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by firmbeliever
3750 days ago
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I get how it works with bitcoin - that's why I was saying the incentive is obvious there. The miner makes money. I was asking what the incentive would be to go through the computational effort of creating a block in a system that doesn't involve money. The author gave the example of using blockchain to maintain a shared calendar. What incentive would I have to go through all the computational effort to create a block of calendar entries? Or let me know if I misunderstood your reply. |
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There's nothing preventing the same tx fee system bitcoin is using from being implemented even if the blockchain itself is not used to transfer value. So now it is a can of worms, no doubt, as the system would have to have a way of attaching the fee to a "real world" value - along the lines of how Ether/Gas relationship works in Ethereum, but it can be done.
Another thing to keep in mind is blockchains the author is talking about in the article aren't necessarily public - with a private blockchain the nodes are paid for by the organization using it in some way shape or form.