Further, we are very far from the point (in my appraisal) where fees are high enough to block home users from using the network.

This depends entirely on the usecase entirely.  Most likely even without a blocksize increase, home purchases will be large enough to fit on the blocksize in the forseeable future.  Microtransactions(<$0.25) on the other hand aren't viable no matter what we try to do - There's just too much data.

Most likely, transaction fees above $1 per tx will become unappealing for many consumers, and above $10 is likely to be niche-level.  It is hard to say with any certainty, but average credit card fees give us some indications to work with - $1.2 on a $30 transaction, though paid by the business and not the consumer.

Without blocksize increases, fees higher than $1/tx are basically inevitable, most likely before 2020.  Running a node only costs $10/month if that.  If we were going to favor node operational costs that highly in the weighting, we'd better have a pretty solid justification with mathematical models or examples.

We should not throw away the core innovation of monetary sovereignty in pursuit of supporting 0.1% of the world's daily transactions.

If we can easily have both, why not have both?

An altcoin with both will take Bitcoin's monetary sovereignty crown by default.  No crown, no usecases, no Bitcoin.



On Thu, Mar 30, 2017 at 9:14 AM, David Vorick via bitcoin-dev <bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
On Mar 30, 2017 12:04 PM, "Tom Harding via bitcoin-dev" <bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
Raystonn, 

Your logic is very hard to dispute. An important special case is small miners.

Small miners use pools exactly because they want smaller, more frequent payments.

Rising fees force them to take payments less frequently, and will only tend to make more of them give up.

With fees rising superlinearly, this centralizing effect is much stronger than the oft-cited worry of small miners joining large pools to decrease orphan rates.

Miners get paid on average once every ten minutes. The size of fees and the number of fee transactions does not change the payout rate.

Further, we are very far from the point (in my appraisal) where fees are high enough to block home users from using the network.

Bitcoin has many high-value use cases such as savings. We should not throw away the core innovation of monetary sovereignty in pursuit of supporting 0.1% of the world's daily transactions.


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