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Topic: 2 ways to avoid transaction fees - page 2. (Read 6456 times)

legendary
Activity: 3472
Merit: 4801
March 26, 2013, 01:05:41 AM
#39
If you are generous, you can send more than what is in those keys. hehehe.

That won't happen.

 Grin
legendary
Activity: 3416
Merit: 1912
The Concierge of Crypto
March 26, 2013, 01:02:33 AM
#38
Sent by email. I will wait patiently. This is going to be interesting. If you are generous, you can send more than what is in those keys. hehehe.
legendary
Activity: 3472
Merit: 4801
March 26, 2013, 12:50:19 AM
#37
How about we turn the trust equation around.

You send me a copy of your wallet.  I'll consolidate the dust for you, and send you back the exact same amount as was in the wallet in the first place (to a brand new address in a brand new wallet that you create so you don't have to worry about me having access to the funds after I send them to you).
Hi Mr DannyHamilton, I will take you up on your offer. But instead of giving you the wallet, how about giving you the private keys instead? I have attempted to consolidate my dust previously, so I only have 6 addresses left with unspent outputs. I can PM you the private keys to those addresses and how much they should have.

Up to you.  You can send them in PM, or in email, or you can print them on paper and send them in the mail.

If you know how, you can encrypt them with my public key before sending them so nobody but me will be able to access them.  This would be safest.

-----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
Version: GnuPG/MacGPG2 v2.0.17 (Darwin)
Comment: GPGTools - http://gpgtools.org

mQENBFEy6pABCACmCX7ezLVyERitEiLmnSFEholbK+iJydoH0df71sByoVM6tDNJ
1wkR9ac09QedAAFS0mSHwDFv6EXKMRoc+RYKm+KyzM5ZgES82NwIU8nTx4RINf2H
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=YotD
-----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----
legendary
Activity: 3416
Merit: 1912
The Concierge of Crypto
March 25, 2013, 11:44:00 PM
#36
How about we turn the trust equation around.

You send me a copy of your wallet.  I'll consolidate the dust for you, and send you back the exact same amount as was in the wallet in the first place (to a brand new address in a brand new wallet that you create so you don't have to worry about me having access to the funds after I send them to you).

Hi Mr DannyHamilton, I will take you up on your offer. But instead of giving you the wallet, how about giving you the private keys instead? I have attempted to consolidate my dust previously, so I only have 6 addresses left with unspent outputs. I can PM you the private keys to those addresses and how much they should have.

My old wallet has maybe 200+ addresses, but only 6 have anything in them, all the rest are zero.
sr. member
Activity: 430
Merit: 250
March 25, 2013, 05:34:57 PM
#35
guys,

we need to make our voices heard.

this whole fee rip-off needs to be terminated once and for all.

Us, the bitcoiners, we must enforce a proper FEE POLICY !

stay with me on the topic.

I assume the admins will kill my account though.

But I will be back.

FIGHTIN' FOR PEOPLES' BTC WITH WORKERS'S FEE POLICIES !! decided on by workers !


The only thing you can do is set up your own miner and mine transaction without fees. Whining won't help.
legendary
Activity: 1708
Merit: 1010
March 25, 2013, 05:33:36 PM
#34
guys,

we need to make our voices heard.

this whole fee rip-off needs to be terminated once and for all.

Us, the bitcoiners, we must enforce a proper FEE POLICY !

stay with me on the topic.

I assume the admins will kill my account though.

But I will be back.

FIGHTIN' FOR PEOPLES' BTC WITH WORKERS'S FEE POLICIES !! decided on by workers !



We won't kill your account.  We don't really give a sh*t.  I don't disagree with the current fee policy, and think that it works well enough to not screw with it.  You can lobby for whatever you think is best, but I would suggest that you actually learn what the fee policy is, and why it's that way, before you proceed.
full member
Activity: 152
Merit: 100
March 25, 2013, 05:29:47 PM
#33
that adds addional fee .0001 to the standard fee .0005, so that won't help at all, other than speeding up transfers and impoverish you in the process  Cry


So that's .00050000?

If so, fifty thousand satoshis is a lot!
newbie
Activity: 28
Merit: 0
March 25, 2013, 05:17:17 PM
#32
guys,

we need to make our voices heard.

this whole fee rip-off needs to be terminated once and for all.

Us, the bitcoiners, we must enforce a proper FEE POLICY !

stay with me on the topic.

I assume the admins will kill my account though.

But I will be back.

FIGHTIN' FOR PEOPLES' BTC WITH WORKERS'S FEE POLICIES !! decided on by workers !

legendary
Activity: 3472
Merit: 4801
March 25, 2013, 05:15:58 PM
#31
Great, I now need about 100.0 BTC to make sure my dust can be consolidated. Anyone want to lend me 100.0 BTC for a day? Didn't think so. (I promise to return it, however, do not charge me interest for it.) If someone lends me 100.0 for this purpose, I will return it, and you can rep me. If I don't return it, you can label me a scammer. I am ready to provide a whole bunch of government credentials and my complete home address, my cell phone, etc.

All I want is to consolidate my less than 0.1 BTC dust.

I'd need 2 days. 1 day to make it age enough, and another day to age it before returning to you after I've grouped up my dust.

How about we turn the trust equation around.

