You aren't adding anything to the discussion. Many have made the same claims you are making, and the matter has been debated endlessly elsewhere.
This is not a technical discussion, so it does not belong here, it belongs in economics. However, in economics, there are probably dozens threads over the years from people proposing this exact idea.
I'm not trying to be mean. I'm just letting you know that your ideas are not new, and if you'd like to know what the community thinks of them, you should read the other threads on this subject.
Ok I get that, I will discontinue the discussion here and do some more research perhaps.
However I admitted that Bitcoin 2.0 was a rehash of old ideas, but warrented serious concideration now that services like inputs.io are starting to gain traction. I felt in previous discussions that this issue is hand waved away with "tx fees will be enough" even though no one has even modelled an actual future scenario. Perhaps I should do some more in depth research of my own and model both systems to determine the most secure and usable one. My hunch is that a constant block reward will be better to secure the network in the long term.
I also posted here because I wanted a technical discussion about Bitcoin 3.0 and how perhaps a proof of work that is to secure and maintain a distributed computing/internet/communication/storage/distribution platform based around a currency.
I think that people would take some of these ideas more seriously if they were either implemented in code (Bitcoin 3.0) or modelled against current systems mathematically(Bitcoin 2.0) In the future I will put in more work and attempt either of these things. Without a model or code to backup my hunch I guess I am just another loon on the forums.
Thats for replying though, I appreciate that rather than being ignored.
Cheers