SoK: Algorithmic Incentive Manipulation Attacks on Permissionless PoW Cryptocurrencies

Aljosha Judmayer (Korresp. Autor*in), Nicholas Stifter, Alexei Zamyatin, Itay Tsabary, Ittay Eyal, Peter Gaži, Sarah Meiklejohn, Edgar Weippl

Veröffentlichungen: Beitrag in BuchBeitrag in KonferenzbandPeer Reviewed

Abstract

A long standing question in the context of cryptocurrencies based on Nakamoto consensus is whether such constructions are incentive compatible, i.e., the intended properties of the system emerge from the appropriate utility model for participants. Bribing and other related attacks, such as front-running or Goldfinger attacks, aim todirectly influence the incentives of actors within (or outside) of the targeted cryptocurrency system. The theoretical possibility of bribing attacks on cryptocurrencies was discussed early on in the cryptocurrency community and various different techniques and approaches have since been proposed. Some of these attacks are designed to gain in-band profits, while others intend to break the mechanism design and render the cryptocurrency worthless. In this paper, we systematically expose the large but scattered body of research in this area which has accumulated over the years. We summarize these bribing attacks and similar techniques that leverage on programmatic execution and verification under the term algorithmic incentive manipulation (AIM) attacks, and show that the problem space is not yet fully explored. Based on our analysis we present several research gaps and opportunities that warrant further investigation. In particular, we highlight no- and near-fork attacks as a powerful, yet largely underestimated, AIM category that raises serious security concerns not only for smart contract platforms.
OriginalspracheEnglisch
TitelFinancial Cryptography and Data Security. FC 2021 International Workshops
UntertitelCoDecFin, DeFi, VOTING, and WTSC, Virtual Event, March 5, 2021, Revised Selected Papers
Redakteure*innenMatthew Bernhard, Andrea Bracciali, Lewis Gudgeon, Thomas Haines, Ariah Klages-Mundt, Shin'ichiro Matsuo, Daniel Perez, Massimiliano Sala, Sam Werner
ErscheinungsortBerlin
Herausgeber (Verlag)Springer
Seiten507-532
Seitenumfang26
ISBN (Print)9783662639573
DOIs
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - 2021

Publikationsreihe

ReiheLecture Notes in Computer Science
Band12676
ISSN0302-9743

ÖFOS 2012

  • 102016 IT-Sicherheit

Zitationsweisen