Flood attack: Difference between revisions
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Created page with "A '''flood attack''' is the process of sending thousands of transactions to "flood" the mempool, filling new blocks to the maximum size of 1MB, and subsequently delaying o..." |
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A '''flood attack''' is the process of sending thousands of transactions to "flood" the mempool, filling new [[block]]s to the maximum size of 1MB, and subsequently delaying other transactions. It is easy to send transactions to yourself repeatedly, but it is made expensive with [[transaction fee]]s. An attacker will eventually run out of money. Even if an attacker wants to waste money, transactions are further prioritized by the time since the coins were last spent, so attacks spending the same coins repeatedly are less effective. | A '''flood attack''' is the process of sending thousands of transactions to "flood" the mempool, filling new [[block]]s to the maximum size of 1MB, and subsequently delaying other transactions. It is easy to send transactions to yourself repeatedly, but it is made expensive with [[transaction fee]]s. An attacker will eventually run out of money. Even if an attacker wants to waste money, transactions are further prioritized by the time since the coins were last spent, so attacks spending the same coins repeatedly are less effective. | ||
Large or distributed flood attacks can fill blocks for days on end, possibly campaigning for [[blocksize debate|raising the blocksize limit]]. | |||
[[Category:Technical]] | |||
[[Category:Attack vectors]] |
Latest revision as of 16:36, 8 July 2015
A flood attack is the process of sending thousands of transactions to "flood" the mempool, filling new blocks to the maximum size of 1MB, and subsequently delaying other transactions. It is easy to send transactions to yourself repeatedly, but it is made expensive with transaction fees. An attacker will eventually run out of money. Even if an attacker wants to waste money, transactions are further prioritized by the time since the coins were last spent, so attacks spending the same coins repeatedly are less effective.
Large or distributed flood attacks can fill blocks for days on end, possibly campaigning for raising the blocksize limit.