demurrage fees
after a free storage period would be perceived so different from
transaction fees?
I haven't heard anyone complaining about "the bitcoin developers are
destroying part of YOUR coins every time you move them!!"
On 3/11/13, Gavin Andresen <gavinandresen@gmail•com> wrote:
>> Just activate a non-proportional demurrage
>
> demurrage of any kind will never, ever happen, just give up on that idea.
>
> The negative publicity of "the bitcoin developers are destroying YOUR
> coins!" would be devastating.
>
> --
> --
> Gavin Andresen
>
--
Jorge Timón
http://freico.in/
http://archive.ripple-project.org/
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Bitcoin-development] Blocking uneconomical UTXO creation
2013-03-11 16:45 ` Jorge Timón
@ 2013-03-11 16:46 ` Jorge Timón
2013-03-11 16:54 ` Mike Hearn
0 siblings, 1 reply; 23+ messages in thread
From: Jorge Timón @ 2013-03-11 16:46 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Gavin Andresen; +Cc: bitcoin-development
Unless of course everlasting physical "bitcoins" are much more
important than smart property and colored coins...
On 3/11/13, Jorge Timón <jtimonmv@gmail•com> wrote:
> "The Bitcoin network will destroy your coins IF you don't move your coins"
> Is pretty different. By the way, doesn't have to destroy them, can
> just give them to miners.
>
> In any case, what's wrong with my reasoning?
> Smart property/colored coins are not spam transactions because they pay
> fees.
>
> The problem for the network are not transactions that move less coins
> than they pay fees, but old UNSPENT OUTPUTS. So why don't you focus on
> that instead of a formula to check what transactions make "economic
> sense"?
>
> I even prefer the sudden "destruction" (or re-generation by miners) of
> the account after the X period (killerstorm's proposal) instead of
> just rejecting great potential use cases for the chain.
>
> I mean, I still prefer a small fixed demurrage fee after those X
> blocks without moving them, but since this community is demurrage
> allergic and that possibility cannot even be considered (doesn't
> matter what reflects better the costs for miners/the network I guess),
> I'll go with the second best option IMO.
>
> This would be just a fee for a resource that users are enjoying and
> has real costs for the network. Why would constant demurrage fees
> after a free storage period would be perceived so different from
> transaction fees?
>
> I haven't heard anyone complaining about "the bitcoin developers are
> destroying part of YOUR coins every time you move them!!"
>
>
> On 3/11/13, Gavin Andresen <gavinandresen@gmail•com> wrote:
>>> Just activate a non-proportional demurrage
>>
>> demurrage of any kind will never, ever happen, just give up on that idea.
>>
>> The negative publicity of "the bitcoin developers are destroying YOUR
>> coins!" would be devastating.
>>
>> --
>> --
>> Gavin Andresen
>>
>
>
> --
> Jorge Timón
>
> http://freico.in/
> http://archive.ripple-project.org/
>
--
Jorge Timón
http://freico.in/
http://archive.ripple-project.org/
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Bitcoin-development] Blocking uneconomical UTXO creation
2013-03-11 16:46 ` Jorge Timón
@ 2013-03-11 16:54 ` Mike Hearn
2013-03-11 17:08 ` Jorge Timón
2013-03-11 18:17 ` Benjamin Lindner
0 siblings, 2 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Mike Hearn @ 2013-03-11 16:54 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Jorge Timón; +Cc: Bitcoin Dev
Why does demurrage even still come up? The base rules of Bitcoin will
not be changing in such a fundamental way.
With regards to trying to minimize the size of the UTXO set, this
again feels like a solution in search of a problem. Even with SD
abusing micropayments as messages, it's only a few hundred megabytes
today. That fits in RAM, let alone disk. If one day people do get
concerned about the working set size, miners can independently set
their own policies for what they confirm, for instance maybe they just
bump the priority of any transaction that has fewer outputs than
inputs. An IsStandard() rule now that tries to ban micropayments will
just risk hurting interesting applications for no real benefit. It's
like trying to anticipate and fix problems we might face in 2020.
There are lots of less invasive changes for improving scalability,
like making transaction validation multi-threaded in every case,
transmitting merkle blocks instead of full blocks, moving blocking
disk IO off the main loop so nodes don't go unresponsive when somebody
downloads the chain from them, and finishing the payment protocol work
so there's less incentive to replicate the SD "transactions as
messages" design.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Bitcoin-development] Blocking uneconomical UTXO creation
2013-03-11 16:54 ` Mike Hearn
@ 2013-03-11 17:08 ` Jorge Timón
2013-03-11 18:17 ` Benjamin Lindner
1 sibling, 0 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Jorge Timón @ 2013-03-11 17:08 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Mike Hearn; +Cc: Bitcoin Dev
Well, my initial idea was that nothing was really needed too.
But if something must be done, I dislike very much the "ban
micropayments" approach. I was just offering other solutions that I
consider much better, but if nothing is done I won't be pushing for
those alternative solutions (to a problem that we may not even have).
