From: Quinn Harris <btcdev@quinnharris•me>
To: Robert Backhaus <robbak@robbak•com>
Cc: Bitcoin Dev <bitcoin-development@lists•sourceforge.net>
Subject: Re: [Bitcoin-development] Double Spend Notification
Date: Mon, 20 May 2013 21:46:15 -0600 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <519AEE07.8020301@quinnharris.me> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <CA+i0-i_+Tes+ePRqmDGEXDQ_L=S5y8gHBKk77zaLgTGOS3OMyA@mail.gmail.com>
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A part of my reason for sending this email was a quick discussion I had
with Gavin at the BitCoin conference. I was under the strong impression
that double spend notification was something he approved of and was
considering implementing himself.
In the case of a double spend, If the receiving end gets a timely
notification (few seconds) it isn't that important that any one of the
two (or more) transactions is chosen over another. The receiving side
can treat a double spend as a failed transaction as it should be proof
that the buyer is acting maliciously or has had their private keys
compromised.
I am aware Peter Todd has implemented replace by fee and is operating a
node on testnet doing this. I think he is rightly pointing out that the
current behaviour of dropping all second spends is based largely on the
good will of nodes and can absolutly contradict the perceived self
interest of those running miners. Accordingly relying on this behaviour
can be precarious. It was from reading his emails to this list or
bitcointalk that I recognized how essential it was to not transmit the
second transaction if double spend notification had any hope of being
worth much.
This is controversial because reliable 0-conf transactions are desirable
but as you said there really is no way to ensure significant integrity
in a decentralized way. Replace by fee would make what transactions get
into blocks more predictable and eliminate any expectation of reliable 0
conf transactions. The question is if this consistency is a better
choice than a double spend notification that is far from perfect but
today its still useful and in practice can probably be trusted as much
as credit cards.
A more strict version of replace by fee could be implemented that only
replaces transactions with ones that don't reduce any output quantity
and accordingly require introducing a new input. This would allow
increasing transaction fees on a transaction without hurting someone who
trusted a 0 conf transaction. This seems like feature bloat to me but
it wouldn't reduce 0 conf integrity.
Unfortunately, I don't see a way to make everyone happy on this issue.
Though, I expect everyone would either prefer double spend notification
or always replace by higher fee over what we have now.
- Quinn
On 05/20/2013 07:24 PM, Robert Backhaus wrote:
> Personally, I agree, but a different decision has been made by the
> main devs.
>
> The issue is this: consider two transactions in the unconfirmed pool.
> One transaction has 2BTC input, 1.5BTC to one address (the payment),
> .4995 to another address (change) and .0005 standard fee. Another
> transaction appears - Same input, 1BTC to one address, .999 to
> another, and .001 fee. Which one would a miner include? On pure self
> interest, the second one, because it has twice the fee. Anyway, the
> miner has no real way of knowing which transaction was real, and which
> the fraudulent double-spend. The network does not keep accurate
> timestamps, so it has no way of really knowing which is first. A bit
> of artificial DDOS-type overload on the recipient's system, and the
> real transaction could easily appear last.
>
> So the decision has been made to make 0-conf double spends trivial, so
> no one will ever trust 0-confs. If a later transaction appears with a
> larger fee, it will be considered to be the valid one, and the first
> one dropped, as long as the first one has not been confirmed. This
> makes undoing a mistaken transaction possible.
>
> So anyone needing 0-conf-like speed will have to make other
> arangements, such as contracting with enough mining pool power to
> never drop their transactions unless confirmed multiple times. Secure
> 0-confs is an impossible target with blockchain cyrpto-currencies as
> the stand. Any ideas on how to make them work are welcome, of course -
> as long as we haven't heard them too many times before.
>
>
> On 21 May 2013 10:45, Quinn Harris <btcdev@quinnharris•me
> <mailto:btcdev@quinnharris•me>> wrote:
>
> The current BitCoin implementation is subject to relatively easy
> double
> spend attack for 0 confirmation payments. Yet 0 confirmation payments
> are needed for typical in person transactions like most purchases at a
> local business.
>
> Notably, it is easy to transmit two transactions from the same
> output at
> the same time to different sets of nodes on the network by using two
> instances of bitcoind with same wallet file and a spend on each daemon
> initiated by RPC by some easy to implement code. If the first attempt
> to pay the merchant doesn't go through because they received the
> "wrong"
> transaction it could be quickly followed up with another initiated
> spend
> from a different output switching which daemon sends the
> transaction the
> merchant is expecting. This means an unsophisticated attacker can
> reliably get away with this attack and it would be worth while for
> small
> transactions. Given this, I would be reluctant to trust 0
> confirmation
> transactions at all though I think many do in practice. Someone could
> write and publish a special daemon to execute this attack further
> reducing the cost.
>
> Right now a node will drop any second spend of the same output in the
> memory pool. After the first transaction has propagated through the
> network issuing a second double spend transaction isn't likely to be
> seen by a significant number of miners as most nodes especially non
> miner nodes will drop this transaction. Today, it is necessary to
> transmit both transactions on the network nearly simultaneously to
> reliably get away with this simple attack. If in this case, the
> receiving end is quickly notified of the double spend this attack
> becomes more more difficult to get away with.
