- Alan Petrillo Not necessarily impossible, but prohibitively difficult. And that enterprising hacker would have to repeat the process for _each_ PKI he wanted to recover. Another potential exploit is generating a "hard fork" in the blockchain, but that would require the ability to take over more than half of the hashing power of all the miners working on it, which at this point would require an investment of around a Billion dollars in mining equipment, and that investment will only get larger as more miners come on line.
- Jo Van Ekeren I know... when I read that book, partway through I found myself saying "Woah... this is some seriously heavy shit masquerading as a SFF novel".
Of course, this happens EVERY time I read a novel by Charles Stross. Or by Cory Doctorow.
Now
I understand more about /Neptune's Brood/, by Charles Stross.
Especially the thread about virtual currency that runs through it.
Bitcoin's
central technology, the innovation that makes the whole thing work, is
the blockchain. Your "wallet", in which you store your Bitcoin, is not a
file on your computer, or any specific computer anywhere, but rather a
domain in the blockchain, which is stored in a cloud of computers and
kept current through peer-to-peer file sharing. Stored within the
blockchain is a ledger of every Bitcoin ever mined, every wallet ever
made, and every transaction since the Genesis. Each wallet is an
encrypted digital record stored in the blockchain which has two keys, a
public key which everyone can see, and a private key which is held only
by the wallet's owner and is necessary to conduct transactions on that
specific wallet. Everyone with the right software can look at a wallet
and see what's in it, but only the owner of the private key can conduct
transactions on that wallet. If that private key is lost then the
wealth contained in that wallet is lost with it.
Now
consider such a wallet with an amount of wealth in it equivalent to the
gross domestic product of the United States. 67 Trillion 2013
Dollars. Wealth beyond the wildest, wettest dreams of avarice.
Everyone can see the wallet way down in the beginning of the
blockchain. The public key is well known. The origins of that wallet
are lost to the mists of time, and have faded into legend. People have
tried for generations to recover the lost private key, and failed. The
key is thought to be on a computer chip lost in the deepest of the deep
ocean.
Now consider that you think you may have
found the location of that lost computer chip, and you have a chance to
recover it for yourself. Would you risk your life for it?
Would you kill for it?
Would you go to war for it?
This
is why I strongly recommend reading /Neptune's Brood/, by Charles
Stross. It is very, very good stuff. This is why it was a _close_
runner-up for last year's Hugo Award.
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