On 3/11/13, Mike Hearn <mike@plan99•net> wrote:
> Why does demurrage even still come up? The base rules of Bitcoin will
> not be changing in such a fundamental way.
>
> With regards to trying to minimize the size of the UTXO set, this
> again feels like a solution in search of a problem. Even with SD
> abusing micropayments as messages, it's only a few hundred megabytes
> today. That fits in RAM, let alone disk. If one day people do get
> concerned about the working set size, miners can independently set
> their own policies for what they confirm, for instance maybe they just
> bump the priority of any transaction that has fewer outputs than
> inputs. An IsStandard() rule now that tries to ban micropayments will
> just risk hurting interesting applications for no real benefit. It's
> like trying to anticipate and fix problems we might face in 2020.
>
> There are lots of less invasive changes for improving scalability,
> like making transaction validation multi-threaded in every case,
> transmitting merkle blocks instead of full blocks, moving blocking
> disk IO off the main loop so nodes don't go unresponsive when somebody
> downloads the chain from them, and finishing the payment protocol work
> so there's less incentive to replicate the SD "transactions as
> messages" design.
>
--
Jorge Timón
http://freico.in/
http://archive.ripple-project.org/
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Bitcoin-development] Blocking uneconomical UTXO creation
2013-03-11 15:36 ` Gavin Andresen
2013-03-11 16:45 ` Jorge Timón
@ 2013-03-11 17:18 ` Jeff Garzik
1 sibling, 0 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Jeff Garzik @ 2013-03-11 17:18 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Gavin Andresen; +Cc: bitcoin-development
On Mon, Mar 11, 2013 at 11:36 AM, Gavin Andresen
<gavinandresen@gmail•com> wrote:
>> Just activate a non-proportional demurrage
>
> demurrage of any kind will never, ever happen, just give up on that idea.
>
> The negative publicity of "the bitcoin developers are destroying YOUR
> coins!" would be devastating.
While 100% agreed, I do think there is space in the alt-currency world
for a well-done coin THAT IS NOT BITCOIN (i.e. merge-mined or
whatever) with a finite lifespan. Call it "tempcoin" For example:
any coin older than (144 * 365 * 4) blocks may be reclaimed by a
miner.
Even though, sadly, many of the alt-coins have been pre-mined scams,
the alt-coin concept in general is great for experimenting. If the
idea can be proven in the field without modifying mainnet bitcoind,
then perhaps it should go onto the mainnet hard fork wishlist, many
years in the future.
That's the great thing about open source. People can experiment with
these ideas, and bitcoin.git need not change at all :)
--
Jeff Garzik
exMULTI, Inc.
jgarzik@exmulti•com
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Bitcoin-development] Blocking uneconomical UTXO creation
2013-03-11 16:54 ` Mike Hearn
2013-03-11 17:08 ` Jorge Timón
@ 2013-03-11 18:17 ` Benjamin Lindner
2013-03-11 18:59 ` Mark Friedenbach
` (2 more replies)
1 sibling, 3 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Benjamin Lindner @ 2013-03-11 18:17 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Bitcoin Dev
On Mar 11, 2013, at 12:54 PM, Mike Hearn <mike@plan99•net> wrote:
> With regards to trying to minimize the size of the UTXO set, this
> again feels like a solution in search of a problem. Even with SD
> abusing micropayments as messages, it's only a few hundred megabytes
> today. That fits in RAM, let alone disk. If one day people do get
The problem of UTXO in principal scales with the block size limit. Thus it should be fixed BEFORE you consider increasing the block size limit. Otherwise you just kick the can down the road, making it bigger.
> concerned about the working set size, miners can independently set
> their own policies for what they confirm, for instance maybe they just
Problem is the skewed incentive structure. Rational miners will always include dust output with fees, because the eternal cost of UTXO is payed by the network and future miners, not the current/individual miner.
On Mar 11, 2013, at 7:01 AM, Jorge Timón <jtimonmv@gmail•com> wrote:
> On 3/10/13, Peter Todd <pete@petertodd•org> wrote:
>> It's also been suggested multiple times to make transaction outputs with
>> a value less than the transaction fee non-standard, either with a fixed
>> constant or by some sort of measurement.
>
> As said on the bitcointalk thread, I think this is the wrong approach.
> This way you effectively disable legitimate use cases for payments
> that "are worth" less than the fees like smart property/colored coins.
this.
