Balancing incentives in committee-based blockchains
Journal:
arXiv
Published Date:
May 30, 2025
Abstract
Blockchain protocols incentivize participation through monetary rewards,
assuming rational actors behave honestly to maximize their gains. However,
attackers may attempt to harm others even at personal cost. These denial of
profit attacks aim to reduce the rewards of honest participants, potentially
forcing them out of the system. While existing work has largely focused on the
profitability of attacks, they often neglect the potential harm inflicted on
the victim, which can be significant even when the attacker gains little or
nothing.
This paper introduces a framework to quantify denial of profit attacks by
measuring both attacker cost and victim loss. We model these attacks as a game
and introduce relevant metrics to quantify these attacks. We then focus on
committee-based blockchains and model vote collection as a game. We show that
in the vote collection game, disincentivizing one denial of profit attack will
make another attack more appealing, and therefore, attacks have to be balanced.
We apply our framework to analyze real-world reward mechanisms in Ethereum and
Cosmos. Our framework reveals imbalances in Cosmos that can make correct
behavior suboptimal in practice. While Ethereum provides stronger protections,
our framework shows that it is also not complete, and we propose alternative
parameter settings to improve the balance between attacks. Our findings
highlight the need for better-balanced reward designs to defend against denial
of profit attacks.