📅 Original date posted:2017-03-30
📝 Original message:Except if people have some incentive to do it, simple example: I have
some servers, they are doing some work but are not so busy finally, I
can decide to run some nodes, this does not cost me more (and less for
the planet than setting up new servers) and I get some rewards (as an
illustration of this my servers are mining zcash and running zcash
nodes, this is of course absolutely not profitable but since this does
not disturb what the servers are primarly intended for and I get some
small zecs with no additionnal costs, why not doing it?) Of course we
can then consider that people doing this are finally using the network...
Le 30/03/2017 à 12:34, Tom Zander via bitcoin-dev a écrit :
> On Wednesday, 29 March 2017 21:50:48 CEST Raystonn . via bitcoin-dev wrote:
>> Low node costs are a good goal for nodes that handle transactions the node
>> operator can afford. Nobody is going to run a node for a network they do
>> not use for their own transactions. If transactions have fees that
>> prohibit use for most economic activity, that means node count will drop
>> until nodes are generally run by those who settle large amounts. That is
>> very centralizing.
>>
>> Raystonn
> The idea that people won’t run a node for a network they don’t use for their
> own transactions is a very good observation and a good reason to get on-
> chain scaling happening well before lightning hits.
>
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