Not sure what you're saying here. The block rate can't be particularly increased or decreased in the long run due to the work difficulty adjustment getting you roughly back where you started no matter what. Someone could DOS the system by producing empty blocks, sure, that's a central attack of what can happen when someone does a 51% attack with no special countermeasures other than everything that Bitcoin does at its core. An attacker or group of attackers could conspire to reduce block sizes in order to increase transaction fees, in fact they could do that with a miner activated soft fork. That appears both doable and given past things which have happened with transaction fees in the past potentially lucrative, particularly as block rewards fall in the future. Please don't tell the big mining pools about it.

On Mon, Jun 18, 2018 at 11:39 AM Артём Литвинович via bitcoin-dev <bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
Dilution is a potential attack i randomly came up with in a Twitter arguement and couldn't find any references to or convincing arguments of it being implausible.

Suppose a malicious actor were to acquire a majority of hash power, and proceed to use that hash power to produce valid, but empty blocks.

As far as i understand it, this would effectively reduce the block rate by half or more and since nodes can't differentiate block relay and block production there would be nothing they can do to adjust difficulty or black list the attacker.

At a rough estimate of $52 per TH equipment cost (Antminer pricing) and 12.5 BTC per 10 minutes power cost we are looking at an order of $2 billion of equipment and $0.4 billion a month of power costs (ignoring block reward) to maintain an attack - easily within means of even a minor government-scale actor.

Is that a plausible scenario, or am i chasing a mirage? If it is plausible, what could be done to mitigate it?


-Artem
_______________________________________________
bitcoin-dev mailing list
bitcoin-dev@lists.linuxfoundation.org
https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev