Question about Timelords #987
Replies: 2 comments 3 replies
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No, it cannot hijack the blockchain, unless it significantly faster. If the fastest timelord is only slightly faster, it may be able to get a slight benefit from selfish farming (similar to selfish mining in bitcoin). However this requires a massive amount of disk space, on the order of 10% of the total network, and the benefit of rewards they can earn is small. If the fastest timelord is significantly faster, it can perform a 51% attack more effectively. Basically, if for example your attacker's VDF is twice as fast, then they can perform a 51% attack with only 33% of the total network space. Basically, a 51% attack requires less total space. |
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@narendraj9 , since this ticket was opened a number of years ago without further comments it seems this issue has been resolved. The best place to reach our support team is on Discord (https://discord.gg/chia) or by reopening this ticket. |
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Proof of time requires a small period of time to pass between blocks. Proof of time is implemented by a Verifiable Delay Function that takes a certain amount of time to compute, but is very fast to verify. The key idea of a VDF is that they require sequential computation, and since having many parallel machines does not yield any benefit, electricity waste is minimized. There will likely be relatively few VDF servers (“Timelords”), as the fastest one will always finish first and it takes only one fast and fair Timelord on the network to complete a block and move the chain forward.
If the fastest timelord always wins, does it mean it can hijack the blockchain? What is the definition for a fair Timelord in this case? The above is an excerpt from the Chia FAQs.
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