- The second assumption is that someone could buy the required materials, needed to produce a sufficient amount of mining devices for a successful attack. Andreas says that the best miners are made of 16-12nm silicon chips. Only those made with the best quality materials would have to be used to reach that rate needed for a 51% attack.
That was years ago, S15 launched in 2018 had BM1391 7nm chips, both Bitmain and Cannan are testing 5nm designs by now, and at least Bitmain is claiming to have a functional prototype, a bit weird hearing such a mistake from him.
The end result of all this is tens of billions of US$ spent on the purchase and manufacturing of mining devices
Nope, not even close to billions.
The current hashrate is around 130 Exa, you need 1.1 million S19pro for this, bitmain was telling them for 2500$ with a profit so you could get it for about two billion, that's 1/6 of the annual defense budget of Sweden....or 0.1% of the F35 program
Not even mentioning the fact that such a sudden increase in hashrate would put easily legit miners out of business and it will give you also a bit of reward while mining to cover costs.
Hard to do it, yeah, maybe. Impossible? Let's serious, if a medium GDP-sized country would have really wanted that it could have done it and it can do it.
Those who attack the network don't receive any compensation from the network because they don't include transactions in their newly created blocks. They must cover their own costs and maintain the attack. Andreas estimates that these costs amount to 2000-3000 BTC per day!
That's stupid, they receive the block reward, fees are barely 10% of the rewards, if the cost of 51% attack would require 3000 BTC what were the miners mining for when the entire daily reward was before the halving at around 1800+- 10%?
Seriously I'm disappointed hearing this from him, he is focusing on double-spending rather than crippling the network.
Take a look at the mempool, we're averaging 10% slower blocks right now, that would be like a miner mining 10% of the blocks but all empty, and look at what the fees are doing, lowest fee in 5 blocks was 87sat/b, now imagine 30%!
In both scenarios, those coins could be blacklisted and would have no value.
The moment you start blacklisting en-masse something on the blockchain you can stop calling it bitcoin.