Very interesting paper. When you talk about a market, what are you referring to exactly? A market means that demand and supply are matched continuously, and Bitcoin has no such mechanism. A lot of discussion has been around fixing the "supply" of blocksize. A floating number would mean that a hardcoded number or function would be replaced by a decision process involving users (demand). I don't think a fee market exists and that demand or supply are not easily definable. Ideally supply of transaction capability would completely depend on demand, and a price would exist such that demand can react to longterm or shorterm supply constraints. In such a scenario there would be no scalability concerns, as scale would be almost perfectly elastic. On Tue, Aug 4, 2015 at 8:40 AM, Peter R via bitcoin-dev < bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote: > Dear Bitcoin-Dev Mailing list, > > I’d like to share a research paper I’ve recently completed titled “A > Transaction Fee Market Exists Without a Block Size Limit.” In addition to > presenting some useful charts such as the cost to produce large spam > blocks, I think the paper convincingly demonstrates that, due to the > orphaning cost, a block size limit is not necessary to ensure a functioning > fee market. > > The paper does not argue that a block size limit is unnecessary in > general, and in fact brings up questions related to mining cartels and the > size of the UTXO set. > > It can be downloaded in PDF format here: > > https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/43331625/feemarket.pdf > > Or viewed with a web-browser here: > > > https://www.scribd.com/doc/273443462/A-Transaction-Fee-Market-Exists-Without-a-Block-Size-Limit > > *Abstract. *This paper shows how a rational Bitcoin miner should select > transactions from his node’s mempool, when creating a new block, in order > to maximize his profit in the absence of a block size limit. To show this, > the paper introduces the block space supply curve and the mempool demand > curve. The former describes the cost for a miner to supply block space by > accounting for orphaning risk. The latter represents the fees offered by > the transactions in mempool, and is expressed versus the minimum block size > required to claim a given portion of the fees. The paper explains how the > supply and demand curves from classical economics are related to the > derivatives of these two curves, and proves that producing the quantity of > block space indicated by their intersection point maximizes the miner’s > profit. The paper then shows that an unhealthy fee market—where miners are > incentivized to produce arbitrarily large blocks—cannot exist since it > requires communicating information at an arbitrarily fast rate. The paper > concludes by considering the conditions under which a rational miner would > produce big, small or empty blocks, and by estimating the cost of a spam > attack. > > Best regards, > Peter > > _______________________________________________ > bitcoin-dev mailing list > bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org > https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev > >