Instead of using vanity addresses, the transactions could just use an OP_RETURN output and express the signalling there. However, such a system could be easily gamed by people who simply spam the network with transactions and by miners who choose what transactions to include in their blocks. On 2/2/2017 7:13 PM, John Hardy via bitcoin-dev wrote: > > Currently in order to signal support for changes to Bitcoin, only > miners are able to do so on the blockchain through BIP9. > > > One criticism is that the rest of the community is not able to > participate in consensus, and other methods of assessing community > support are fuzzy and easily manipulated through Sybil. > > > I was trying to think if there was a way community support could be > signaled through transactions without requiring a hard fork, and > without increasing the size of transactions at all. > > > My solution is basically inspired by hashcash and vanity addresses. > > > The output address of a transaction could basically have the last 4 > characters used to signal support for a particular proposal. > > To generate an address with 4 consecutive case-insensitive characters > should be roughly 34^4 which is just over a million attempts. On > typical hardware this should take less than a second. > > An example bitcoin address that wanted to support the core roadmap > might be: > > 1CLNgjuu8s51umTA76Zi8v6EdvDp8q*CorE* > > > or to signal support for a big block proposal might be: > > 1N62SRhBioRFrigS5eJ8kR1WYcfcYr*16mB* > > > Popularity could be measured weighted by fee paid per voting kb. > > > Issues are that this could lead to transactions been censored by > particular miners for political reasons. Also miners might attempt to > manipulate the results by stuffing their block with 'fake' > transactions. Such attempts could be identified if a large number of > voting transactions were not in the mempool. > > > Despite the limitations, I believe this offers a very accessible way > to immediately allow the entire economic community to signal their > support within transactions. The only cost is that of a tiny hashing > PoW that should tie up a CPU for a barely noticeable amount of time, > and could be implemented relatively easily into wallet software. > > > For its weaknesses, surely it is better than the existing methods we > use to assess support from the wider economic community? > > > While it could just be used for signaling support and giving users a > 'voice' on chain, if considered effective it could also be used to > activate changes in the future. > > > Any thoughts welcome. > > > Thanks, > > > John Hardy > > john@seebitcoin.com > > > > _______________________________________________ > bitcoin-dev mailing list > bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org > https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev