ETC Labs believes regulation is the key to preventing future 51% attacks

Published at: Sept. 3, 2020

Responding to numerous 51% attacks on the Ethereum Classic blockchain, ETC Labs said that it's time to bring regulation to hashpower rental marketplaces, citing the fact that at least two of the attacks were perpetrated by renting hash power through NiceHash — a claim that has been confirmed by both NiceHash and ETC Labs. 

ETC Labs CEO Terry Culver also shared with Cointelegraph that according to the information that was provided by CipherTrace, which was hired to investigate the attacks, the attackers used proceeds from the first attack to rent hashpower for the second attack. The latter cost crypto exchange OKEx $5.6 million in damages — the company had to reimburse its users.

The idea of using a hashpower broker to conduct an attack on a proof-of-work blockchain is not new. For instance, at a recent Unitize virtual conference, there was a panel dedicated to this topic and an earlier attack on Bitcoin Gold was discussed.

In order to learn about NiceHash’s response to the problem, we interviewed the company’s chief marketing officer Andrej Skraba. He told us that while NiceHash’s crypto exchange is a regulated entity and as such follows all proper Know Your Custome or KYC and Anit-Money Laundering procedures or AML, its hash rental business is unregulated and its users are not required to disclose their identity. We asked if the company would consider instituting such procedures in response to the attacks, Skraba responded:

This will depend totally on the European Union, what they will decide in this regard.

He also pointed out that a good analogy for NiceHash would be an Internet Service Provider, or ISP, that simply delivers data packets:

NiceHash can deliver packets of data to mining pools and these packets of data can be described as hash power. <...> So if we really want to be built a truly decentralized world, we cannot impose limitations on this traffic.

He added that it is very difficult for a broker like NiceHash to detect such attacks as they happen. It be even more challenging to prevent them from happening in the first place. Skraba admitted that instituting proper KYC and AML would help reduce the risks. However, in his opinion, it would not solve the issue:

You can always use fake KYC. So it would help, but it would not stop. It would not stop at all.

Currently, ETC’s hashrate stands at 1.4 Th/s. Meanwhile, NiceHash marketplace has almost 10 Th/s available for rental, which is seven times the current amount of hashpower protecting the network.

ETC hashrate. Source: BitcoinCarts.

Skraba said that NiceHash has introduced ETC Labs to their platform. Though they were not previously familiar, ETC Labs now intends to use their services for defensive mining:

We have introduced them to our service because before they were not aware of how NiceHash works. And they have also publicly stated that they will use defensive mining.

The idea behind defensive mining is to use a broker like NiceHash to increase the network’s hashrate in order to make potential attacks prohibitively expensive.

Although regulation may reduce the likelihood of future attacks, this is more of a long-term plan. Not only does it take time for the appropriate legislators and regulators to come up with a proper framework, but in the case of hashpower brokers, it would have to be global to be effective. For example, NiceHash is based in Slovenia. If the local government or the EU enacted a regulatory framework affecting its business, the company could easily relocate to an unregulated jurisdiction. The decentralized and virtual nature of the business makes physical location irrelevant.

Other solutions that are being discussed by the ETC community include a checkpointing system (that would manually prevent future attacks), switching to a different hashing algorithm, and finally, strategic moves like the institution of a decentralized treasury.

Some believe that the last attack was conducted by ETH miners. As the two forks use the same DaggerHashimoto hashing algorithm, and ETH enjoys a considerably higher hashrate, it would be rather easy for ETH miners to attack the less fortunate fork. Tomorrow’s ETC developers’ call will be dedicated to discussing the checkpointing system proposed by IOHK.

Tags
Related Posts
Gitcoin Teams Up With ETCLabs for Crypto Bounty Payments in ETC
Crypto bounty payment platform Gitcoin announced it has enabled contributor payouts in Ethereum Classic (ETC). In partnership with Ethereum Classic Labs, bounty seekers now have the option to receive pay in ETC for their work on various open-sourced projects, Ethereum Classic Labs said in a March 16 announcement. The ETC core team confirmed to Cointelegraph that this partnership provides the option for ETC payout, regardless of the project being worked on. “This allows hunters to receive pay in ETC for our bounties and enables people who want to pay in ETC to do so,” the team said in an email. …
Blockchain / March 17, 2020
Ethereum Classic books 12% rally as mining support for ETC gains pace
Ethereum Classic (ETC) price rallied on Sept. 5 on back-to-back positive reports concerning its adoption among crypto miners. Top mining pool supports Ethereum Classic On the daily chart, ETC's price surged 14.5% to nearly $37.25 per token. Its massive gains came days after BTC.com, a blockchain explorer and crypto mining pool, launched a specialized Ethereum Classic pool with "zero-fee" mining for three months. The announcement appeared after "the Merge," a long-awaited network update that would switch Ethereum's energy-intensive proof-of-work (PoW) protocol to a "cost-efficient" and scalable alternative, the proof-of-stake (PoS) on Sept. 19 or before. But the switch to PoS …
Markets / Sept. 5, 2022
Thai SEC issues license to Ethereum-based real estate project
The Securities Exchange and Commission of Thailand has a license to an asset-backed token offering service based on the Ethereum blockchain. Fraction, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Hong Kong-based fintech firm Fraction Group, has received a license allowing it to list and trade tokens for fractional ownership of physical or digital assets, the firm announced Thursday. The license was granted through the Thai SEC’s official portal for initial coin offering established back in 2018. The license lays out the foundation for Fraction’s upcoming service for asset digitization and fractionalization, referred to as an initial fraction offering (IFO). The firm …
Adoption / Sept. 20, 2021
US Treasury blacklisted a non-existent ETH address in connection with alleged Russian election interference
Earlier today, the U.S. Department of the Treasury updated its Specially Designated Nationals List, adding several individuals and a number of cryptocurrency addresses. One of the individuals added was Artem Mikhaylovich Lifshits — a Russian national, accused of interfering in the U.S. elections. In addition to disclosing his personal information, the site lists a number of cryptocurrency addresses that he allegedly controls. One of the Ethereum addresses, found at 0xa7e5d5a720f06526557c513402f2e6b5fa20b00, does not seem to exist, however. Source: U.S. Department of the Treasury. There was likely a mixup somewhere in the chain of command and the Treasury meant to blacklist 0xA7e5d5A720f06526557c513402f2e6B5fA20b008 …
Regulation / Sept. 10, 2020
New York legislator introduces crypto payments bill for fines, taxes
A bill introduced to the New York State Assembly on Jan. 26 would allow state agencies to accept cryptocurrency as a form of payment for fines, civil penalties, taxes, fees, and other payments charged by the state. JUST IN: A New York Senate has introduced a bill to allow #Crypto as a form of payment — Interpret Crypto (@interpretcrypto) January 27, 2023 New York State Assembly Bill A523 was introduced by Democratic Assemblymember Clyde Vanel, who is often seen as a crypto-friendly politician. It allows state agencies to enter into “agreements with persons to provide the acceptance, by offices of …
Bitcoin / Jan. 27, 2023