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Bitcoin Cash more vulnerable to timestamp manipulation than Bitcoin: BitMEX Research

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Recently, BitMEX Research published a report detailing Bitcoin’s block timestamp protection rules, ones designed to stop nefarious miners from manipulating block timestamps and achieving unfairly high mining rewards. The report also discusses certain constants that were chosen and how those values could have particular implications for Bitcoin Cash.

According to the BitMEX research team, if too many miners join or leave the network, block times could become too fast or too slow, making the network unreliable. When a block is produced on Bitcoin, a timestamp is placed in the header by the miner and the actual time at which the block is produced is stored in the block itself.

If miners manipulated block timestamps, they could make it seem as if the difficulty needs to be adjusted to maintain the 10-minute rule for mining blocks, by either making it seem as if it took longer or shorter time to mine those blocks. To mitigate this risk, Bitcoin introduces two mechanisms to protect itself against this manipulation.

The first one, the Median Past Time Rule, states that the timestamp must be further forward than the median of the last eleven blocks. This median implies that even if six blocks are re-organized, time would still not move backwards. It is also consistent with the example provided in Meni Rosenfield’s 2012 paper, which shows that six confirmations are necessary to decrease the probability of success below 0.1% for an attacker with 10% of the network hashrate.

The other rule is the Future Block Time Rule, which essentially makes sure the timestamp cannot be set to more than a constant time ahead (2 hours), relative to the median time for the node’s peers. Further, another safeguard is that the maximum allowed gap between the time provided by the nodes and the local system clock is 90 minutes. However, unlike the MPT rule, this rule is not a full consensus rule as blocks with a timestamp too far ahead in the future are not invalidated, and can become valid as time moves forward.

“Rule number one ensures that the blockchain continues to move forwards in time and rule number two ensures that the chain does not move too far forwards. These time protection rules are not perfect, for example miners could still move the timestamps forward by producing timestamps in the future, within a two week period, however the impact of this would be limited.”

The report added that these rules have proven reasonably effective in preventing miners from manipulating Bitcoin timestamps. Bitcoin Cash however, is a different story. Since the Emergency Difficulty Adjustment model was replaced by a more simple rolling 24-hour system, though it is faster to resolve block time discrepancies, it is more susceptible to them than Bitcoin.

For Bitcoin, the 2-hour limit is only 0.6% of the 2 weeks it takes for a difficulty adjustment. On Bitcoin Cash however, the 2 hours become 8.3% of the 1 day it takes for a difficulty adjustment. According to the researchers, this appears to be potentially significant and if exploited, could result in changes to miner profitability.

“Bitcoin Cash may therefore be somewhat vulnerable to miners manipulating timestamps, or at least more vulnerable than Bitcoin. On the other hand, although Bitcoin Cash may be more vulnerable to miner timestamp manipulation attacks than Bitcoin, any issues will be resolved faster.”

Researchers also commended Satoshi Nakamoto for being able to think so far ahead 10 years ago, before anyone had any experience with building a blockchain.

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Manu is a full-time journalist at AMBCrypto covering the US and Indian markets. A graduate in engineering, he writes mainly about regulations and its impact with a focus on technological advancements in the crypto space.
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