Hijacking Bitcoin: Routing Attacks on Cryptocurrencies
Title | Hijacking Bitcoin: Routing Attacks on Cryptocurrencies |
Publication Type | Conference Paper |
Year of Publication | 2017 |
Authors | Apostolaki, M., Zohar, A., Vanbever, L. |
Conference Name | 2017 IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy (SP) |
ISBN Number | 978-1-5090-5533-3 |
Keywords | ASes, authorisation, autonomous systems, BGP, BGP hijack, BGP hijacks, BGP routing data, bitcoin, Bitcoin hijacking, bitcoin security, Bitcoin topology, Bitcoin traffic manipulation, Computer crime, cryptocurrencies, cryptocurrency, cryptography, data mining, delays, electronic money, Human Behavior, human factor, human factors, Internet, Internet routing infrastructure, IP networks, mining pools, P2P networks, Peer-to-peer computing, pubcrawl, Routing, routing advertisements, routing attacks, routing manipulation, Routing protocols, Scalability, telecommunication network routing |
Abstract | As the most successful cryptocurrency to date, Bitcoin constitutes a target of choice for attackers. While many attack vectors have already been uncovered, one important vector has been left out though: attacking the currency via the Internet routing infrastructure itself. Indeed, by manipulating routing advertisements (BGP hijacks) or by naturally intercepting traffic, Autonomous Systems (ASes) can intercept and manipulate a large fraction of Bitcoin traffic. This paper presents the first taxonomy of routing attacks and their impact on Bitcoin, considering both small-scale attacks, targeting individual nodes, and large-scale attacks, targeting the network as a whole. While challenging, we show that two key properties make routing attacks practical: (i) the efficiency of routing manipulation; and (ii) the significant centralization of Bitcoin in terms of mining and routing. Specifically, we find that any network attacker can hijack few (\textbackslashtextless;100) BGP prefixes to isolate 50% of the mining power-even when considering that mining pools are heavily multi-homed. We also show that on-path network attackers can considerably slow down block propagation by interfering with few key Bitcoin messages. We demonstrate the feasibility of each attack against the deployed Bitcoin software. We also quantify their effectiveness on the current Bitcoin topology using data collected from a Bitcoin supernode combined with BGP routing data. The potential damage to Bitcoin is worrying. By isolating parts of the network or delaying block propagation, attackers can cause a significant amount of mining power to be wasted, leading to revenue losses and enabling a wide range of exploits such as double spending. To prevent such effects in practice, we provide both short and long-term countermeasures, some of which can be deployed immediately. |
URL | https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/7958588 |
DOI | 10.1109/SP.2017.29 |
Citation Key | apostolaki_hijacking_2017 |
- Peer-to-peer computing
- Human behavior
- human factor
- Human Factors
- internet
- Internet routing infrastructure
- IP networks
- mining pools
- P2P networks
- electronic money
- pubcrawl
- Routing
- routing advertisements
- routing attacks
- routing manipulation
- Routing protocols
- Scalability
- telecommunication network routing
- bitcoin security
- authorisation
- autonomous systems
- BGP
- BGP hijack
- BGP hijacks
- BGP routing data
- bitcoin
- Bitcoin hijacking
- ASes
- Bitcoin topology
- Bitcoin traffic manipulation
- Computer crime
- cryptocurrencies
- cryptocurrency
- Cryptography
- Data mining
- delays