Author

Topic: How Do Transactions Get Confirmed Once We Reach 21m BTC Mined? (Read 1297 times)

newbie
Activity: 49
Merit: 0
136 years from now, your HDD will be just about enough to store the entire blockchain. This is just a guess. 30 years ago, a kilobyte of data was a lot and a megabyte was unthinkable. Then a few years later, people were dreaming of gigabytes. Today, hard drives are measured in terabytes. In the future? Add a few zeros, maybe.
136 years your pendrive will be storing yottabytes, and for your harddrive they will have to make up some ridiculous names to store ridiculous amounts of data. Although moore's law has a physical limitation (we can't go beyond atomic scale) probably by then we will have some hack or discovery to keep evolving towards a world of data exuberance lol.
legendary
Activity: 3416
Merit: 1912
The Concierge of Crypto
136 years from now, your HDD will be just about enough to store the entire blockchain. This is just a guess. 30 years ago, a kilobyte of data was a lot and a megabyte was unthinkable. Then a few years later, people were dreaming of gigabytes. Today, hard drives are measured in terabytes. In the future? Add a few zeros, maybe.
legendary
Activity: 1176
Merit: 1280
May Bitcoin be touched by his Noodly Appendage
blocks will never stop being created.
My HDD does not approve this message
member
Activity: 75
Merit: 10
Title says it all. If miners confirm transaction blocks, how do we transfer funds once there are no more miners?

Miners receive both a block subsidy and transaction fees.  The block subsidy is designed to decrease over the next 136 years, being cut in half approximately every 4 years. Once the block subsidy is reduced all the way to 0 (136 years form now), the assumption is that transaction fees will continue to increase as bitcoin gains popularity and mainstream use.  Miners will continue to exist so they can collect the transaction fees.  I suppose once we get to the point where the transaction fees are consistently more than the block reward, we might stop calling them "miners", perhaps then we will call them transaction processors. Whatever we call them, they will continue to provide the same service and will continue to be paid for that service.

Thank you! You answered my question very well  Smiley
hero member
Activity: 793
Merit: 1026
blocks will always be created, it's just once the limit is reached, the only reward for a new block will be the transaction fees.  blocks will never stop being created.
legendary
Activity: 3472
Merit: 4794
Title says it all. If miners confirm transaction blocks, how do we transfer funds once there are no more miners?

Miners receive both a block subsidy and transaction fees.  The block subsidy is designed to decrease over the next 136 years, being cut in half approximately every 4 years. Once the block subsidy is reduced all the way to 0 (136 years form now), the assumption is that transaction fees will continue to increase as bitcoin gains popularity and mainstream use.  Miners will continue to exist so they can collect the transaction fees.  I suppose once we get to the point where the transaction fees are consistently more than the block reward, we might stop calling them "miners", perhaps then we will call them transaction processors. Whatever we call them, they will continue to provide the same service and will continue to be paid for that service.
legendary
Activity: 2058
Merit: 1434
no blocks will confirm it? hello double spending
stop spamming and spreading FUD.
member
Activity: 158
Merit: 10
no blocks will confirm it? hello double spending
hero member
Activity: 756
Merit: 501
There is more to Bitcoin than bitcoins.
Title says it all. If miners confirm transaction blocks, how do we transfer funds once there are no more miners?
Transaction fees.
legendary
Activity: 2058
Merit: 1434
ffs, read the wiki
member
Activity: 158
Merit: 10
member
Activity: 75
Merit: 10
Title says it all. If miners confirm transaction blocks, how do we transfer funds once there are no more miners?
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