> 
> On 5 Aug 2015, at 15:15, Peter R <pete...@gmx.com> wrote:
> 
> Hi Dave,
> 
> Thank you for the feedback regarding my paper.  
> 
>> The paper is nicely done, but I'm concerned that there's a real problem with 
>> equation 4. The orphan rate is not just a function of time; it's also a 
>> function of the block maker's proportion of the network hash rate. 
>> Fundamentally a block maker (pool or aggregation of pools) does not orphan 
>> its own blocks.
> 
> With the benefit of hindsight, I think the paper would be stronger if it also 
> analyzed how the model changes (or doesn't) if we assume zero propagation 
> impedance for intra-miner communication, as you suggested (the "you don't 
> orphan your own blocks" idea).  Note that the paper did briefly discuss 
> miner-dependent propagation times in the second paragraph of page 9 and in 
> note 13.

I think this would be really interesting. It's an area that seems to be lacking 
research.

While I've not had time to model it I did have a quick discussion with the 
author of the Organ-of-Corti blog a few months ago and he seemed to think that 
the Poisson process model isn't quite accurate here. Intuitively this makes 
sense as until a block has fully propagated we're only seeing some fraction of 
the actual hashing network operating on the same problem, so we actually see 
slightly fewer very quick blocks than we might expect.

I do suspect that if we were to model this more accurately we might be able to 
infer the "typical" propagation characteristics by measuring the deviation from 
the expected distribution.

>> Consider that a 1% miner must assume a greater risk from orphaning than, 
>> say, a pool with 25%, or worse 40% of the hash rate.
> 
> I'd like to explore this in more detail.  Although a miner may not orphan his 
> own block, by building on his own block he may now orphan two blocks in a 
> row.  At some point, his solution or solutions must be communicated to his 
> peers.  And if there's information about the transactions in his blocks to 
> communicate, I think there's a cost associated with that.  It's an 
> interesting problem and I'd like to continue working on it.  \

Agreed - I think this would be really interesting!

>> I suspect this may well change some of the conclusions as larger block 
>> makers will definitely be able to create larger blocks than their smaller 
>> counterparts.
> 
> It will be interesting to see.  I suspect that the main result that "a 
> healthy fee market exists" will still hold (assuming of course that a single 
> miner with >50% of the hash power isn't acting maliciously).  Whether miners 
> with larger value of h/H have a profit advantage, I'm not sure (but that was 
> outside the scope of the paper anyways).

I really look forward to seeing the revised version. Seeing the differences 
will also help assess how much impact there is from simplified models.


Regards,
Dave


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