Goodmorning everyone,

I'm trying to deepen the technology and I was watching a podcast of Andrew 
Polstra
https://www.weusecoins.com/mimble-wimble-andrew-poelstra/
that in November 2016 left open a question / opportunity, which I report:

Another open problem that I didn't talk about too much is something that Grin 
is facing right now. How do you design a p2p protocol where it is possible to 
just combine transactions freely? It turns out that if you just allow free 
combination of transactions, this causes serious problems at the p2p layer even 
without Denial of Service attacks or griefing. Suppose you're a privacy-minded 
user, and you want to sed a coin to someone, but you don't want anyone to know 
this is happening. You might wait for some other transaction to come along, and 
when it does happen you want to broadcast a combination to the network instead 
of just yours. What happens if I do that, and someone else has the same idea? 
So now I have a combination where two transactions are conflicting, where it's 
missing my part but it has other parts. So now there are two conflicting 
transactions that conflict, and only one can geet confirmed. This is pretty 
bad. In practice, we need something different probably a bit more complicated 
than a simple flood network where people are combining all willy-nilly. For 
example, this might look like people sending transactions directly to miners, 
and they give a variant of the transaction to each miner. And then one miner 
knows what the original transactions were in the block, but nobody else knows. 
This is pretty good privacy and it's a fairly simple model to reason about, but 
it does require a communication channel with a miner which is a little annoying.

Is this protocol developed in grin, in plan or it is a hypothesis definitely 
waned?
Can you give me a link to how it was implemented, designed or possibly a brief 
reasons that make this road impractical?

~ Azure
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