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Currently miners can signal for certain BIP proposals. But users cannot signal, that's why they need to indirectly force miners to vote for them, using UASF's.
But why are transactions not used for signalling? For example 1 transaction = 1 vote. That would allow a very large userbase to signal directly without the miners, and seems pretty foolproof, since both censoring or creating them (just for the purpose of influencing the vote) will be very expensive to an attacker.
It feels like a much nicer solution than a UASF, so what am I overlooking here?
I think a lot of your critism also holds true for UASF, as it also doesn't consider someones amount of coins and allows to spam the network with fake nodes, etc. So even though I agree with you it's far from a perfect solution, Im still not fully convinced its worse than UASF. Thanks for the link though! – Muis – 2017-07-18T09:32:37.427