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Recycling Hashes from Reversible Bitcoin Mining to Seed Pseudorandom Number Generators

Year of publication

2022

Authors

Heinonen, Henri T.; Semenov, Alexander

Abstract

We analyzed the Bitcoin difficulty data and noticed that the difficulty has been around the level of 1013 for three years (H2 2018–H1 2021). Our calculation showed about 1028 hashes have been generated during bitcoin mining around the world for securing the addition of 703,364 blocks to the Bitcoin blockchain. We introduced a concept of Recycling Hashes in the hope to (a) jump-start bespoke silicon (customized silicon) for reversible computing, (b) open up the possibility of Bitcoin’s Proof-of-Work to be less energy-consuming in the future, (c) provide scientific value or new services, in the form of entropy pool or random numbers, to Internet users while still achieving the security level of Bitcoin of today, (d) decrease the old mining hardware e-waste by using them to recycle hashes to the entropy pool, and (e) solve the problem of low mining rewards. We found that the bit rates of the current irreversible bitcoin miners are millions of times as high as the existing Internet connections, so it would be difficult to send all the hashes generated in real-time via the Internet. Even if only 0.000000355% of the hashes can be recycled, it would still mean that 355⋅1018 hashes (355 EH) would have been recycled since the beginning of Bitcoin. Storing all the hashes, so far, would need storage of 2.560⋅1030 bits, and it is not currently possible to keep all of them. Our simulation of 10,000 bitcoin hashes showed that the occurrences of zeros and ones in bitcoin hashes are almost 50% and 50%, so it is an encouraging finding for seeding the Pseudorandom Number Generators. We also proposed a second coin for the Bitcoin blockchain, an inflationary coin with a different currency unit (BTCi), to motivate the entropy providers to keep the old mining hardware online. The proposed second coin might keep Bitcoin’s security model safe in the future when the deflationary bitcoin (BTC or BTCd) block reward is becoming too low.
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Organizations and authors

Publication type

Publication format

Article

Parent publication type

Conference

Article type

Other article

Audience

Scientific

Peer-reviewed

Peer-Reviewed

MINEDU's publication type classification code

A4 Article in conference proceedings

Open access

Open access in the publisher’s service

No

Self-archived

Yes

Other information

Fields of science

Computer and information sciences

Keywords

[object Object],[object Object]

Publication country

Switzerland

Internationality of the publisher

International

Language

English

International co-publication

Yes

Co-publication with a company

No

DOI

10.1007/978-3-030-96527-3_7

The publication is included in the Ministry of Education and Culture’s Publication data collection

Yes