> Just activate a non-proportional
> demurrage (well, I won't complain if you just turn bitcoin into
> freicoin, just think that non-proportional would be more acceptable by
> most bitcoiners) that incentives old transactions to be moved
You could delegate the decision to the user with a rule like:
if (output<fee):
limit lifetime of the UTXO to 10 years.
if (output>fee):
unlimited lifetime
Then, when a user creates a transaction, he can decide whether he wants to have limited or unlimited lifetime. The rationale for limiting the lifetime for (output<fee) transactions is that they may have no inherent economic incentive to be spend.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Bitcoin-development] Blocking uneconomical UTXO creation
2013-03-11 18:17 ` Benjamin Lindner
@ 2013-03-11 18:59 ` Mark Friedenbach
2013-03-11 18:59 ` Jorge Timón
2013-03-11 19:08 ` Tadas Varanavičius
2 siblings, 0 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Mark Friedenbach @ 2013-03-11 18:59 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Benjamin Lindner; +Cc: Bitcoin Dev
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On Mon, Mar 11, 2013 at 11:17 AM, Benjamin Lindner <ben@benlabs•net> wrote:
> > Just activate a non-proportional
> > demurrage (well, I won't complain if you just turn bitcoin into
> > freicoin, just think that non-proportional would be more acceptable by
> > most bitcoiners) that incentives old transactions to be moved
>
> You could delegate the decision to the user with a rule like:
>
> if (output<fee):
> limit lifetime of the UTXO to 10 years.
> if (output>fee):
> unlimited lifetime
>
> Then, when a user creates a transaction, he can decide whether he wants to
> have limited or unlimited lifetime. The rationale for limiting the lifetime
> for (output<fee) transactions is that they may have no inherent economic
> incentive to be spend.
>
If you think demurrage has a bad rep, wait until you see the response to
escheatment (which is what's really being proposed here).
UTXO growth over time is worst-case linear, while computational resources
increase exponentially. Mike nailed it on the head: all of this is a
solution in search of a problem.
Mark
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Bitcoin-development] Blocking uneconomical UTXO creation
2013-03-11 18:17 ` Benjamin Lindner
2013-03-11 18:59 ` Mark Friedenbach
@ 2013-03-11 18:59 ` Jorge Timón
2013-03-11 19:08 ` Tadas Varanavičius
2 siblings, 0 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Jorge Timón @ 2013-03-11 18:59 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Benjamin Lindner; +Cc: Bitcoin Dev
That solution seems good enough to me.
Smartcoin users would just need to move their assets before 10 years,
totally acceptable.
And regular users don't need to think about it since they're probably
always sending more than they pay in fees.
On 3/11/13, Benjamin Lindner <ben@benlabs•net> wrote:
>
> On Mar 11, 2013, at 12:54 PM, Mike Hearn <mike@plan99•net> wrote:
>> With regards to trying to minimize the size of the UTXO set, this
>> again feels like a solution in search of a problem. Even with SD
>> abusing micropayments as messages, it's only a few hundred megabytes
>> today. That fits in RAM, let alone disk. If one day people do get
>
> The problem of UTXO in principal scales with the block size limit. Thus it
> should be fixed BEFORE you consider increasing the block size limit.
> Otherwise you just kick the can down the road, making it bigger.
>
>> concerned about the working set size, miners can independently set
>> their own policies for what they confirm, for instance maybe they just
>
> Problem is the skewed incentive structure. Rational miners will always
> include dust output with fees, because the eternal cost of UTXO is payed by
> the network and future miners, not the current/individual miner.
>
> On Mar 11, 2013, at 7:01 AM, Jorge Timón <jtimonmv@gmail•com> wrote:
>
>> On 3/10/13, Peter Todd <pete@petertodd•org> wrote:
>>> It's also been suggested multiple times to make transaction outputs with
>>> a value less than the transaction fee non-standard, either with a fixed
>>> constant or by some sort of measurement.
>>
>> As said on the bitcointalk thread, I think this is the wrong approach.
>> This way you effectively disable legitimate use cases for payments
>> that "are worth" less than the fees like smart property/colored coins.
>
> this.
>
>> Just activate a non-proportional
>> demurrage (well, I won't complain if you just turn bitcoin into
>> freicoin, just think that non-proportional would be more acceptable by
>> most bitcoiners) that incentives old transactions to be moved
>
> You could delegate the decision to the user with a rule like:
>
> if (output<fee):
> limit lifetime of the UTXO to 10 years.
> if (output>fee):
> unlimited lifetime
>
> Then, when a user creates a transaction, he can decide whether he wants to
> have limited or unlimited lifetime. The rationale for limiting the lifetime
> for (output<fee) transactions is that they may have no inherent economic
> incentive to be spend.
>
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Symantec Endpoint Protection 12 positioned as A LEADER in The Forrester
> Wave(TM): Endpoint Security, Q1 2013 and "remains a good choice" in the
> endpoint security space. For insight on selecting the right partner to
> tackle endpoint security challenges, access the full report.
