ZmnSCPxj [ARCHIVE] on Nostr: 📅 Original date posted:2023-08-30 🗒️ Summary of this message: Mainchain nodes ...
📅 Original date posted:2023-08-30
🗒️ Summary of this message: Mainchain nodes do not validate sidechain blocks. Sidechain nodes publish attestations to a public network, but if a node is hacked, it could disrupt the network. This could potentially force some nodes to fork off the network, which is dangerous.
📝 Original message:
Good morning Ryan,
> I appreciate your questions, ZmnSCPxj.
>
> I will answer your second question first: Mainchain nodes do not ever validate sidechain blocks. Sidechain nodes watch Bitcoin for invalid withdrawals, and publish signed attestations to a public broadcast network (such as Nostr) that a transaction is making an invalid withdrawal. These sidechain nodes are the so-called sentinels.
Let me reiterate my question:
Suppose I trust some sidechain node that is publishing such an attestation.
Then the sidechain node is hacked or otherwise wishes to disrupt the network for its own purposes.
And it attests that a valid sidechain withdrawal is actually invalid.
What happens then?
To the point, suppose that the attestation private key is somehow leaked or determined by a third party that has incentive to disrupt the mainchain network.
And it seems to me that this can be used to force some number of nodes to fork themselves off the network.
This is dangerous as nodes may be monitoring the blockchain for time-sensitive events, such as Lightning Network theft attempts.
Making "fork off bad miners!" a regular occurrence seems dangerous to me.
Regards,
ZmnSCPxj
🗒️ Summary of this message: Mainchain nodes do not validate sidechain blocks. Sidechain nodes publish attestations to a public network, but if a node is hacked, it could disrupt the network. This could potentially force some nodes to fork off the network, which is dangerous.
📝 Original message:
Good morning Ryan,
> I appreciate your questions, ZmnSCPxj.
>
> I will answer your second question first: Mainchain nodes do not ever validate sidechain blocks. Sidechain nodes watch Bitcoin for invalid withdrawals, and publish signed attestations to a public broadcast network (such as Nostr) that a transaction is making an invalid withdrawal. These sidechain nodes are the so-called sentinels.
Let me reiterate my question:
Suppose I trust some sidechain node that is publishing such an attestation.
Then the sidechain node is hacked or otherwise wishes to disrupt the network for its own purposes.
And it attests that a valid sidechain withdrawal is actually invalid.
What happens then?
To the point, suppose that the attestation private key is somehow leaked or determined by a third party that has incentive to disrupt the mainchain network.
And it seems to me that this can be used to force some number of nodes to fork themselves off the network.
This is dangerous as nodes may be monitoring the blockchain for time-sensitive events, such as Lightning Network theft attempts.
Making "fork off bad miners!" a regular occurrence seems dangerous to me.
Regards,
ZmnSCPxj