Academics Spy Weaknesses in Bitcoin’s Foundations

Game theory suggests the rules governing Bitcoin may need to be updated if the currency is to endure.

One thing cannot be disputed about the person (or persons) responsible for creating Bitcoin: they were skilled in math, and expert at coding. Five years after the Bitcoin software was first released, no major fixes have been needed to the core code, which uses cryptography to generate and transfer virtual money.

Yet signs are emerging of more subtle flaws in the vision of Satoshi Nakamoto (which may or may not be a pseudonym), with analysis suggesting the rules governing how Bitcoin operates as a currency may be far from perfect. Some researchers claim that these rules leave room for cheats to destabilize Bitcoin. Others have concluded that major changes to the currencys rules will be needed as the number of bitcoins in circulation increases.

In the real world, people dont always follow the rulesthey do whats best for them, says Joshua Kroll, a researcher at Princeton. Understanding this is the key to understanding whether and how Bitcoin survivesit tells you whether the system can last for a long time, [and] how robust is it in the face of shocks.

Kroll and others are exploring possible problems using game theory, a way to mathematically calculate how individuals might choose to coperate, compete, or cheat given the options available to them and the strategies of others.

One conclusion drawn by Kroll and his Princeton colleagues Ian Davey and Ed Felten is that those rules will have to be significantly changed if Bitcoin is to last. Their models predict that interest in mining for bitcoins, by downloading and running the Bitcoin software, will drop off as the number in circulation grows toward the cap of 21 million set by Nakamoto. This would be a problem because computers running the mining software also maintain the ledger of transactions, known as the blockchain, that records and guarantees bitcoin transactions (see What Bitcoin Is and Why It Matters).

Miners earn newly minted bitcoins for adding new sections to the blockchain. But the amount awarded for adding a section is periodically halved so that the total number of bitcoins in circulation never exceeds 21 million (the reward last halved in 2012 and is set to do so again in 2016). Transaction fees paid to miners for helping verify transfers are supposed to make up for that loss of income. But fees are currently negligible, and the Princeton analysis predicts that under the existing rules these fees wont become significant enough to make mining worth doing in the absence of freshly minted bitcoins.

The only solution Kroll sees is to rewrite the rules of the currency. It would need some kind of governance structure that agreed to have a kind of tax on transactions or not to limit the number of bitcoins created, he says. We expect both mechanisms to come into play.

That kind of approach is common in established economies, which tame things like insider trading with laws and regulatory agencies and have central banks to shape economies. But many backers of Bitcoin prize the way it currently operates without centralized control, and would likely rebel at any suggestion of changing the rules.

Researchers from Cornell claim to have found another problem with bitcoin mining. At the Financial Cryptography conference this month, they presented work suggesting that so-called selfish miners could exploit the current rules to gain more than a fair reward for their work.

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Academics Spy Weaknesses in Bitcoin’s Foundations

Occupation to co-operation: P.J. Crowley on Iraq today, special relationship, and WikiLeaks – Video


Occupation to co-operation: P.J. Crowley on Iraq today, special relationship, and WikiLeaks
Watch the full episode here: http://bit.ly/1j5u6Kw Former US Assistant Secretary of State P.J. Crowley joins Going Underground host, Afshin Rattansi, to talk...

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Occupation to co-operation: P.J. Crowley on Iraq today, special relationship, and WikiLeaks - Video

Greens want to call Julian Assange and Edward Snowden to parliamentary surveillance inquiry

Edward Snowden and Julian Assange would not be protected by parliamentary privilege if they give evidence to a Senate committee about what they know about government snooping on Australian citizens, according to advice given to the ABC.

Greens senator Scott Ludlam is trying to have Snowden, a former National Security Agency (NSA) contractor, and WikiLeaks founder Assange called before a parliamentary committee to give evidence into what they might know about mass surveillance of Australian citizens.

The move has caused a rift within Labor following the ABC's report that the Opposition was initially open to the idea.

Snowden has been charged with espionage by the Americans for leaking thousands of classified documents which have exposed the spying activities of countries including the United States, Britain, Canada and Australia.

Australia's Foreign Minister Julie Bishop and Attorney-General George Brandis have labelled him a "traitor" for leaking the sensitive information some of which included revelations Australia spied on Indonesian president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and his wife.

Snowden has been granted a temporary visa in Russia since leaking the classified documents.

Mr Assange, the Australian founder of WikiLeaks, has been living in the Ecuadorian embassy in London since 2012 to avoid being extradited to Sweden where he is wanted for questioning on sexual assault charges.

It is thought that any successful attempts to have both men give evidence to the Senate's Legal and Constitutional Affairs References Committee would occur via video link.

If that were to happen, Snowden and Mr Assange would not be protected by privilege as it only applies when witnesses are physically in Australia.

Labor MP Michael Danby said he hoped Snowden and Mr Assange would have revelations about non-Western countries' spying activities to share.

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Greens want to call Julian Assange and Edward Snowden to parliamentary surveillance inquiry

The private sector answer to exploiting public sector data

The UK government has mounted, and in some cases joined, a variety of initiatives in recent years aimed at open standards, open source software and, perhaps above all, open data.

At government level this means transparency and the ability of organisations and the public at large to access the various datasets they may have a vested interest in.

The UK government joined the Open Government Partnership (OGP) as a founding member in 2011. The OGP was established with a remit to establish "an international platform for domestic reformers", a label which the UK would presumably like to wear, were it not for its own various back-pedalling on open data and Freedom of Information (FOI) targets, due to legacy system issues and other complexities.

The government established the National Information Infrastructure (NII), committed to creating "as complete an inventory of the datasets they hold as possible". Once again, although initiatives of this kind set out with the best intentions, pragmatic rationalisation and execution are often a harder trick to pull off.

The government justifies the need to create a transparent environment for open data because, in its own view, over the past three years it has become clear that public sector information is capable of driving significant social and economic growth in the UK.

The NII published a white paper in October 2013 entitled Setting out a National Information Infrastructure. Its authors note: "Innovative applications and services have been developed using government open data from datasets whose value was not immediately obvious."

The government advocates a "twin-track" approach to the release of government data, focusing in the first instance on the release of "core reference data"; and then related "unspecified other" datasets.

Given the interplay and interconnect points between business and government today, how do big suppliers such as SAP, Oracle and IBM offer tools to help organisations and governments categorise data for the purposes of governance, risk and compliance (or GRC as it is now increasingly known)?

Oracle for its part has been nothing if not formal on this subject and has published a white paper, entitled Transparency in the Public Sector: Its Importance and How Oracle Supports Governments Efforts, to set out its stall.

Oracle says it offers a variety of technology and application products that can support government transparency efforts anywhere. The supplier says governments can use its Endeca enterprise content management tool to give citizens an easy way to search for and retrieve a wide variety of documents.

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The private sector answer to exploiting public sector data