> By doing this you're significantly changing the economic incentives behind 
> bitcoin mining. How can you reliably invest in hardware if you have no idea 
> when or if your profitability is going to be cut by 50-75% based on a whim?


Of course, that's why this is a last resort, successfully activated only in 
response to a contentious hard fork. If it succeeds just once it should help 
prevent the same situation occurring in the future.


> You may also inadvertently create an entirely new attack vector if 50-75% of 
> the SHA256 hardware is taken offline and purchased by an entity who intends 
> to do harm to the network.

How so? If you have four proof of work methods, that 50-75% of SHA256 hashpower 
would equate to 13-18% of total hashpower. If you can harm the network with 
this much hashpower bitcoin was DOA.

________________________________
From: Andrew Johnson <andrew.johnso...@gmail.com>
Sent: Monday, March 20, 2017 3:38:01 PM
To: Bitcoin Protocol Discussion; John Hardy
Subject: Re: [bitcoin-dev] Malice Reactive Proof of Work Additions (MR POWA): 
Protecting Bitcoin from malicious miners

By doing this you're significantly changing the economic incentives behind 
bitcoin mining. How can you reliably invest in hardware if you have no idea 
when or if your profitability is going to be cut by 50-75% based on a whim?

You may also inadvertently create an entirely new attack vector if 50-75% of 
the SHA256 hardware is taken offline and purchased by an entity who intends to 
do harm to the network.

Bitcoin only works if most miners are honest, this has been known since the 
beginning.

On Mon, Mar 20, 2017 at 9:50 AM John Hardy via bitcoin-dev 
<bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org<mailto:bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org>>
 wrote:

I’m very worried about the state of miner centralisation in Bitcoin.

I always felt the centralising effects of ASIC manufacturing would resolve 
themselves once the first mover advantage had been exhausted and the industry 
had the opportunity to mature.

I had always assumed initial centralisation would be harmless since miners have 
no incentive to harm the network. This does not consider the risk of a single 
entity with sufficient power and either poor, malicious or coerced decision 
making. I now believe that such centralisation poses a huge risk to the 
security of Bitcoin and preemptive action needs to be taken to protect the 
network from malicious actions by any party able to exert influence over a 
substantial portion of SHA256 hardware.

Inspired by UASF, I believe we should implement a Malicious miner Reactive 
Proof of Work Additions (MR POWA).

This would be a hard fork activated in response to a malicious attempt by a 
hashpower majority to introduce a contentious hard fork.

The activation would occur once a fork was detected violating protocol (likely 
oversize blocks) with a majority of hashpower. The threshold and duration for 
activation would need to be carefully considered.

I don’t think we should eliminate SHA256 as a hashing method and change POW 
entirely. That would be throwing the baby out with the bathwater and hurt the 
non-malicious miners who have invested in hardware, making it harder to gain 
their support.

Instead I believe we should introduce multiple new proofs of work that are 
already established and proven within existing altcoin implementations. As an 
example we could add Scrypt, Ethash and Equihash. Much of the code and mining 
infrastructure already exists. Diversification of hardware (a mix of CPU and 
memory intensive methods) would also be positive for decentralisation. Initial 
difficulty could simply be an estimated portion of existing infrastructure.

This example would mean 4 proofs of work with 40 minute block target difficulty 
for each. There could also be a rule that two different proofs of work must 
find a block before a method can start hashing again. This means there would 
only be 50% of hardware hashing at a time, and a sudden gain or drop in 
hashpower from a particular method does not dramatically impact the functioning 
of the network between difficulty adjustments. This also adds protection from 
attacks by the malicious SHA256 hashpower which could even be required to wait 
until all other methods have found a block before being allowed to hash again.

50% hashing time would mean that the cost of electricity in relation to 
hardware would fall by 50%, reducing some of the centralising impact of 
subsidised or inexpensive electricity in some regions over others.

Such a hard fork could also, counter-intuitively, introduce a block size 
increase since while we’re hard forking it makes sense to minimise the number 
of future hard forks where possible. It could also activate SegWit if it hasn’t 
already.

The beauty of this method is that it creates a huge risk to any malicious actor 
trying to abuse their position. Ideally, MR POWA would just serve as a 
deterrent and never activate.

If consensus were to form around a hard fork in the future nodes would be able 
to upgrade and MR POWA, while automatically activating on non-upgraded nodes, 
would be of no economic significance: a vestigial chain immediately abandoned 
with no miner incentive.

I think this would be a great way to help prevent malicious use of hashpower to 
harm the network. This is the beauty of Bitcoin: for any road block that 
emerges the economic majority can always find a way around.

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Andrew Johnson

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