Bitcopia
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June 11, 2014, 12:00:22 AM |
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From the wiki: "Since this attack doesn't permit all that much power over the network, it is expected that no one will attempt it. A profit-seeking person will always gain more by just following the rules, and even someone trying to destroy the system will probably find other attacks more attractive."
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akujin
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June 11, 2014, 01:04:30 AM |
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From the wiki: "Since this attack doesn't permit all that much power over the network, it is expected that no one will attempt it. A profit-seeking person will always gain more by just following the rules, and even someone trying to destroy the system will probably find other attacks more attractive." I've read from this link: http://learncryptography.com/51-attack/There’s only a couple things someone with 51% of the network hashrate could do. They could prevent transactions of their choosing from gaining any confirmations, thus making them invalid, potentially preventing people from sending Bitcoins between addresses. They could also reverse transactions they send during the time they are in control (allowing double spend transactions), and they could potentially prevent other miners from finding any blocks for a short period of time I guess 51% attack could drive away the investors Like maybe two companies doing a multi-million dollar deal using bitcoin as payment gateway but their transaction cannot proceed because the network is under 51% attack. They'll be forced to avoid bitcoin. So, I was wondering, does bitcoin have the capability to ban those miners/people doing the attack? Let's say some entity could maintain a 51% hashrate and they continued attacking the network, what could bitcoin do? Will bitcoin just be a sitting duck waiting for someone with greater computational power to appear and save the network?
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sgbett
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June 11, 2014, 01:10:05 AM |
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"A purely peer-to-peer version of electronic cash would allow online payments to be sent directly from one party to another without going through a financial institution" - Satoshi Nakamoto*my posts are not investment advice*
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Beans
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June 11, 2014, 01:19:41 AM |
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From the wiki: "Since this attack doesn't permit all that much power over the network, it is expected that no one will attempt it. A profit-seeking person will always gain more by just following the rules, and even someone trying to destroy the system will probably find other attacks more attractive." That assumes they are in control of their pool and not some third party.
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Arghhh (OP)
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June 11, 2014, 01:31:46 AM |
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The tired argument that the disincentive to the 51% attack is so great that no one would consider it... is a flawed argument that comes with the assumption that there are only rational actors on stage...
We all know that there are men who just want to watch the world burn... that 51% attack is coming, and it needs to be addressed.
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AmDD
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June 11, 2014, 01:39:56 AM |
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From the wiki: "Since this attack doesn't permit all that much power over the network, it is expected that no one will attempt it. A profit-seeking person will always gain more by just following the rules, and even someone trying to destroy the system will probably find other attacks more attractive." That assumes they are in control of their pool and not some third party. The tired argument that the disincentive to the 51% attack is so great that no one would consider it... is a flawed argument that comes with the assumption that there are only rational actors on stage...
We all know that there are men who just want to watch the world burn... that 51% attack is coming, and it needs to be addressed.
Thank you and Thank you, I was going to post the exact same thing. Just because the pool operators have no plans of a 51% attack doesnt mean the pool cant be hacked and someone else does the attack. We could bounce back after such an event but looking at other coins who have been 51%'d im not sure....
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Gingermod
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June 11, 2014, 01:41:53 AM |
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The tired argument that the disincentive to the 51% attack is so great that no one would consider it... is a flawed argument that comes with the assumption that there are only rational actors on stage...
We all know that there are men who just want to watch the world burn... that 51% attack is coming, and it needs to be addressed.
You're an idiot OP
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Ibian
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June 11, 2014, 01:45:44 AM |
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It is a problem. It doesn't matter if there is an easy technical solution or if we can recover from it, what really matters here is public perception. It must not happen in the first place.
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Look inside yourself, and you will see that you are the bubble.
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Bitcopia
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June 11, 2014, 01:52:07 AM |
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Remember when bitcoin hard forked in March 2013? Remember how incredibly quickly the community came together to remedy the issue? Remember what happened to BTC/USD price right after?
Do you think miners wouldn't leave ghash.io quickly and permanently if they executed a 51% attack by their own virtue or that of a hacker? Do you think in the very rare event that a pool did execute what would be limited to a brief 51% attack there would be any dire, permanent consequences to the integrity of the protocol? Or do you think it's more likely that the bitcoin community would once again demonstrate its resiliency?
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BawsyBoss
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June 11, 2014, 01:59:33 AM |
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"We're not going anywhere..." until the 51% question stops being asked. Seriously, it can't be that hard to understand.
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Forever strong.
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Arghhh (OP)
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June 11, 2014, 02:05:50 AM |
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It will stop being asked when it stops being a problem. Seriously, it can't be that hard to understand.
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Gingermod
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June 11, 2014, 02:08:01 AM |
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It will stop being asked when it stops being a problem. Seriously, it can't be that hard to understand.
But it's not a problem, seriously. Stop.
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Arghhh (OP)
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June 11, 2014, 02:21:23 AM |
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Are you telling me that the fate of bitcoin resting resting on a single entity who can fork it on a whim, is not a problem?
Instead of wasting your time begging me to stop, you should beg GHash.io to stop instead.
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fr33d0miz3r
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June 11, 2014, 02:31:29 AM Last edit: June 11, 2014, 02:47:51 AM by fr33d0miz3r |
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Are you telling me that the fate of bitcoin resting resting on a single entity who can fork it on a whim, is not a problem?
+1. What's the difference between bitcoin and centralized payment systems (visa, mastercard, paypal) then? The de-facto single payment processor is not what we all are expecting from bitcoin. Even if our money is safe (for now). Meanwhile, GHash.io is at 47%. I bet it will reach 50% in a few days.
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AmDD
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June 11, 2014, 02:38:35 AM |
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one of the main points is Bitcoin is decentralized. Allowing one entity with a large percent of the hash rate defeats this and goes against the whole idea. I really have a hard time understanding why people dont see this as bad.
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Gingermod
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June 11, 2014, 03:17:35 AM |
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one of the main points is Bitcoin is decentralized. Allowing one entity with a large percent of the hash rate defeats this and goes against the whole idea. I really have a hard time understanding why people dont see this as bad.
Because if you looked into the "issue" it's not very impactful (wouldn't do major damage to the system) and completely stops taking effect after miners switch pools immediately following the attack.
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Ibian
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June 11, 2014, 03:19:52 AM |
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The fact that they hit 48% tells me the average miner doesn't much care about it. It should never have gotten that high.
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Look inside yourself, and you will see that you are the bubble.
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Bitcopia
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June 11, 2014, 03:20:51 AM |
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The fact that they hit 48% tells me the average miner doesn't much care about it.
Because it's a non-issue. And if it becomes an issue, they will obviously move, as their profits rely on the success of bitcoin.
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fr33d0miz3r
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June 11, 2014, 03:29:24 AM |
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(wouldn't do major damage to the system)
The system will become the same as visa/mastercard/paypal. Isn't that a major damage?
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Gingermod
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June 11, 2014, 03:31:25 AM |
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(wouldn't do major damage to the system)
The system will become the same as visa/mastercard/paypal. Isn't that a major damage? No, it wouldn't. Stop trolling. As previously mentioned the effects wouldn't even last long.
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