What is Merged Mining?
Blockchain Research Bytes
#2
What is merged mining and how it impacts the broader blockchain community
Article: Merged Mining: Curse or Cure?
Authors: Aljosha Judmayer, Alexei Zamyatin, Nicholas Stifter,
Artemios Voyiatzis, Edgar Weippl
Affiliation: SBA Research, Vienna, Austria
Article Category: Security
Why this article? : As discussed in our last
installment, Proof-of-Work
consensus algorithm acts as the backbone of prominent cryptocurrencies such as
Bitcoin and Ethereum. The security of Proof-of-Work heavily depends on the
control of computing power in the network. If an attacker is able to control
over 50% of the computing power in the network, they can perform the
double-spending attack.
In a double-spending attack, the attacker attempts to spend the same
coin twice. As Bitcoin is considerably mature with a very high computational
power required to perform a double-spending attack, it is considered safe.
However, other newer cryptocurrencies such as Namecoin that are based on the
Proof-of-Work that use the same cryptographic primitives are vulnerable to the
high computational power of bigger cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin. These small
cryptocurrencies came up a clever way of circumventing the issue of being
overshadowed by the large computing power of Bitcoin and similar currency. They
implement something known as merged mining. In merged mining, the miners
operating on Bitcoin can use the same work on the smaller cryptocurrencies such
as Namecoin.
This clever solution is not without its own issues; one of which is the
high degree of dependence on the larger cryptocurrency. The article that we
review this week aims to look at the security issues related to merged mining.
Paper Overview:
Background: Merged mining refers to the process of performing
mining on multiple Proof-of-Work cryptocurrencies at the same time. This
process is considered beneficial because it helps in reducing energy wastage. A
less understood side of merged mining is its impact on the security of the
cryptocurrency that adopts merged mining. The shortlisted article reviews
prominent merged mining based cryptocurrencies and reports that these
cryptocurrencies are often operated beyond the level of security provided by classical
Proof-of-Work.
Attacks on Blockchain: Most of the attacks devised on the
Proof-of-Work blockchain rely on the consensus power of the attacker. These
attacks include selfish mining and double-spending attacks. An attacker with
more than 26% consensus power can easily conduct a selfish mining attack.
This type of attack is particularly interesting from the perspective of
merged mining cryptocurrencies as most of the mining on merged cryptocurrencies
is performed by mining pools. The authors analyze a number of merged mined
cryptocurrencies to determine if merged mining leads in power concentration. In
the following text, we overview the methodology employed by the researcher.
Methodology: The authors first identify prominent merged mined
cryptocurrencies, including Litecoin, Namecoin, Dogecoin, Huntercoin, and
Myriadcoin. After the identification of the target cryptocurrencies, the
historical mining data is retrieved by either using a public API or crawling
through the blocks. This historical data is used to attribute blocks to a
mining pool. This attribution process is formally defined as the Block
Attribution Scheme. The block attribution scheme aims to identify the miner of
the block by examining the public coinbase address of the miner. More details
on the block attribution scheme can be obtained from the paper. After the
identification of the miner of the block, the authors examine the trend of
mining over time.
Results: The authors report that when the target cryptocurrency
adopts the merged mining, it sees a significant increase in the overall
difficulty as miners from the bigger Proof-of-Work chains indulge in
calculating the proof. This growth in the difficulty of mining is considered a
security attribute. One surprise finding is the fact that only big mining pools
indulge in merged mining on a large scale. This high concentration of
computational power in the hands of a few may be contradicting to the
decentralized manner of the blockchain. The authors also propose a possibility
of security threats due to the domination of mining pools over these small
Proof-of-Work cryptocurrencies.
Implications for the greater blockchain community:
This article serves as an important step towards understanding the wider
impact of design choices for newer cryptocurrencies. A high difficulty for
mining is a prerequisite for ensuring security; thus, newer cryptocurrencies
are trending towards the concept of merged mining. Irrespective of the benefits
of merged mining, the cryptocurrencies may suffer existential threats due to
the power concentration. This power concentration essentially translates to
trusting the big mining pools that they will remain honest.
In this quest of usability and security, what do you think is a better
design choice? Would you favor a less decentralized cryptocurrency that adopts
merged mining?
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surrounding the most influential research publications in the crypto/blockchain
domain.