You send me a copy of your wallet.  I'll consolidate the dust for you, and send you back the exact same amount as was in the wallet in the first place (to a brand new address in a brand new wallet that you create so you don't have to worry about me having access to the funds after I send them to you).

This way you only have to trust me with $7.80 rather than me trusting you with $7800.

You can rep me.  If I don't return the consolidated dust, you can label me a scammer.
sr. member
Activity: 430
Merit: 250
March 25, 2013, 05:10:41 PM
#30
Just set fees to 0.0001 on your client.

in rpc console window of bitcoin-qt.exe type:

settxfee 0.00001

is that really enough ?
No it's not. If it doesn't have high enough priority nobody will even relay it. Minimum is 0.0001 btc.

This is not true.  It should be relayed just fine.  It'd just sit in the miners' transaction queues until it's old enough.
True. I'll correct myself: if any of the outputs are less than 1 bitcent, then nobody will relay it.
legendary
Activity: 1708
Merit: 1010
March 25, 2013, 05:08:31 PM
#29
Just set fees to 0.0001 on your client.

in rpc console window of bitcoin-qt.exe type:

settxfee 0.00001

is that really enough ?
No it's not. If it doesn't have high enough priority nobody will even relay it. Minimum is 0.0001 btc.

This is not true.  It should be relayed just fine.  It'd just sit in the miners' transaction queues until it's old enough.
legendary
Activity: 3416
Merit: 1912
The Concierge of Crypto
March 25, 2013, 04:59:55 PM
#28
Great, I now need about 100.0 BTC to make sure my dust can be consolidated. Anyone want to lend me 100.0 BTC for a day? Didn't think so. (I promise to return it, however, do not charge me interest for it.) If someone lends me 100.0 for this purpose, I will return it, and you can rep me. If I don't return it, you can label me a scammer. I am ready to provide a whole bunch of government credentials and my complete home address, my cell phone, etc.

All I want is to consolidate my less than 0.1 BTC dust.

I'd need 2 days. 1 day to make it age enough, and another day to age it before returning to you after I've grouped up my dust.
legendary
Activity: 3472
Merit: 4801
March 25, 2013, 03:32:00 PM
#27
would be nice if the fee was based on a 7 day average for bitcoin price and have the data taken from a website once daily. at the vary least it would allow fees to stay proportionally the same.  to send one bitcoin with .005 fee, at the old price of 5$ thats $.025 (2.5 cents)  at current 70$ thats $0.35 . while not "allot" it is sure as hell isnt the same fee.

if you work the math back the other way that would be like having the fee at .07 BTC back when they were 5$ each.

Fortunately the fee is 0.0005 (not 0.005).  At current $70, that's $0.035. Which is like having a $0.0025 fee back when it was $5 per bitcoin (which is exactly what the fee was back then).
Eri
sr. member
Activity: 264
Merit: 250
March 25, 2013, 03:21:25 PM
#26
would be nice if the fee was based on a 7 day average for bitcoin price and have the data taken from a website once daily. at the vary least it would allow fees to stay proportionally the same.  to send one bitcoin with .005 fee, at the old price of 5$ thats $.025 (2.5 cents)  at current 70$ thats $0.35 . while not "allot" it is sure as hell isnt the same fee.

if you work the math back the other way that would be like having the fee at .07 BTC back when they were 5$ each.
sr. member
Activity: 430
Merit: 250
March 25, 2013, 02:47:04 PM
#25
Eventually fee threshold will be lowered again if price rises enough. For now it is like it is. For the majority of "normal" transactions you're not required to pay a fee anyway.
"Who" will lower them?

Anyone willing to compile and use a new version of the reference client.  Realistically, this means the development team that operates bitcoin.org unless there is an uprising from the userbase.

This.

One thing that has to be said is, even if that were to happen, it would only mean that transactions would be relayed with a lower fee. Whether or not such a transaction would be included in a block is entirely up to miners to decide.
legendary
Activity: 3472
Merit: 4801
March 25, 2013, 02:34:00 PM
#24
Eventually fee threshold will be lowered again if price rises enough. For now it is like it is. For the majority of "normal" transactions you're not required to pay a fee anyway.
"Who" will lower them?

Anyone willing to compile and use a new version of the reference client.  Realistically, this means the development team that operates bitcoin.org unless there is an uprising from the userbase.
full member
Activity: 210
Merit: 100
March 25, 2013, 02:31:12 PM
#23
Eventually fee threshold will be lowered again if price rises enough. For now it is like it is. For the majority of "normal" transactions you're not required to pay a fee anyway.

"Who" will lower them?
sr. member
Activity: 430
Merit: 250
March 25, 2013, 01:38:53 PM
#22
Eventually fee threshold will be lowered again if price rises enough. For now it is like it is. For the majority of "normal" transactions you're not required to pay a fee anyway.
newbie
Activity: 28
Merit: 0
March 25, 2013, 01:36:52 PM
#21
I'm not sure about that.
sr. member
Activity: 430
Merit: 250
March 25, 2013, 01:35:00 PM
#20
so it's coded in source.

one would have to alter then recompile the sourcecode and run a little node network with "bitcoin free transaction relay policy"
You can use electrum to enforce fees. However, if a fee is required, your transaction will never go through without it anyway, so there really isn't much point.
Fees are there to help keep the network secure. If your transaction is "harmful", you will have to pay a fee. It's as simple as that.
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