[bitcoin-dev] Inquiry: Transaction Tiering

Martin Stolze martin at stolze.cc
Tue Mar 28 12:58:31 UTC 2017


Hi AJ,
That's outstanding. I am glad to see that there is actually somebody
who has made some progress.

> "miners as service providers."
Great idea! Block space as a resource is under-analyzed.

> miner/pool's political positions, their consensus ideology, physical location (yes some people would like only miners in particular countries to mine their transactions)

I am not joking when I say that in 3 to 8 years, I want to be able to
verify my transaction through green blocks that are generated locally
by my neighbor through the excess capacity of his solar panels or by
an NGO pool that promotes solar deployment around the equator.

> The main attitude right now is that people would like to 'support' miners who signal for the features they care about.

Yes, just selecting all SegWit signaling hash power instead of picking
individual Authorities would be helpful on preferredminer.com

> I strongly believe, whether the Bitcoin developer community facilitates it or not, certain miners will become preferred by users.

Absolutely, considering the recent language used in opinions by the
ECB and drafts by the EU I see them assembling the artillery. I
wouldn't be surprised if they start target practice next year. That
will mean that commercial interest must have a way to transact on
somewhat regulated space.

> 1) By creating 'segregated mempools' where an authenticated third-party like my web service Preferred Miner manages the access to pending transactions destined for a specific set of miners

I would call it regulated block space or regulated consensus space. I
hope that we can do that on a deeper level, as part of the p2p
protocol layer.

> 2) by creating transactions where the mining fee is in one way or another, an output to an address owned by the preferred miner(s).

That's a distinct function, e.g. at least some communities charge a tax. [1]
I fear it is more likely that a business, say Coinbase, will approach
a "miner" and just say "we pay 100 USD for a KB to your bank account,
here are our transactions with no fee". It will literally be an
off-chain fee. That's what I mean by "secondary market". This would be
one of the least appealing scenarios.

> There are some terrible pitfalls with both of these methods. [...]

Spot on, that's why this should receive some attention before it
becomes urgent. I think there is much more to it that we are missing
at the moment, e.g. Tom: "Using xthin/compact blocks miners only send
a tiny version of a block which then causes the receiving node to
re-create it using the memory pool."


[1] http://thebitcoin.foundation/declaration.txt



> From: AJ West <ajwest at gmail.com>
> To: bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org
> Cc:
> Bcc:
> Date: Mon, 27 Mar 2017 12:29:20 -0400
> Subject: Re: [bitcoin-dev] Inquiry: Transaction Tiering
> Hi I'm AJ West, I made a service http://preferredminer.com which is a proof-of-concept project designed to spur discussion on exactly this issue of "miners as service providers."
>
> The current status is that Bitcoin end users are looking to support specific miners, whether that's because they agree with a miner/pool's political positions, their consensus ideology, physical location (yes some people would like only miners in particular countries to mine their transactions) and the list of reasons goes on. The main attitude right now is that people would like to 'support' miners who signal for the features they care about.
>
> I strongly believe, whether the Bitcoin developer community facilitates it or not, certain miners will become preferred by users. In summary, there are realistically two proposed ways of providing this service in the present-day situation: 1) By creating 'segregated mempools' where an authenticated third-party like my web service Preferred Miner manages the access to pending transactions destined for a specific set of miners, and 2) by creating transactions where the mining fee is in one way or another, an output to an address owned by the preferred miner(s).
>
> There are some terrible pitfalls with both of these methods. The first being that you have to trust a lot of people, including the 3rd party (me) and the pools to work in your users' interest ("don't give my transactions to other miners or broadcast to mempool please"). Then there are the extra fees users will have to pay to offset the risk of a miner losing out for having to send the network a not-yet-broadcasted transaction. And finally, the other method requires that they be larger transactions, and a directory of mining pools' receiving addresses for outputs must be maintained. Then you have to hope the miner will be setup to scoop in your transaction knowing it's got a fee for them. Plus, how many nodes going forward are going to hold what seem to be 0-fee transactions in mempool (because the fee is in the outputs)?
>


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