On Sun, Aug 30, 2015 at 10:01:00PM +0200, Daniele Pinna via bitcoin-dev wrote: > Since my longer post seems to be caught in moderator purgatory I will > rehash its results into this much smaller message. I apologize for the > spamming. > > I present a theorem whose thesis is obvious to many. > > *THESIS: All hashrates* *h' > h generate a revenue per unit of hash v' > > v. * > > Let us absurdly[1] assume that an optimal hashrate *h* exists where the > average revenue for each hash in service is maximized. This will result > from perpetually mining blocks of size *q,* is *v. *All larger hashrates *h' > > h* will generate an average revenue per hash *v' < v*(effectively the > conclusion of my paper) due to the higher orphan risk carried from having > to mine blocks of size *q' > q*. Leading from Peter's model and my > analysis, the origin of this balance lies in the fact that larger miners > must somehow be forced to mine larger blocks which in turn carry a larger > orphan risk. > > What happens if a large miner *h'* chooses not to mine his optimal block > size *q' *in favor of a seemingly "sub-optimal" block size* q*? > Since he mines a block of identical size as the smaller miner, they will > both carry identical orphan risks[2], and win identical > amounts*R+M(q)* whenever > they successfully mine a block. Since the larger miner can statistically > expect to win *h'/h* more blocks than the smaller miner, they will each > earn an identical revenue per unit of hash *R+M(q)/h*. > > This however directly contradicts the assumption that an optimal hashrate > exists beyond which the revenue per unit of hash *v' < v*if *h' > h. * > *Q.E.D * > > This theorem in turn implies the following corollary: > > *COROLLARY: **The marginal profit curve is a monotonically increasing of > miner hashrate.* > > This simple theorem, suggested implicitly by Gmaxwell disproves any and all > conclusions of my work. Most importantly, centralization pressures will > always be present. FWIW I did a quick math proof along those lines awhile back too using some basic first-year math, again proving that larger miners earn more money per unit hashing power: http://www.mail-archive.com/bitcoin-development@lists.sourceforge.net/msg03272.html -- 'peter'[:-1]@petertodd.org 000000000000000010b552c5f5c18705ccb1b21c550c08872089f89076840d6d