> http://p.sf.net/sfu/symantec-dev2dev
> _______________________________________________
> Bitcoin-development mailing list
> Bitcoin-development@lists•sourceforge.net
> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bitcoin-development
>
--
Jorge Timón
http://freico.in/
http://archive.ripple-project.org/
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Bitcoin-development] Blocking uneconomical UTXO creation
2013-03-11 18:17 ` Benjamin Lindner
2013-03-11 18:59 ` Mark Friedenbach
2013-03-11 18:59 ` Jorge Timón
@ 2013-03-11 19:08 ` Tadas Varanavičius
2013-03-11 22:19 ` Mike Hearn
2 siblings, 1 reply; 23+ messages in thread
From: Tadas Varanavičius @ 2013-03-11 19:08 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: bitcoin-development
On 03/11/2013 08:17 PM, Benjamin Lindner wrote:
> The problem of UTXO in principal scales with the block size limit. Thus it should be fixed BEFORE you consider increasing the block size limit. Otherwise you just kick the can down the road, making it bigger.
Let's assume bitcoin has scaled up to 2000 tx/s. We all want this,
right? https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Scalability. Block size is 500 MB.
CPU, network and archival blockchain storage seem to solvable.
Let's say SatoshiDice-like systems are doing informational transactions
that produce unspendable outputs, because they can and users are paying
for it anyway (proved in real life). 400 unspendable outputs per second
would be realistic.
This would be bloating UTXO data at a speed of 52 GB/year. That's a very
big memory leak. And this is just the unspendable outputs.
Bitcoin cannot scale up until such dust output spamming is discouraged
at the protocol level.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Bitcoin-development] Blocking uneconomical UTXO creation
2013-03-11 11:01 ` Jorge Timón
2013-03-11 15:36 ` Gavin Andresen
@ 2013-03-11 20:08 ` Rune Kjær Svendsen
2013-03-11 20:36 ` Michael Gronager
1 sibling, 1 reply; 23+ messages in thread
From: Rune Kjær Svendsen @ 2013-03-11 20:08 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: bitcoin-development
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2519 bytes --]
On Mon, Mar 11, 2013 at 12:01 PM, Jorge Timón <jtimonmv@gmail•com> wrote:
> On 3/10/13, Peter Todd <pete@petertodd•org> wrote:
> > It's also been suggested multiple times to make transaction outputs with
> > a value less than the transaction fee non-standard, either with a fixed
> > constant or by some sort of measurement.
>
> As said on the bitcointalk thread, I think this is the wrong approach.
> This way you effectively disable legitimate use cases for payments
> that "are worth" less than the fees like smart property/colored coins.
> While the transactions pay fees, they should not be considered spam
> regardless of how little the quantities being moved are.
>
> Then your only concern are unspent outputs and comparing fees with
> values doesn't help in any way.
> Just activate a non-proportional
> demurrage (well, I won't complain if you just turn bitcoin into
> freicoin, just think that non-proportional would be more acceptable by
> most bitcoiners) that incentives old transactions to be moved and
> destroys unspent transactions with small amounts that don't move to
> another address periodically. This has been proposed many times before
> too, and I think it makes a lot more sense.
>
From an economic point of view this *does* make sense, in my opinion.
Storing an unspent transaction in the block chain costs money because we
can't prune it. However, it would completely destroy confidence in Bitcoin,
as far as I can see. It makes sense economically, but it isn't feasible if
we want to maintain people's confidence in Bitcoin.
I like Jeff's proposal of letting an alt-coin implement this. If it gets to
the point where Bitcoin can't function without this functionality, it'll be
a lot easier to make the transition, instead of now, when it's not really
needed, and the trust in Bitcoin really isn't that great.
/Rune
>
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Symantec Endpoint Protection 12 positioned as A LEADER in The Forrester
> Wave(TM): Endpoint Security, Q1 2013 and "remains a good choice" in the
> endpoint security space. For insight on selecting the right partner to
> tackle endpoint security challenges, access the full report.
> http://p.sf.net/sfu/symantec-dev2dev
> _______________________________________________
> Bitcoin-development mailing list
> Bitcoin-development@lists•sourceforge.net
> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bitcoin-development
>
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Bitcoin-development] Blocking uneconomical UTXO creation
2013-03-11 20:08 ` Rune Kjær Svendsen
@ 2013-03-11 20:36 ` Michael Gronager
2013-03-11 21:01 ` Gregory Maxwell
0 siblings, 1 reply; 23+ messages in thread
From: Michael Gronager @ 2013-03-11 20:36 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: bitcoin-development
The point with UTXO is in the long run to be able to switch from a p2p network where everyone stores, validates and verifies everything to a DHT where the load of storing, validating and verifying can be shared.
If we succeed with that then I don't see a problem in a growing set of UTXO, may that be due to abuse/misuse or just massive use. A properly designed DHT should be able to scale to this.
However, that being said, if you worry about the size of the UTXO set you should change the current coin choosing algorithm to simply get rid of dust.
The current algorithm (ApproximateBestSubset) tend to accumulate dust as dust tend to be on an other scale than a real transactions and hence it is never included.
