I've been paying attention for a while, and it seems that this time the 51% attack on Monero was successful (thanks to the information from the Black Book group), but the cost was also very high, and in the end, it's uncertain what the economic benefits of doing this are... Now theoretically, the Qubic mining pool can rewrite the blockchain, enabling double spending and reviewing any transaction... Related platforms should be aware of potential threats and stay vigilant.
Charles Guillemet
Charles Guillemet12.8. klo 15.44
Monero appears to be in the midst of a successful 51% attack. The privacy-focused blockchain, launched in 2014 and long targeted by governments and 3-letters agencies, is already banned from most major centralized exchanges. The Qubic mining pool has been amassing hashrate for months and now controls a majority of the network. A major chain reorganization was detected this morning. With its current dominance, Qubic can rewrite the blockchain, enable double-spending, and censor any transaction. Sustaining this attack is estimated to cost $75 million per day. While potentially lucrative, it threatens to destroy confidence in the network almost overnight. Other miners are left with no incentive to continue, as Qubic can simply orphan any competing blocks, effectively becoming the sole miner. In effect, a $300 million market-cap chain is taking over a $6 billion one. Monero’s options for recovery are limited, and a full takeover is now possible and even likely. So far, XMR has dropped only 13%.
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