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On Oct. 13, ethical hacker âGeocoldâ followed through on his promise to 51 percent attack an altcoin. He eventually settled on Bitcoin Private (BTCP), and quickly gained majority hashrate control, but the spectacle was fraught with setbacks, including censorship from two streaming services that pulled the plug.
Also read: Mischief-Maker Promises to Livestream a 51% Altcoin Attack
Censorship, Denial of Service and Revenge Attacks â and That Was Just for Starters
Geocold promised he would 51 percent attack an altcoin to prove how easy it was, and he did, but the attempt did not run as smoothly as he might have hoped. Over 750 viewers were tuned in, and the likes of Jackson Palmer live-tweeting the spectacle, when Twitch suddenly pulled the plug. Cam-whores and other performance artists can broadcast their âartâ to the masses, it would appear, but 51-percenting altcoins is a step too far.
Geocold shows off his BTCP hashpower
One of the unexpected lessons derived from Geocoldâs session was on the dangers of censorship on an internet when a âReportâ button is never more than a few pixels away. Despite the ethical hacker having no intention of attempting to double spend coins, such as by depositing them into an exchange wallet and swapping them for BTC, the streaming provider pulled the plug, presumably in response to members of the Bitcoin Private community reporting his channel. âAnyone own/work for a streaming platform and can ensure report spamming doesnât work for my stream?â he asked Twitter. âIf I find such a solution Iâll stream again. If not I might do a surprise stream. If not Iâll just post a video.â
I have to say, it is very interesting to be sitting around on a Saturday afternoon watching someone demo-ing a 51% attack while other people attack his IP addresses. Very crypto and 2018.
â Jackson Palmer (@ummjackson) October 13, 2018
When Geocold returned on Stream.me half an hour later, he lasted a little over 15 minutes before the same thing happened. Thankfully, by this time he had done enough to demonstrate his attack in action. When the second stream died, Geocold had majority hashrate and was merrily mining BTCP blocks.
Geocold, shortly before Twitch banned him
A Mischief-Maker on a Mission
Geocold, who incorporated the âmischief-makerâ epithet into his Twitter name in response to last weekâs post from news.Bitcoin.com, had intended to 51 percent attack Einsteinium (EMC2). When the time came to perform the feat on Saturday, Oct. 13, however, he discovered that its hashrate had soared 15-fold to 1.4 TH/s. Given a weekâs notice, the EMC2 community had thwarted the attack by acquiring huge amounts of hashpower. Geocold had anticipated this, and swiftly moved on to one of the alternative alts he had lined up as part of his contingency plan.
Einsteiniumâs hashrate had soared in advance of the attack
Bitcoin Private was selected and the benign hacker connected to a BTCP mining pool, using a couple of hundred dollarsâ worth of rented hashpower heâd purchased from Nicehash with BTC. Shortly after finding his first block, however, Geocold came unstuck as members of the Bitcoin Private community fought back, possibly after heâd accidentally leaked his IP address while live-streaming. An http flood to the web UI of Geocoldâs mining pool disabled the interface, but the real damage was caused by Twitch swinging the banhammer, prompting a move to a different streamer.
At the second attempt, Geocold dominated BTCPâs hashrate, producing a steady 10 MSol/s versus the rest of the networkâs 6 MSol/s. He soon began to create the longest chain of blocks, and, had he persisted, could have forked the BTCP chain. In the event, the second stream died, and Geocold elected to wind things down and save some tricks for next time. The evening started as an exercise on the ease of controlling low hashrate PoW coins and ended as a demonstration of the need for censorship-resistant platforms.
Update on the stream. Got banned from two streaming platforms fairly quickly. I'm going to try to find a platform where I can be assured report spamming won't work. If not I'll just post a video on youtube. But attack wise: We got ~70% of BTCP's network and I was about to fork it
â GeoCold "Mischief-Maker" (@geocold51) October 13, 2018
Do you think 51 percent attacking altcoins is a good spectator sport? Let us know in the comments section below.
Images courtesy of Shutterstock, Twitch, Coinwarz.com, and Twitter.
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