Towards Overcoming the Undercutting Problem
Tiantian Gong, Mohsen Minaei, Wenhai Sun, Aniket Kate

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the undercutting attack in cryptocurrency mining, challenges previous assumptions about fee profitability, and proposes a practical defense strategy that can stabilize mining incentives.
Contribution
It models undercutting profitability considering block size limits and introduces a deployable defense strategy that achieves Nash equilibrium in mining.
Findings
Undercutting profitability depends on block size and fee dynamics.
Selective transaction assembly can prevent profitable undercutting.
The proposed defense strategy is effective and stabilizes mining incentives.
Abstract
Mining processes of Bitcoin and similar cryptocurrencies are currently incentivized with voluntary transaction fees and fixed block rewards which will halve gradually to zero. In the setting where optional and arbitrary transaction fee becomes the remaining incentive, Carlsten et al.\ [CCS~2016] find that an undercutting attack can become the equilibrium strategy for miners. In undercutting, the attacker deliberately forks an existing chain by leaving wealthy transactions unclaimed to attract petty complaint miners to its fork. We observe that two simplifying assumptions in [CCS~2016] of fees arriving at fixed rates and miners collecting {\em all} accumulated fees regardless of block size limit are often infeasible in practice and find that they are inaccurately inflating the profitability of undercutting. Studying Bitcoin and Monero blockchain data, we find that the fees deliberately…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsBlockchain Technology Applications and Security · Crime, Illicit Activities, and Governance · Cryptography and Data Security
