The Truth About Bitcoin Security: Beyond Hash Power, Law is the Bottom Line
The article "The Truth About Bitcoin Security: Beyond Hash Power, Law is the Bottom Line" by Craig Wright challenges the common narrative that Bitcoin operates outside legal frameworks. It argues that the standard economic model, which assumes anonymous miners and a lawless environment, is outdated and inaccurate for large-scale transactions.
Bitcoin mining is now dominated by industrialized, identifiable entities—large, publicly-listed companies and regulated mining pools—not anonymous actors. For small transactions (e.g., under a few million dollars), pure protocol security (proof-of-work) suffices, as legal action is economically unfeasible. However, for large transactions, legal and organizational mechanisms become critical. A double-spend attack by an identifiable mining pool would trigger legal consequences, including criminal charges, asset seizures, and reputational damage, making such attacks economically irrational.
The mining industry’s structure—reliant on specialized ASICs, long-term capital investments, and relationships with regulated entities—creates inherent disincentives for attacks. Mining pools would face capital destruction, contributor defection, and legal sanctions if they attempted fraud. Thus, Bitcoin’s security is not solely based on computational cost but also on legal accountability and economic deterrence.
The conclusion is that Bitcoin’s security relies on a dual mechanism: protocol-level security for small transactions and legal-institutional security for large ones. Law and protocol are complementary, not opposing forces. The evolution of Bitcoin’s mining industry has naturally embedded it within legal frameworks, making it more secure and robust than purely "lawless" models suggest.
marsbit29 мин. назад