Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: It's about time to turn off PoW mining
by
leannemckim46
on 08/09/2014, 05:25:26 UTC
In a PoS currency how do you guarantee that a 51+% stake holder remains a benign actor?

It's only logical that the 51% group of holders will not have bad intentions against a currency that they themselves have a majority stake in.

You have no guarantee in a PoW system neither, since it only needs about 10% of the value of the eco-system to 51% attack. Also the other problem is you don't even need to own the currency to attack it, therefore the attacker have no stake in the system.

To 51% attack a PoS eco-system, you yourself must be an extremely large stake holder in the eco-system, which means you are basically attacking yourself. Not to mention you need extremely large amount of resources, at least several times the value of the eco-system, to achieve 51% in the first place.

Just plain wrong on all accounts.

51% PoS stakeholders have every reason to reverse transactions. Because they use TOR, nobody knows they even have 51%. They can attack transactions to grow their wealth. When they are rich enough, they can sell their stake. With PoW, they have to invest in equipment that is traceable so they can't attack anonymously. When they want to cash out, their equipment is obsolete and worth much less. As far as the value of the ecosystem, 51% is 51%. That means just over half, not "several times the value."
In DPOS it is not the stakeholders who generate block but delegates (comparable to pools in Bitcoin except that the DPOS delegates/pools can be voted in and out) which makes your argument invalid.
Who guarantees the stakeholders and delegates are not colluding?
No guarantee but it is highly unlikely (way more unlikely than with Bitcoin) since block producers are more decentralized (~ 60 individuals (delegates) all with the same block production capacity than with Bitcoin's 2 or 3 pools which control 50% of the block production capabilities) and because stakeholders who vote for delegates have a stake in the network whereas with POW there is no way that the coin holders can choose who is securing their network.
I disagree. With PoS you really don't know who the stake holders are. They could very well be all one person who has multiple computers (or even Virtual Machines w/VPN setup) to make it look like there are numerous stakeholders. With PoW there are a small number of pools, but if a pool starts to act in a way that is not proper then miners can easily leave the pool and join another one. It costs almost nothing to switch pools (you have a few seconds of downtime and minutes to get your hashrate back up to speed) therefore the concentration on hashpower at individual pools should be considered temporary