>
> If the second transaction is relayed instead of being dropped to
> notify
> the receiving party of the double spend, most miners will receive both
> transactions and it is possible that some or even many of the miners
> would replace the first transaction with the second if it has a higher
> fee as it would be in their short term interest. This can happen some
> time after the first transaction has propagated through the network so
> the receiving end wouldn't get a timely notification of the double
> spend. Depending on the choices of the miners, this approach to
> double
> spend notification could exacerbate the very problem it was attempting
> to fix compared to the current implementation. While miners might
> continue to drop the second spends, the easy availability of the
> second
> spends would increase the short term reward for changing this policy.
>
> This problem can be fixed if instead of sending the second
> transaction a
> new double spend message is sent with proof of the double spend
> but not
> the complete transactions. This would allow the receiving end to be
> quickly notified of a double spend while in no way increase the chance
> over the current implementation that a double spend would be
> successful.
>
> The proof of the double spend would include the scriptSig (input) from
> the original transactions and the hashes from the "simplified"
> transaction used by OP_CHECKSIG of the scriptPubKey (output) but
> not the
> entire transaction. This is the hash computed by the SignatureHash
> function in script.cpp. The double spend notification message should
> contain proofs of both signed transaction spending the same output
> ordered by hash to produce a canonical proof for a specific two
> transactions. To reduce DOS potential, the proof should not be
> relayed
> unless one of the original transactions has been received to ensure
> there is some commitment to the block chain and different double spend
> proofs of the same output should not be relayed. The forwarding of
> transactions should remain exactly the same as it is now where the
> second transaction is dropped but a double spend message is
> transmitted
> if appropriate.
>
> The existing block chain needs to be checked to make sure the proof of
> double spend couldn't have been derived from the block chain and a
> single spend in the memory pool. This could happen if there was
> already
> an identical transaction in the block chain. This would typically
> only
> happen if someone was paying someone else the same amount they had
> before and neither side changed addresses. In this case double spend
> detection wouldn't be reliable as it could be generated by anyone, but
> both the sending and receiving client could detect this situation and
> warn the user.
>
> It would still be possible for an attacker to send the second
> transaction directly to powerful miners but this is a distinctly less
> viable attack than the current double spend attack.
>
> I would expect this double spend notification implementation to make
> double spends more costly than they are worth for most cases today
> that
> 0 confirmation acceptance is needed. That said over time this
> provision
> might become less effective. As the reward for each block mined
> decreases, transactions fees will become a more significant part
> of the
> mining reward accordingly increasing the incentive to replace
> transactions with higher fees. Today most BitCoin participants have a
> high expectation of significant future appreciation of BitCoins and
> recognize anything that brings into question the integrity of the
> system
> is likely to reduce that future value so they have a long term self
> interest to keep up the impression of integrity. As BitCoin becomes
> more establish this incentive will decrease.
>
> On the other hand, non mining nodes have no incentive to replace by
> fee. The continued increased capital costs of mining would likely
> increase the proportion of non mining nodes typically run by those
> with
> an incentive to assure integrity of the network such as merchants.
> But
> increasing transaction volume is likely to increase node costs which
> would push out non mining nodes with lower incentive more than mining
> nodes. Accordingly increasing block size would have a tendency to
> reduce the effectiveness of double spend notification. The primary
> point is there are multiple counteracting forces that make predicting
> the future effectiveness of double spend notification uncertain.
>
> I don't believe this necessary warrants conceding that we can not
> provide any protection from non trusted 0 confirmations
> transaction as a
> replace by fee implementation would do. But it would still be
> important
> to work towards more robust solutions notably various forms of 3rd
> party
> trust. This could be tamper resistant devices trusted to not
> duplicate
> spends, 3rd party certificates with proof the transaction was spent by
> the holder of the certificate or multi signature transactions on the
> block chain that must be signed by a trusted 3rd party to spend. I
> would expect it would take significantly longer for the companies and
> technologies to be built to implement this on a wide scale than adding
> double spend proof messages to the current implementation. In
> addition,
> there will likely always be some use cases where a 3rd party
> (centralization) is not viable.
>
> Should a BIP and pull request implementing a double spend notification
> as described be accepted?
>
> - Quinn
>
>
>
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prev parent reply other threads:[~2013-05-21 3:46 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 14+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2013-05-21 0:45 Quinn Harris
2013-05-21 1:24 ` Robert Backhaus
2013-05-21 1:56 ` Pieter Wuille
2013-05-21 3:27 ` Mike Hearn
2013-05-21 3:39 ` Robert Backhaus
2013-05-21 13:06 ` Peter Todd
2013-05-21 3:54 ` Gregory Maxwell
2013-05-21 4:39 ` Gavin Andresen
2013-05-21 7:04 ` Gregory Maxwell
2013-05-21 8:08 ` Robert Backhaus
2013-05-21 13:05 ` Peter Todd
2013-05-21 14:26 ` David Vorick
2013-05-21 16:47 ` Quinn Harris
2013-05-21 3:46 ` Quinn Harris [this message]
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