Regarding the demurrage/escheatment road, I agree that this is for another project. However, if users/developers like this idea, they can just implement a coin choosing algorithm donating dust as miner fee and use it on their satoshi-dice polluted wallet ;)
/M
On 11/03/2013, at 21:08, Rune Kjær Svendsen <runesvend@gmail•com> wrote:
> On Mon, Mar 11, 2013 at 12:01 PM, Jorge Timón <jtimonmv@gmail•com> wrote:
> On 3/10/13, Peter Todd <pete@petertodd•org> wrote:
> > It's also been suggested multiple times to make transaction outputs with
> > a value less than the transaction fee non-standard, either with a fixed
> > constant or by some sort of measurement.
>
> As said on the bitcointalk thread, I think this is the wrong approach.
> This way you effectively disable legitimate use cases for payments
> that "are worth" less than the fees like smart property/colored coins.
> While the transactions pay fees, they should not be considered spam
> regardless of how little the quantities being moved are.
>
> Then your only concern are unspent outputs and comparing fees with
> values doesn't help in any way.
>
>
> Just activate a non-proportional
> demurrage (well, I won't complain if you just turn bitcoin into
> freicoin, just think that non-proportional would be more acceptable by
> most bitcoiners) that incentives old transactions to be moved and
> destroys unspent transactions with small amounts that don't move to
> another address periodically. This has been proposed many times before
> too, and I think it makes a lot more sense.
>
> From an economic point of view this *does* make sense, in my opinion. Storing an unspent transaction in the block chain costs money because we can't prune it. However, it would completely destroy confidence in Bitcoin, as far as I can see. It makes sense economically, but it isn't feasible if we want to maintain people's confidence in Bitcoin.
>
> I like Jeff's proposal of letting an alt-coin implement this. If it gets to the point where Bitcoin can't function without this functionality, it'll be a lot easier to make the transition, instead of now, when it's not really needed, and the trust in Bitcoin really isn't that great.
>
> /Rune
>
>
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Symantec Endpoint Protection 12 positioned as A LEADER in The Forrester
> Wave(TM): Endpoint Security, Q1 2013 and "remains a good choice" in the
> endpoint security space. For insight on selecting the right partner to
> tackle endpoint security challenges, access the full report.
> http://p.sf.net/sfu/symantec-dev2dev
> _______________________________________________
> Bitcoin-development mailing list
> Bitcoin-development@lists•sourceforge.net
> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bitcoin-development
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Symantec Endpoint Protection 12 positioned as A LEADER in The Forrester
> Wave(TM): Endpoint Security, Q1 2013 and "remains a good choice" in the
> endpoint security space. For insight on selecting the right partner to
> tackle endpoint security challenges, access the full report.
> http://p.sf.net/sfu/symantec-dev2dev_______________________________________________
> Bitcoin-development mailing list
> Bitcoin-development@lists•sourceforge.net
> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bitcoin-development
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Bitcoin-development] Blocking uneconomical UTXO creation
2013-03-11 20:36 ` Michael Gronager
@ 2013-03-11 21:01 ` Gregory Maxwell
2013-03-11 21:15 ` Michael Gronager
0 siblings, 1 reply; 23+ messages in thread
From: Gregory Maxwell @ 2013-03-11 21:01 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Michael Gronager; +Cc: bitcoin-development
On Mon, Mar 11, 2013 at 1:36 PM, Michael Gronager <gronager@ceptacle•com> wrote:
> The point with UTXO is in the long run to be able to switch from a p2p network where everyone stores, validates and verifies everything to a DHT where the load of storing, validating and verifying can be shared.
I believe you are confusing disjoint things.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Bitcoin-development] Blocking uneconomical UTXO creation
2013-03-11 21:01 ` Gregory Maxwell
@ 2013-03-11 21:15 ` Michael Gronager
0 siblings, 0 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Michael Gronager @ 2013-03-11 21:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Gregory Maxwell; +Cc: bitcoin-development@lists•sourceforge.net Dev
>> The point with UTXO is in the long run to be able to switch from a p2p network where everyone stores, validates and verifies everything to a DHT where the load of storing, validating and verifying can be shared.
>
> I believe you are confusing disjoint things.
Nope, ahh well, I agree that the use of UTXOs in the Satoshi client today by no means a directed towards a DHT, though it does help speeding up validation (db lookup to check if an output is indeed unspent).
However, an alternative way to bootstrap and validate transactions exist, needing only the UTXOs and not the rest of the blockchain history: An authenticated data structure storing the UTXOs in a DHT.
/M
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Symantec Endpoint Protection 12 positioned as A LEADER in The Forrester
> Wave(TM): Endpoint Security, Q1 2013 and "remains a good choice" in the
> endpoint security space. For insight on selecting the right partner to
> tackle endpoint security challenges, access the full report.
