Regardless of the submitter's rationale, it is easy to work around any rule that denies mempool inclusion based on fee proportion: if you have plenty, add inputs from your own wallet and return to yourself; if not, borrow them and return to the lender, maybe with interest.

On Thu, May 11, 2023 at 9:27 AM Kalle Rosenbaum via bitcoin-dev <bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
Another use case for paying more fees than outputs is to incentivize
honest mining when Bitcoin is under a state-level censorship attack.
If it's really important to me that my transaction goes through, I
might be willing to set a fee at 99x the output value. It's the only
way bitcoin could work in an adversarial environment.

/Kalle

On Thu, 11 May 2023 at 13:55, vjudeu via bitcoin-dev
<bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
>
> > confused.   the rule was "cannot pay a fee > sum of outputs with consideration of cpfp in the mempool"
> > your example is of someone paying a fee "< sum"  which wouldn't be blocked
>
> Every transaction paying "fee > sum" can be replaced by N transactions paying "fee <= sum", where the sum of all fees will be the same. That means, someone will still do the same thing, but it will be just expanded into N transactions, so you will reach the same outcome, but splitted into more transactions. That means, mempool will be even more congested, because for example instead of 1kB transaction with huge fee, you will see 100 such transactions with smaller fees, that will add to the same amount, but will just consume more space.
>
> > show me how someone could move 1 btc and pay 2 btc as fees...
>
> In the previous example, I explained how someone could move 1k sats and pay almost 1 BTC as fees. But again, assuming that you have 3 BTC, and you move 1 BTC with 2 BTC fee, that will be rejected by your rules if and only if that will be done in a single transaction. But hey, the same owner can prepare N transactions upfront, and release them all at the same time, Segwit makes it possible without worrying about malleability.
>
> So, instead of:
>
> 3 BTC -> 1 BTC
>
> You can see this:
>
> 3 BTC -> 2 BTC -> 1 BTC
>
> If that second transaction will not pass CPFP, more outputs could be used:
>
> +--------------------+--------------------+--------------------+
> | 3.0 BTC -> 0.5 BTC | 0.5 BTC -> 0.5 BTC | 0.5 BTC -> 0.5 BTC |
> |            0.5 BTC | 0.5 BTC    0.5 BTC | 0.5 BTC            |
> |            0.5 BTC | 0.5 BTC            +--------------------+
> |                    +--------------------+
> |            0.5 BTC | 0.5 BTC -> 0.5 BTC |
> |            0.5 BTC | 0.5 BTC            |
> +--------------------+--------------------+
>
> As you can see, there are four transactions, each paying 0.5 BTC fee, so the total fee is 2 BTC. However, even if you count it as CPFP, you will get 1.5 BTC in fees for the third transaction in the chain. Note that more outputs could be used, or they could be wired a bit differently, and then if you will look at the last transaction, the sum of all fees from 10 or 15 transactions in that chain, could still pass your limits, but the whole tree will exceed that. If you have 1.5 BTC limit for that 3 BTC, then you could have 20 separate chains of transactions, each paying 0.1 BTC in fees, and it will still sum up to 2 BTC.
>
> > the only way around it is to maintain balances and use change addresses.   which would force nft and timestamp users to maintain these balances and would be a deterrent
>
> Not really, because you can prepare all of those transactions upfront, as the part of your protocol, and release all of them at once. You don't have to maintain all UTXOs in between, you can create the whole transaction tree first, sign it, and broadcast everything at once. More than that: if you have HD wallet, you only need to store a single key, and generate all addresses in-between on-the-fly, as needed. Or even use some algorithm to deterministically recreate the whole transaction tree.
>
>
>
> On 2023-05-10 19:42:49 user Erik Aronesty <erik@q32.com> wrote:
> confused.   the rule was "cannot pay a fee > sum of outputs with consideration of cpfp in the mempool"
>
>
> your example is of someone paying a fee "< sum"  which wouldn't be blocked
>
>
> note: again, i'm not a fan of this, i like the discussion of "bitcoin as money only" and using fee as a lever to do that
>
>
> show me how someone could move 1 btc and pay 2 btc as fees... i think we can block it at the network or even the consensus layer, and leave anything but "non-monetary use cases" intact.   the only way around it is to maintain balances and use change addresses.   which would force nft and timestamp users to maintain these balances and would be a deterrent
>
>
> im am much more in favor of doing something like op_ctv which allows many users to pool fees and essentially "share" a single utxo.
> .
>
>
>
> On Wed, May 10, 2023 at 12:19 PM <vjudeu@gazeta.pl> wrote:
>
> > possible to change tx "max fee"  to output amounts?
>
> Is it possible? Yes. Should we do that? My first thought was "maybe", but after thinking more about it, I would say "no", here is why:
>
> Starting point: 1 BTC on some output.
> Current situation: A single transaction moving 0.99999000 BTC as fees, and creating 1000 satoshis as some output (I know, allowed dust values are lower and depend on address type, but let's say it is 1k sats to make things simpler).
>
> And then, there is a room for other solutions, for example your rule, mentioned in other posts, like this one: https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2023-May/021626.html
>
> > probably easier just to reject any transaction where the fee is higher than the sum of the outputs
>
> Possible situation after introducing your proposal, step-by-step:
>
> 1) Someone wants to move 1 BTC, and someone wants to pay 0.99999000 BTC as fees. Assuming your rules are on consensus level, the first transaction creates 0.5 BTC output and 0.5 BTC fee.
> 2) That person still wants to move 0.5 remaining BTC, and still is willing to pay 0.49999000 BTC as fees. Guess what will happen: you will see another transaction, creating 0.25 BTC output, and paying 0.25 BTC fee.
> ...
> N) Your proposal replaced one transaction, consuming maybe one kilobyte, with a lot of transactions, doing exactly the same, but where fees are distributed between many transactions.
>
> Before thinking about improving that system, consider one simple thing: is it possible to avoid "max fee rule", no matter in what way it will be defined? Because as shown above, the answer seems to be "yes", because you can always replace a single transaction moving 1 BTC as fees with multiple transactions, each paying one satoshi per virtual byte, and then instead of consuming around one kilobyte, it would consume around 1 MvB per 0.01 BTC, so 100 MvB per 1 BTC mentioned in the example above.
>
>
>
> On 2023-05-08 13:55:18 user Erik Aronesty via bitcoin-dev <bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
> possible to change tx "max fee"  to output amounts?
>
>
> seems like the only use case that would support such a tx is spam/dos type stuff that satoshi warned about
>
>
> its not a fix for everything, but it seems could help a bit with certain attacks
>
>
>
>
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