Blockchain Takeovers in Web 3.0: An Empirical Study on the TRON-Steem Incident
Chao Li, Runhua Xu, Balaji Palanisamy, Li Duan, Meng Shen, Jiqiang Liu, and Wei Wang

TL;DR
This paper provides an empirical analysis of the Tron-Steem blockchain takeover incident, revealing its impact on decentralization, uncovering takeover strategies, and proposing mitigation methods to strengthen Web 3.0 security.
Contribution
It offers a detailed reconstruction of the incident, identifies takeover mechanics, and suggests strategies to improve blockchain resilience against similar threats.
Findings
Significant decentralization shifts post-incident
Identification of anomalous voter behaviors
Proposed mitigation strategies for future attacks
Abstract
A fundamental goal of Web 3.0 is to establish a decentralized network and application ecosystem, thereby enabling users to retain control over their data while promoting value exchange. However, the recent Tron-Steem takeover incident poses a significant threat to this vision. In this paper, we present a thorough empirical analysis of the Tron-Steem takeover incident. By conducting a fine-grained reconstruction of the stake and election snapshots within the Steem blockchain, one of the most prominent social-oriented blockchains, we quantify the marked shifts in decentralization pre and post the takeover incident, highlighting the severe threat that blockchain network takeovers pose to the decentralization principle of Web 3.0. Moreover, by employing heuristic methods to identify anomalous voters and conducting clustering analyses on voter behaviors, we unveil the underlying mechanics of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlockchain Technology Applications and Security · FinTech, Crowdfunding, Digital Finance
