Something similar to this has been proposed in this article by Ron Lavi, Or Sattath, and Aviv Zohar, and discussed in this bitcoin-dev thread https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2017-September/015093.html They only discussed changing the fee structure, not removing the block size limit, as far as I know. "Redesigning Bitcoin's fee market" https://arxiv.org/abs/1709.08881 *Ben Kloester* On 30 November 2017 at 11:47, William Morriss via bitcoin-dev < bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote: > Comrades, > > Long term, tx fees must support hash power by themselves. The following is > an economic approach to maximize total fee collection, and therefore > hashpower. > > *Goals* > Maximize total transaction fees > Reduce pending transaction time > Reduce individual transaction fees > > *Challenges* > Validators must agree on the maximum block size, else miners can cheat and > include extra transactions. > Allowing too many transactions per block will increase the cost of the > mining without collecting much income for the network. > > > *Problem* > In the transaction market, users are the demand curve, because they will > transact less when fees are higher, and prefer altcoins. The block size is > the supply curve, because it represents miners' willingness to accept > transactions. > Currently, the supply curve is inelastic: > > ​Increasing the block size will not affect the inelasticity for any fixed > block size. The downsides of a fixed block size limit are well-known: > - Unpredictable transaction settlement time > - Variable transaction fees depending on network congestion > - Frequent overpay > > *Proposal* > 1. Miners implicitly choose the market sat/byte rate with the cheapest-fee > transaction included in their block. Excess transaction fees are refunded > to the inputs. > 2. Remove the block size limit, which is no longer necessary. > > *Benefits* > - Dynamic block size limit regulated by profit motive > - Transaction fees maximized for every block > - No overpay; all fees are fair > > ​Miners individually will make decisions to maximize their block-reward > profit. > Miners are incentivized to ignore low-fee transactions because they would > shave the profits of their other transactions and increase their hash time. > Users and services are free to bid higher transaction fees in order to > reach the next block, since their excess bid will be refunded. > > The block size limit was added as a spam-prevention measure, but in order > for an attacker to spam the network with low-fee transactions, they would > have to offset the marginal cost of reducing the price with their own > transaction fees. Anti-spam is thus built into the marginal system without > the need for an explicit limit. > > Rarely, sections of the backlog would become large enough to be > profitable. This means every so many blocks, lower-fee transactions would > be included en masse after having been ignored long enough. Low-fee > transactions thus gain a liveness property not previously enjoyed: low-fee > transactions will eventually confirm. Miners targeting these transactions > would be at a noteworthy disadvantage because they would be hashing a > larger block. I predict that this scheme would result in two markets: a > backlog market and a real-time market. Users targeting the backlog market > would match the price of the largest backlog section in order to be > included in the next backlog block. > > *Examples* > > Scenario 1 > Sat/byte Bytes Reward > 400 500000 200000000 > 300 700000 210000000 > 200 1000000 200000000 > 100 1500000 150000000 > 50 5000000 250000000 > 20 10000000 200000000 > A miner would create a 5MB block and receive 0.25 BTC > > Scenario 2 > Sat/byte Bytes Reward > 400 600000 240000000 > 300 700000 210000000 > 200 1000000 200000000 > 100 1800000 180000000 > 50 4000000 200000000 > 20 10000000 200000000 > A miner would create a 600KB block and receive 0.24 BTC > > Thanks, > William Morriss > > _______________________________________________ > bitcoin-dev mailing list > bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org > https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev > >