Good Afternoon,

It is obvious that something needs to be done to curtail the current cost of 
mining in kWh per block. I understand proposals are rejected because it is 
considered censorship and Bitcoin has a consensus to allow anyone to mine but, 
since mining requires specific hardware and energy requirements it is already a 
form of censorship where most on the planet except for the top 6% I am guessing 
here, cannot afford to mine. Without affecting the current algorithm, I have 
previously begun to explore the process by which mining can be turned into a 
lottery with only authorized payto addresses able to mine valid blocks, since 
transaction fees and block rewards exist to pay the miner. It would be better 
even if the algorithms are improved if there are some ways that only a subset 
of miners can produce valid blocks for any given period, say for 12 months with 
four groups starting three months apart to transition, and maybe limit mining 
to 50 people per continent to produce valid blocks at any one time. Possibly 
this requires a consortium to oversee the lottery but it is something Bitcoin 
can handle themselves, and would do better to handle than to wait for 
government intervention as we have seen previously in China where power was too 
cheap Bitcoin was banned entirely.

KING JAMES HRMH
Great British Empire

Regards,
The Australian
LORD HIS EXCELLENCY JAMES HRMH (& HMRH)
of Hougun Manor & Glencoe & British Empire
MR. Damian A. James Williamson
Wills

et al.


Willtech
www.willtech.com.au
www.go-overt.com
and other projects

earn.com/willtech
linkedin.com/in/damianwilliamson


m. 0487135719
f. +61261470192


This email does not constitute a general advice. Please disregard this email if 
misdelivered.
________________________________
From: bitcoin-dev <bitcoin-dev-boun...@lists.linuxfoundation.org> on behalf of 
Lonero Foundation via bitcoin-dev <bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org>
Sent: Saturday, 6 March 2021 3:16 AM
To: Devrandom <c1.devran...@niftybox.net>
Cc: Bitcoin Protocol Discussion <bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org>
Subject: Re: [bitcoin-dev] BIP Proposal: Consensus (hard fork) PoST Datastore 
for Energy Efficient Mining

Also in regards to my other email, I forgot to iterate that my cryptography 
proposal helps behind the efficiency category but also tackles problems such as 
NP-Completeness or Halting which is something the BTC network could be 
vulnerable to in the future. For sake of simplicity, I do want to do this BIP 
because it tackles lots of the issues in regards to this manner and can provide 
useful insight to the community. If things such as bigger block height have 
been proposed as hard forks, I feel at the very least an upgrade regarding the 
hashing algorithm and cryptography does at least warrant some discussion. 
Anyways I hope I can send you my BIP, just let me know on the preferred format?

Best regards, Andrew

On Fri, Mar 5, 2021, 10:12 AM Lonero Foundation 
<loneroassociat...@gmail.com<mailto:loneroassociat...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Hi, this isn't about the energy efficient argument in regards to renewables or 
mining devices but a better cryptography layer to get the most out of your 
hashing for validation. I do understand the arbitrariness of it, but do want to 
still propose a document. Do I use the Media Wiki format on GitHub and just 
attach it as my proposal?

Best regards, Andrew

On Fri, Mar 5, 2021, 10:07 AM Devrandom 
<c1.devran...@niftybox.net<mailto:c1.devran...@niftybox.net>> wrote:
Hi Ryan and Andrew,

On Fri, Mar 5, 2021 at 5:42 AM Ryan Grant via bitcoin-dev 
<bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org<mailto:bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org>>
 wrote:

  https://www.truthcoin.info/blog/pow-cheapest/
    "Nothing is Cheaper than Proof of Work"
    on | 04 Aug 2015


Just to belabor this a bit, the paper demonstrates that the mining market will 
tend to expend resources equivalent to miner reward.  It does not prove that 
mining work has to expend *energy* as a primary cost.

Some might argue that energy expenditure has negative externalities and that we 
should move to other resources.  I would argue that the negative externalities 
will go away soon because of the move to renewables, so the point is likely 
moot.

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