If there is a benefit in producing larger more-fee blocks if they propagate slowly, then there is also a benefit in including high-fee transactions that are unlikely to propagate quickly through optimized relay protocols (for example: very recent transactions, or out-of-band receoved ones). This effect is likely an order of magnitude less important still, but the effect is likely the same. On Jun 12, 2015 8:31 PM, "Peter Todd" wrote: > On Fri, Jun 12, 2015 at 01:21:46PM -0400, Gavin Andresen wrote: > > Nice work, Pieter. You're right that my simulation assumed bandwidth for > > 'block' messages isn't the bottleneck. > > > > But doesn't Matt's fast relay network (and the work I believe we're both > > planning on doing in the near future to further optimize block > propagation) > > make both of our simulations irrelevant in the long-run? > > Then simulate first the relay network assuming 100% of txs use it, and > secondly, assuming 100%-x use it. > > For instance, is it in miners' advantage in some cases to sabotage the > relay network? The analyse say yes, so lets simulate that. Equally even > the relay network isn't instant. > > -- > 'peter'[:-1]@petertodd.org > 0000000000000000127ab1d576dc851f374424f1269c4700ccaba2c42d97e778 >