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I understand the mining fee will be the major incentive when the Bitcoin supply hit its limit of 21m. But right now, new coins are still being minted and are much higher than any fee can compansate. Shouldn't the fee calculation be a WIP improvement protocol that needs to be worked on in the Testnet rather than causing huge innefficeny in the Main Bitcoin network?
I am very sorry if it is naive to think that, but I see that many debates on Bitcoin's future are based on the high amount of miner fees or the long waiting time for confirmations.
Why shouldn't miners just add the transactions randomly and just incentivized by the reward?
I believe the mainstream usage adoption will be provided by the people who can't afford the current miner fees, but still wish there could be a way to actually use the network at least in a fair way where the highest fee couldn't win the confirmation race.
To sum up, I am wondering, why the fee structure shouldn't be tested and worked on on the Tesnet until a good protocol for fee calculation has been developed, and in the main network miners just incentivized by the reward and add the transactions in blocks randomly or by First In First Out method or by some other criteria rather than fee?
Yes, but the current structure is kind of hurting the environment, almost every fork market themselves with lower fees and fast transactions. I just think that if the fee structure is developed privately and not cause a marketing scheme and confuse users, the network would have a relief. And also I believe the actual demand is to use the network, not to pay in order to use it. Maybe the cause of mining centralizaiton is that it became too profitable by the current structure. – thefrogking – 2018-01-02T09:19:32.417
@thefrogking The current structure hurts, because it's being abused, some rich folks are degrading the service by artificially making large number of/sized transactions, giving the appearance of a broken network (it's functioning fine, as intended, if a bit slow if you don't over pay in fees). While people carry out these "attacks" as some call it, they are attempting to sell you a competing product - theirs. To quote ViaBTC: "if it looks like shit, and smells like shit, you don't have to taste". – Daniel Morritt – 2018-01-02T12:54:07.983
That is the pont if you don't pay the high fee, you'll have to wait. You are buying priority like buying a business class ticket vs economy ticket, same destination but different conditions. It's a peer to peer cash system, not a special service to buy premium features, so everybody should have the same conditions and the tx selection for blocks should be based on a criteria where everybody is equal or costing them proportional to their consumption in value not size. I am sorry if my debate is not practical or stupidly idealistic. – thefrogking – 2018-01-02T13:10:34.527
@DanielMorritt "some rich folks are degrading the service by artificially making large number of/sized transactions" do you have any proof of this? – Salvador Dali – 2018-01-02T20:58:32.083
@thefrogking It's a peer to peer cash system, not a special service to buy premium features, so everybody should have the same conditions and the tx selection for blocks should be based on a criteria where everybody is equal or costing them proportional to their consumption in value I can start from the same assumption and ask: It is an electronic transaction, so it does not matter how much money am I transferring. The fee for transferring 500b of data over the internet should be the same. It does not matter whether I transfer 1$ or 500$ – Salvador Dali – 2018-01-02T21:00:35.293
@SalvadorDali http://www.nasdaq.com/article/the-curious-case-of-bitcoins-moby-dick-spam-and-the-miners-that-confirmed-it-cm852087 read the bit about the fan out, and fan in. https://twitter.com/sbetamc/status/943691309734420480 has a visualisation and https://www.blocktrail.com/BTC/tx/4adb8664a91e92d67864962636d4c8ee8c9ed1ac86c22cc194fc287afc5af4ff is an example transaction of a "fan in".
– Daniel Morritt – 2018-01-03T21:54:52.383