An Eye for an Eye: Economics of Retaliation in Mining Pools

Cited 1 time in webofscience Cited 1 time in scopus
  • Hit : 156
  • Download : 0
Currently, miners typically join mining pools to solve cryptographic puzzles together, and mining pools are in high competition. This has led to the development of several attack strategies such as block withholding (BWH) and fork after withholding (FAW) attacks that can weaken the health of PoW systems and but maximize mining pools' profits. In this paper, we present strategies called Adaptive Retaliation Strategies (ARS) to mitigate not only BWH attacks but also FAW attacks. In ARS, each pool cooperates with other pools in the normal situation, and adaptively executes either FAW or BWH attacks for the purpose of retaliation only when attacked. In addition, in order for rational pools to adopt ARS, ARS should strike to an adaptive balance between retaliation and selfishness because the pools consider their payoff even when they retaliate. We theoretically and numerically show that ARS would not only lead to the induction of a no-attack state among mining pools, but also achieve the adaptive balance between retaliation and selfishness.
Publisher
ACM
Issue Date
2019-10-22
Language
English
Citation

ACM AFT 2019: 1st ACM Conference on Advances in Financial Technologies (AFT), pp.169 - 182

DOI
10.1145/3318041.3355472
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/269189
Appears in Collection
EE-Conference Papers(학술회의논문)
Files in This Item
There are no files associated with this item.
This item is cited by other documents in WoS
⊙ Detail Information in WoSⓡ Click to see webofscience_button
⊙ Cited 1 items in WoS Click to see citing articles in records_button

qr_code

  • mendeley

    citeulike


rss_1.0 rss_2.0 atom_1.0