> http://p.sf.net/sfu/symantec-dev2dev
> _______________________________________________
> Bitcoin-development mailing list
> Bitcoin-development@lists•sourceforge.net
> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bitcoin-development
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Bitcoin-development] Blocking uneconomical UTXO creation
2013-03-11 19:08 ` Tadas Varanavičius
@ 2013-03-11 22:19 ` Mike Hearn
2013-03-11 22:25 ` Tadas Varanavičius
0 siblings, 1 reply; 23+ messages in thread
From: Mike Hearn @ 2013-03-11 22:19 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Tadas Varanavičius; +Cc: Bitcoin Dev
> This would be bloating UTXO data at a speed of 52 GB/year. That's a very
> big memory leak. And this is just the unspendable outputs.
Firstly, the UTXO set is a LevelDB, it's not stored in memory. Outputs
that never get spent are not in the working set by definition, after a
while they just end up in the bottom levels and hardly ever get
accessed. If need be we can always help LevelDB out a bit by moving
outputs that we suspect are unlikely to get spent into a separate
database, but I doubt it's needed.
Secondly, if an output can be proven unspendable it can be pruned
immediately. We already reached consensus on adding some standard
template using OP_RETURN that results in insta-pruning. So people who
want to create unspendable outputs can do so with the only side-effect
being long term chain storage. It would be effectively "free" to
pruning nodes.
So the issue is not really with unspendable outputs but with low-value
spendable outputs. Wallets with lots of tiny outputs end up generating
large transactions that take a long time to verify, in situations
where the network redlines those transactions would end up at the
bottom of the priority queue and might take longer to confirm. So
wallet apps already have incentives to try and find a good balance in
output sizes and defragment themselves if their average output gets
too low in value, eg, by send-to-self transactions at night.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Bitcoin-development] Blocking uneconomical UTXO creation
2013-03-11 22:19 ` Mike Hearn
@ 2013-03-11 22:25 ` Tadas Varanavičius
2013-03-11 22:39 ` Mike Hearn
0 siblings, 1 reply; 23+ messages in thread
From: Tadas Varanavičius @ 2013-03-11 22:25 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Mike Hearn; +Cc: Bitcoin Dev
On 03/12/2013 12:19 AM, Mike Hearn wrote:
> Firstly, the UTXO set is a LevelDB, it's not stored in memory. Outputs
> that never get spent are not in the working set by definition, after a
> while they just end up in the bottom levels and hardly ever get
> accessed. If need be we can always help LevelDB out a bit by moving
> outputs that we suspect are unlikely to get spent into a separate
> database, but I doubt it's needed.
Isn't there danger of an attack if UTXO is not stored in fast storage?
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Bitcoin-development] Blocking uneconomical UTXO creation
2013-03-11 22:25 ` Tadas Varanavičius
@ 2013-03-11 22:39 ` Mike Hearn
2013-03-11 23:26 ` Tadas Varanavičius
0 siblings, 1 reply; 23+ messages in thread
From: Mike Hearn @ 2013-03-11 22:39 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Tadas Varanavičius; +Cc: Bitcoin Dev
> Isn't there danger of an attack if UTXO is not stored in fast storage?
RAM is used as a database cache.
But regardless, what kind of attack are you thinking of? Using up all
available disk seeks by sending a node a lot of fake transactions that
connect to unspent outputs, but have invalid transactions? You'll get
yourself disconnected and the IP banned even with todays code.
It's much easier to hose a node by just asking it to send you the
block chain. Watch your own node when something is syncing the chain
from it. Ping times go through the roof because there's only one
network thread. If you're worried about DoS attacks on Bitcoin, it'd
be better to fix that first.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Bitcoin-development] Blocking uneconomical UTXO creation
2013-03-11 22:39 ` Mike Hearn
@ 2013-03-11 23:26 ` Tadas Varanavičius
0 siblings, 0 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Tadas Varanavičius @ 2013-03-11 23:26 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Mike Hearn; +Cc: Bitcoin Dev
On 03/12/2013 12:39 AM, Mike Hearn wrote:
> RAM is used as a database cache.
>
> But regardless, what kind of attack are you thinking of? Using up all
> available disk seeks by sending a node a lot of fake transactions that
> connect to unspent outputs, but have invalid transactions? You'll get
> yourself disconnected and the IP banned even with todays code.
I'm thinking that (assuming 2000 tx/s and UTXO growing 50 GB/year) a
malicious miner could create 1 GB of unspent outputs and then spam nodes
with valid transactions. This would not be dangerous, if UTXO were
smaller and fit on RAM.
Thank you for reading and correcting me :)
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Bitcoin-development] Blocking uneconomical UTXO creation
2013-03-10 4:31 [Bitcoin-development] Blocking uneconomical UTXO creation Peter Todd
2013-03-11 11:01 ` Jorge Timón
@ 2013-03-12 7:49 ` Peter Todd
2013-03-13 5:31 ` Stephen Pair
1 sibling, 1 reply; 23+ messages in thread
From: Peter Todd @ 2013-03-12 7:49 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Bitcoin Dev
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1721 bytes --]
On Sat, Mar 09, 2013 at 11:31:55PM -0500, Peter Todd wrote:
> As discussed endlessly data in the UTXO set is more costly, especially
> in the long run, than transaction data itself. The fee system is per KB
> in a block, and thus doesn't properly capture the long-term costs of
> UTXO creation.
There's been a lot of discussion about this issue, and many people have
asked that Bitcoin not arbitrarily block interesting potential uses of
provably unspendable txouts for data applications, and similarly
spendable txouts representing assets. I've changed my hardline position
and now think we should support all that stuff. However, there is one
remaining class of txout not yet talked about, unspendable but not
provably so txouts. For instance we could make the following a standard
transaction type:
scriptPubKey: OP_HASH160 <20 byte digest> OP_EQUALVERIFY <data>
scriptSig: <data>
Of course, usually the 20 byte digest would be picked randomly, but it
might not be, and thus all validating nodes will always have a copy of
the data. With the 10KB limit on script sizes you can fit 9974 bytes of
data per transaction output with very little waste.
A good application is timestamping, with the advantage over
coinbase/merkle tree systems in that you don't have to wait until your
timestamp confirms, or even store the timestamp at all. Another
application, quite possible with large block sizes and hence cheap or
free transactions, is secure data backups. In particular such a service,
perhaps called Google Chain Storage, can offer the unique guarantee that
you can know you're data is secure by simply performing a successful
Bitcoin transaction.
--
'peter'[:-1]@petertodd.org
[-- Attachment #2: Digital signature --]
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Bitcoin-development] Blocking uneconomical UTXO creation
2013-03-12 7:49 ` Peter Todd
@ 2013-03-13 5:31 ` Stephen Pair
2013-03-13 9:20 ` Jorge Timón
0 siblings, 1 reply; 23+ messages in thread
From: Stephen Pair @ 2013-03-13 5:31 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Peter Todd; +Cc: Bitcoin Dev
[-- Attachment #1.1: Type: text/plain, Size: 3087 bytes --]
Instead of thinking in terms of blocking uneconomical transactions (how
would a node even determine what's economical?), what about thinking in
terms of paying for a feed of economical (i.e. profitable) transactions?
There is a market for fee bearing, profitable transactions...if there is no
one willing to pay to receive a transaction, then no one will bother
propagating it. Such a system would make it possible to determine the
probability of confirmation in a given timeframe for a given fee.
On Tue, Mar 12, 2013 at 3:49 AM, Peter Todd <pete@petertodd•org> wrote:
> On Sat, Mar 09, 2013 at 11:31:55PM -0500, Peter Todd wrote:
> > As discussed endlessly data in the UTXO set is more costly, especially
> > in the long run, than transaction data itself. The fee system is per KB
> > in a block, and thus doesn't properly capture the long-term costs of
> > UTXO creation.
>
> There's been a lot of discussion about this issue, and many people have
> asked that Bitcoin not arbitrarily block interesting potential uses of
> provably unspendable txouts for data applications, and similarly
> spendable txouts representing assets. I've changed my hardline position
> and now think we should support all that stuff. However, there is one
> remaining class of txout not yet talked about, unspendable but not
> provably so txouts. For instance we could make the following a standard
> transaction type:
>
> scriptPubKey: OP_HASH160 <20 byte digest> OP_EQUALVERIFY <data>
> scriptSig: <data>
>
> Of course, usually the 20 byte digest would be picked randomly, but it
> might not be, and thus all validating nodes will always have a copy of
> the data. With the 10KB limit on script sizes you can fit 9974 bytes of
> data per transaction output with very little waste.
>
> A good application is timestamping, with the advantage over
> coinbase/merkle tree systems in that you don't have to wait until your
> timestamp confirms, or even store the timestamp at all. Another
> application, quite possible with large block sizes and hence cheap or
> free transactions, is secure data backups. In particular such a service,
> perhaps called Google Chain Storage, can offer the unique guarantee that
> you can know you're data is secure by simply performing a successful
> Bitcoin transaction.
>
> --
> 'peter'[:-1]@petertodd.org
>
>
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> Symantec Endpoint Protection 12 positioned as A LEADER in The Forrester
> Wave(TM): Endpoint Security, Q1 2013 and "remains a good choice" in the
> endpoint security space. For insight on selecting the right partner to
> tackle endpoint security challenges, access the full report.
> http://p.sf.net/sfu/symantec-dev2dev
> _______________________________________________
> Bitcoin-development mailing list
> Bitcoin-development@lists•sourceforge.net
> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bitcoin-development
>
>
--
Stephen Pair, Co-Founder, CTO
Does *your* website accept cash? bitpay.com
[image: bitpay-small]
ABC6 C11B BF75 9E2B FC6A B3E0 7B96 40B2 CAC0 C158
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[-- Attachment #2: image001.png --]
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
* Re: [Bitcoin-development] Blocking uneconomical UTXO creation
2013-03-13 5:31 ` Stephen Pair
@ 2013-03-13 9:20 ` Jorge Timón
0 siblings, 0 replies; 23+ messages in thread
From: Jorge Timón @ 2013-03-13 9:20 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Stephen Pair; +Cc: Bitcoin Dev
I'm not sure I understand your proposal, but its sounds good.
