We collect cookies to analyze our website traffic and performance; we never collect any personal data. Cookie Policy
Accept
NEW YORK DAWN™NEW YORK DAWN™NEW YORK DAWN™
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • Trending
  • New York
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Real Estate
  • Crypto & NFTs
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
    • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Fashion
    • Art
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
Reading: How ‘Trustless’ Is Bitcoin, Really?
Share
Font ResizerAa
NEW YORK DAWN™NEW YORK DAWN™
Search
  • Home
  • Trending
  • New York
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Real Estate
  • Crypto & NFTs
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
    • Lifestyle
    • Food
    • Travel
    • Fashion
    • Art
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
Follow US
NEW YORK DAWN™ > Blog > Technology > How ‘Trustless’ Is Bitcoin, Really?
How ‘Trustless’ Is Bitcoin, Really?
Technology

How ‘Trustless’ Is Bitcoin, Really?

Last updated: June 7, 2022 12:51 pm
Editorial Board Published June 7, 2022
Share
SHARE
07 sci bitcoin still facebookJumbo

In the same spirit, he wondered what treasures might be submersed in Bitcoin’s data lake. “We literally have a record of every single transaction,” he said. “These are remarkable economic and sociological data sets. Clearly, there’s a lot of information in there, if you can get at it.”

Getting at it proved nontrivial. Ms. Blackburn was barred from the university’s supercomputing cluster — with her file folder labeled “Bitcoin,” she was suspected of mining the cryptocurrency. “I objected,” she said. She said she tried to convince an administrator that she was conducting research, but “they were completely unmoved.”

A key tactic of Ms. Blackburn’s was to trace patterns in plots of numbers that in theory should have been random and meaningless. In one case, she was chasing the “extranonce,” one piece of the mining puzzle: a short field of 0s and 1s tucked within a longer string that encodes each block, or bundle, of transactions. The extranonce leaked information about a computer’s activity. This led Ms. Blackburn to reconstruct the miners’ behavior: when they were mining, when they stopped and when they started up again. She speculates that the extranonce’s leaky behavior was tolerated because it allowed Bitcoin’s creator to keep an eye on miners; the source code was modified to plug this leak shortly before Satoshi Nakamoto disappeared from the public Bitcoin community in December 2010.

Once Ms. Blackburn had put various toeholds to use — allowing her to erode the identity-masking protections — she began merging addresses, linking nodes on a graph, consolidating the effective population of mining agents. Then she cross-referenced and validated the results with information scraped from Bitcoin discussion forums and blogs. Initially, the catalog of agents who mined most of the Bitcoin tallied a couple of thousand; then it hovered for a while around 200. Ultimately, Hail Mary spit out 64. (Eventually, Hail Mary’s brains were incorporated into the lab’s computer cluster, Voltron.)

The study’s purpose was not to name names; it’s the job of the F.B.I. and the I.R.S. to bust Bitcoin criminals. But the researchers pinpointed the identities of a couple of the top players who were publicly known Bitcoin criminals: Agent No. 19 is Michael Mancil Brown, a.k.a. “Dr. Evil,” who was found guilty of a 2012 fraud and extortion scheme involving Mitt Romney, then a candidate for president. Agent No. 67 is associated with Ross Ulbricht, a.k.a. “DreadPirateRoberts,” creator of the Silk Road. Naturally, Agent No. 1 is Satoshi Nakamoto — whose true identity the researchers did not try to determine.

Mark Gerstein, a professor of bioinformatics at Yale University, found in the research implications for data privacy. He recently stored a genome on a private blockchain, which allowed for a secure and tamperproof record. But he noted that in a public setting, as with Bitcoin’s blockchain, a data set’s size and subtle patterns made it susceptible to breaches, even as the data remained immutable. (Ms. Blackburn wasn’t tampering with the Bitcoin blockchain’s records.)

“That’s the amazing thing about big data,” Dr. Gerstein said. “If you have a big enough data set, it starts to leak information in unexpected ways.” Even more so when data from different sources are connected, he said: “When you combine one data set with another to make a bigger data set, nonobvious linkages can arise.”

You Might Also Like

OpenAI is enhancing its GPT-5 rollout on the fly — right here’s what’s altering in ChatGPT

AI’s promise of alternative masks a actuality of managed displacement

From terabytes to insights: Actual-world AI obervability structure

Anthropic income tied to 2 prospects as AI pricing battle threatens margins

OpenAI returns outdated fashions to ChatGPT as Sam Altman admits ‘bumpy’ GPT-5 rollout

TAGGED:Bitcoin (Currency)Blockchain (Technology)Computers and the InternetCryptography, Codes and CiphersData-Mining and Database MarketingMathematicsSilk Road (Web Site)The Washington MailVirtual Currencyyour-feed-science
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print

Follow US

Find US on Social Medias
FacebookLike
TwitterFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
TelegramFollow
Popular News
Scientific trial exhibits biomarkers maintain clue in treating aggressive prostate most cancers
Health

Scientific trial exhibits biomarkers maintain clue in treating aggressive prostate most cancers

Editorial Board June 1, 2025
Ukraine War’s Latest Victim? The Fight Against Climate Change.
What was the best Disneyland period? We glance again on 70 years on the happiest place on Earth
Artist Jaune Fast-to-See Smith, Who Bore Witness to Native Life, Dies at 85
Samuel L. Jackson and Walter Mosley Team Up for a Sci-Fi Fable

You Might Also Like

OpenAI’s GPT-5 rollout shouldn’t be going easily
Technology

OpenAI’s GPT-5 rollout shouldn’t be going easily

August 8, 2025
OpenAI’s GPT-5 rollout shouldn’t be going easily
Technology

ChatGPT customers dismayed as OpenAI pulls widespread fashions GPT-4o, o3 and extra — enterprise API stays (for now)

August 8, 2025
Black Hat 2025: Why your AI instruments have gotten the following insider menace
Technology

Black Hat 2025: Why your AI instruments have gotten the following insider menace

August 8, 2025
OpenAI launches GPT-5, nano, mini and Professional — not AGI, however able to producing ‘software-on-demand’
Technology

OpenAI launches GPT-5, nano, mini and Professional — not AGI, however able to producing ‘software-on-demand’

August 7, 2025

Categories

  • Health
  • Sports
  • Politics
  • Entertainment
  • Technology
  • World
  • Art

About US

New York Dawn is a proud and integral publication of the Enspirers News Group, embodying the values of journalistic integrity and excellence.
Company
  • About Us
  • Newsroom Policies & Standards
  • Diversity & Inclusion
  • Careers
  • Media & Community Relations
  • Accessibility Statement
Contact Us
  • Contact Us
  • Contact Customer Care
  • Advertise
  • Licensing & Syndication
  • Request a Correction
  • Contact the Newsroom
  • Send a News Tip
  • Report a Vulnerability
Term of Use
  • Digital Products Terms of Sale
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Settings
  • Submissions & Discussion Policy
  • RSS Terms of Service
  • Ad Choices
© 2024 New York Dawn. All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?