It is not "fear" of fee pressure.

1) Blocks are mostly not-full on average.

2) Absent long blocks and stress tests, there is little fee pressure above the anti-spam relay fee metric, because of #1.

3) As such, inducing fee pressure is a delta, a change from years-long bitcoin economic policy.  Each time we approach the soft limit, Bitcoin Core increases the soft limit to prevent "full" blocks.  Mike Hearn et. al. lobbies miners to upgrade.

(note - this is not an endorsement of these actions - it is a neutral observation)

4) Inaction leads to consistent fee pressure as the months tick on and system volume grows; thus, inaction leads to economic policy change.

5) Economic policy change leads to market and software disruption.  The market and software - notably wallets - is not prepared for this.

6) If you want to change economic policy, that's fine.  But be honest and admit you are arguing for a change, a delta from current market expectations and behavior.

7) It is critical to first deal with what _is_, not what you wish the world to be.  You want a fee market to develop.  There is nothing wrong with that desire.  It remains a delta from where we are today, and that is critically relevant in a $3b+ market.








On Fri, Jun 26, 2015 at 7:09 AM, Pieter Wuille <pieter.wuille@gmail.com> wrote:
Hello all,

here I'm going to try to address a part of the block size debate which has been troubling me since the beginning: the reason why people seem to want it.

People say that larger blocks are necessary. In the long term, I agree - in the sense that systems that do not evolve tend to be replaced by other systems. This evolution can come in terms of layers on top of Bitcoin's blockchain, in terms of the technology underlying various aspects of the blockchain itself, and also in the scale that this technology supports.

I do, however, fundamentally disagree that a fear for a change in economics should be considered to necessitate larger blocks. If it is, and there is consensus that we should adapt to it, then there is effectively no limit going forward. This is similar to how Congress voting to increase the copyright term retroactively from time to time is really no different from having an infinite copyright term in the first place. This scares me.

Here is how Gavin summarizes the future without increasing block sizes in PR 6341:

> 1. Transaction confirmation times for transactions with a given fee will rise; very-low-fee transactions will fail to get confirmed at all.
> 2. Average transaction fee paid will rise
> 3. People or applications unwilling or unable to pay the rising fees will stop submitting transactions
> 4. People and businesses will shelve plans to use Bitcoin, stunting growth and adoption

Is it fair to summarize this as "Some use cases won't fit any more, people will decide to no longer use the blockchain for these purposes, and the fees will adapt."?

I think that is already happening, and will happen at any scale. I believe demand for payments in general is nearly infinite, and only a small portion of it will eventually fit on a block chain (independent of whether its size is limited by consensus rules or economic or technological means). Furthermore, systems that compete with Bitcoin in this space already offer orders of magnitude more capacity than we can reasonably achieve with any blockchain technology at this point.

I don't know what subset of use cases Bitcoin will cater to in the long term. They have already changed - you see way less betting transactions these days than a few years ago for example - and they will keep changing, independent of what effective block sizes we end up with. I don't think we should be afraid of this change or try to stop it.

If you look at graphs of block sizes over time (for example, http://rusty.ozlabs.org/?p=498), it seems to me that there is very little "organic" growth, and a lot of sudden changes (which could correspond to changing defaults in miner software, introduction of popular sites/services, changes in the economy). I think these can be seen as the economy changing to full up the available space, and I believe these will keep happening at any size effectively available.

None of this is a reason why the size can't increase. However, in my opinion, we should do it because we believe it increases utility and understand the risks; not because we're afraid of what might happen if we don't hurry up. And from that point of view, it seems silly to make a huge increase at once...

--
Pieter


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