Can you elaborate with an example?
Are you considering colored coins/smart property?
On 3/13/13, Stephen Pair <stephen@bitpay•com> wrote:
> Instead of thinking in terms of blocking uneconomical transactions (how
> would a node even determine what's economical?), what about thinking in
> terms of paying for a feed of economical (i.e. profitable) transactions?
> There is a market for fee bearing, profitable transactions...if there is no
> one willing to pay to receive a transaction, then no one will bother
> propagating it. Such a system would make it possible to determine the
> probability of confirmation in a given timeframe for a given fee.
>
>
> On Tue, Mar 12, 2013 at 3:49 AM, Peter Todd <pete@petertodd•org> wrote:
>
>> On Sat, Mar 09, 2013 at 11:31:55PM -0500, Peter Todd wrote:
>> > As discussed endlessly data in the UTXO set is more costly, especially
>> > in the long run, than transaction data itself. The fee system is per KB
>> > in a block, and thus doesn't properly capture the long-term costs of
>> > UTXO creation.
>>
>> There's been a lot of discussion about this issue, and many people have
>> asked that Bitcoin not arbitrarily block interesting potential uses of
>> provably unspendable txouts for data applications, and similarly
>> spendable txouts representing assets. I've changed my hardline position
>> and now think we should support all that stuff. However, there is one
>> remaining class of txout not yet talked about, unspendable but not
>> provably so txouts. For instance we could make the following a standard
>> transaction type:
>>
>> scriptPubKey: OP_HASH160 <20 byte digest> OP_EQUALVERIFY <data>
>> scriptSig: <data>
>>
>> Of course, usually the 20 byte digest would be picked randomly, but it
>> might not be, and thus all validating nodes will always have a copy of
>> the data. With the 10KB limit on script sizes you can fit 9974 bytes of
>> data per transaction output with very little waste.
>>
>> A good application is timestamping, with the advantage over
>> coinbase/merkle tree systems in that you don't have to wait until your
>> timestamp confirms, or even store the timestamp at all. Another
>> application, quite possible with large block sizes and hence cheap or
>> free transactions, is secure data backups. In particular such a service,
>> perhaps called Google Chain Storage, can offer the unique guarantee that
>> you can know you're data is secure by simply performing a successful
>> Bitcoin transaction.
>>
>> --
>> 'peter'[:-1]@petertodd.org
>>
>>
>> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> Symantec Endpoint Protection 12 positioned as A LEADER in The Forrester
>> Wave(TM): Endpoint Security, Q1 2013 and "remains a good choice" in the
>> endpoint security space. For insight on selecting the right partner to
>> tackle endpoint security challenges, access the full report.
>> http://p.sf.net/sfu/symantec-dev2dev
>> _______________________________________________
>> Bitcoin-development mailing list
>> Bitcoin-development@lists•sourceforge.net
>> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bitcoin-development
>>
>>
>
>
> --
> Stephen Pair, Co-Founder, CTO
>
> Does *your* website accept cash? bitpay.com
>
> [image: bitpay-small]
>
> ABC6 C11B BF75 9E2B FC6A B3E0 7B96 40B2 CAC0 C158
>
--
Jorge Timón
http://freico.in/
http://archive.ripple-project.org/
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 23+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2013-03-13 9:20 UTC | newest]
Thread overview: 23+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed)
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2013-03-10 4:31 [Bitcoin-development] Blocking uneconomical UTXO creation Peter Todd
2013-03-11 11:01 ` Jorge Timón
2013-03-11 15:36 ` Gavin Andresen
2013-03-11 16:45 ` Jorge Timón
2013-03-11 16:46 ` Jorge Timón
2013-03-11 16:54 ` Mike Hearn
2013-03-11 17:08 ` Jorge Timón
2013-03-11 18:17 ` Benjamin Lindner
2013-03-11 18:59 ` Mark Friedenbach
2013-03-11 18:59 ` Jorge Timón
2013-03-11 19:08 ` Tadas Varanavičius
2013-03-11 22:19 ` Mike Hearn
2013-03-11 22:25 ` Tadas Varanavičius
2013-03-11 22:39 ` Mike Hearn
2013-03-11 23:26 ` Tadas Varanavičius
2013-03-11 17:18 ` Jeff Garzik
2013-03-11 20:08 ` Rune Kjær Svendsen
2013-03-11 20:36 ` Michael Gronager
2013-03-11 21:01 ` Gregory Maxwell
2013-03-11 21:15 ` Michael Gronager
2013-03-12 7:49 ` Peter Todd
2013-03-13 5:31 ` Stephen Pair
2013-03-13 9:20 ` Jorge Timón
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