After talking with a few groups of people, I decided a good use of Bitcoin Faucet funds would be compensating miners who had blocks that were orphaned in last week's Bit Chain Fork.
This is a one-time thing-- don't expect orphaned blocks in the future to be compensated! It is just a coincidence that I haven't had time to fix the Faucet, and have a bunch of coins waiting to be given away.
Transaction id paying the to the addresses in the coinbases of the orphaned blocks: c931f1aa9f0d211dca085342ec472e77b538b55980a2c7b0ff9fab9a20a9acd2
Obviously, this is pretty popular, based on the last few posts. But I am completely baffled.
1. It's not unlike the Cyprus government bailing out the failing banks by giving them 10% of the citizens bank accounts. [Is there nobody aside from the big bankers (miners) who could use Faucet funds?]
2. It rewards miners who ignored the advice of the night of the event. Paraphrasing the advice: "If you can't mine the 0.7 fork, please stop mining." OK. So many miners and individuals stopped mining the 0.8 fork. Their compensation? Nothing. But for those who ignored your advice and continued to mine the 0.8 fork? Here's some coin to compensate for your efforts. Even though those efforts were against our posted request. And even though those efforts caused the fork to be longer than it otherwise might have been. And even though those efforts are causing us to compensate more miners like yourself who mined the wrong fork after we asked you to stop.
3.
I don't know if Eligius mined any block on the bad fork. But if Eligius (or other mining pols who pay directly to the end-users) did mine any orphan blocks, won't your policy of paying to the addresses in the coinbases of the orphaned blocks result in a windfall double-payment for a few individual miners, and nothing for the rest of their pool? Update: I don't see any such payouts.
I'm sorry I sound so negative, but it seems the big mining pools are pulling the strings of BItcoin, just like big banks are pull the strings of their governments.
4. I thought there were 25 orphaned blocks. It appears the referenced transaction is reimbursing approximately 40 25-coin transactions.
I thought Bitcoin decisions were originally to be voted on by the masses of users, not a handful of elite mining conglomerates and/or "a few groups of people". "Groups of people" can do what they want with their bitcoin. But, coming through Gavin, this sounds like an official bitcoin decision.