An anonymous Bitcoin miner is threatening the security of the entire system

TECHi's Author Brian Molidor
Opposing Author Arstechnica Read Source Article
Last Updated Originally published June 16, 2014 · 1:20 AM EDT
Arstechnica View all Arstechnica Two Takes by TECHi Read the original story Published June 16, 2014 Updated June 15, 2014
TECHi's Take
Brian Molidor
Brian Molidor
  • Words 135
  • Estimated Read 1 min

A single bitcoin mining network has repeatedly supplied more than half the computational power necessary to mint new bitcoins, undermining the decentralized nature of the digital currency and creating new security concerns. Ars Technica reports on new research from Cornell University showing that GHash, a top mining pool whose leaders are unknown, performed more than 51 percent of all cryptographic hashing on at least five separate occasions beginning June 3rd. One of those periods lasted for 12 hours, according to the researchers. GHash’s computational feat is significant because an entity with majority control over bitcoin creation gains powers over the network that could undermine its security and reliability. With majority control, a miner could spend the same coins twice, demand higher fees, or even mount a denial-of-service attack on the bitcoin network, according to the researchers.

Arstechnica

Arstechnica

  • Words 237
  • Estimated Read 2 min
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For the first time in Bitcoin’s five-year history, a single entity has repeatedly provided more than half of the total computational power required to mine new digital coins, in some cases for sustained periods of time. It’s an event that, if it persists, signals the end of the crypto currency’s decentralized structure. Researchers from Cornell University say that on multiple occasions, a single mining pool repeatedly contributed more than 51 percent of Bitcoin’s total cryptographic hashing output for spans as long as 12 hours. The contributor was GHash, which bills itself as the “#1 Crypto & Bitcoin Mining Pool.” During these periods, the GHash operators had unprecedented powers that circumvented the decentralization that is often held up as a salient advantage Bitcoin has over traditional currencies. So-called 51 percenters, for instance, have the ability to spend the same coins twice, reject competing miners’ transactions, or extort higher fees from people with large holdings. Even worse, a malicious player with a majority holding could wage a denial-of-service attack against the entire Bitcoin network. Like tremblers before a major earthquake, most of GHash’s 51-percent spans were relatively short. Few people paid much attention, since shortly after a miner loses the majority position, it also loses its extraordinary control. Then, on June 12, GHash produced a majority of the power for 12 hours straight, a sustained status that enables precisely the type of doomsday scenario some researchers have warned was possible.

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