I have been using crypto since 2017, made plenty of dumb trades which caused me to lose out a lot. Currently my portfolio is about 80% BTC and while the new USA admin seems they may do more damage than good to the crypto space I’m still positive about Bitcoin.

This sub seems like a meme or anti-btc sub mostly. Anybody here who isn’t that way?

  • Sonalder@lemmy.ml
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    1 month ago

    We’ve seen real-world 51% attacks on PoW chains due to mining centralization.

    What chains are you referring too ? Cuz except some SHA-256 mining coins like BCH I can’t remember hearing about that.

    • Sibshops@lemm.ee
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      1 month ago

      Here’s a list of a number of them: https://99bitcoins.com/wiki/51-percent-attack/

      I should note that I’m lumping in security as part of resilience, since being able to recover from problems includes being able to recover from attacks and limiting damage from attacks. If something is not as secure it’s not as resilient, either.

      • Sonalder@lemmy.ml
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        1 month ago

        Thanks for the link, interesting stuff.

        So yes that’s mainly unknown tokens, chains that forks from popular chains. Also 51% of hashrate from a pool doesn’t mean malicious actor to easily do a 51% attacks. While the pool dominance isn’t an ideal situation it’s usually not as bad as some people like to tell.

        But there is no explaination on how PoW is less secure than PoS chains (especially with most tokenomics launch), PoW is indeed a better design to recover from attacks.

        • Sibshops@lemm.ee
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          1 month ago

          Sure, those attacks happened on lesser-known chains like Ethereum Classic and Bitcoin Gold, but doesn’t that actually suggest PoS is more resilient in practice, even if can be argued that it’s weaker in theory?

          In PoS, to extract value or compromise finality, an attacker needs to control 67% of the stake, which has never successfully happened, even on unknown tokens or forks from popular chains. That’s a pretty strong track record for security and resilience.

          • Sonalder@lemmy.ml
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            1 month ago

            The lack of successful 67% attacks on major PoS chains is indeed a positive sign. However, this could also reflect social deterrence, early-stage economics, or insufficient adversarial incentives — not necessarily intrinsic robustness.

            • Liveliness attacks (e.g., preventing finality without conflicting it) can happen with 1/3 of the stake. This happened on Ethereum in 2023.
            • Censorship and delay attacks are feasible with much less than 67% if coordination and MEV strategies are used.

            Anyway my initial argument was that Bitcoin have no interest to move away from its PoW and especially not to transition to PoS. PoW isn’t perfect and has its drawbacks but PoS is not a better system, it’s an alternative with other drawbacks that doesn’t meet every chains needs.

            • Sibshops@lemm.ee
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              1 month ago

              True, I agree that PoS has tradeoffs and isn’t a perfect solution. And I totally understand that Bitcoin has lots of reasons to stick with PoW. I was speaking more generally about resilience and security in PoW vs. PoS.

              I don’t think what happened to Ethereum is a fair comparison, because PoW doesn’t have finality to begin with. When Ethereum temporarily lost finality, it just reverted to a PoW-like model, where finality is probabilistic. It was a degradation, not a catastrophic failure.