Temporary Power Adjusting Withholding Attack
The paper introduces Temporary Power Adjusting Withholding (T-PAW), a generalized and more potent block withholding attack than the existing PAW attack, demonstrating that this attack can yield significantly higher adversarial rewards.
Abstract
More Like ThisWe consider the block withholding attacks on pools, more specifically the state-of-the-art Power Adjusting Withholding (PAW) attack. We propose a generalization called Temporary PAW (T-PAW) where the adversary withholds a fPoW from pool mining at most $T$-time even when no other block is mined. We show that PAW attack corresponds to $T\to\infty$ and is not optimal. In fact, the extra reward of T-PAW compared to PAW improves by an unbounded factor as adversarial hash fraction $α$, pool size $β$ and adversarial network influence $γ$ decreases. For example, the extra reward of T-PAW is 22 times that of PAW when an adversary targets a pool with $(α,β,γ)=(0.05,0.05,0)$. We show that honest mining is sub-optimal to T-PAW even when there is no difficulty adjustment and the adversarial revenue increase is non-trivial, e.g., for most $(α,β)$ at least $1\%$ within $2$ weeks in Bitcoin even when $γ=0$ (for PAW it was at most $0.01\%$). Hence, T-PAW exposes a significant structural weakness in pooled mining-its primary participants, small miners, are not only contributors but can easily turn into potential adversaries with immediate non-trivial benefits.