Thursday, July 21, 2016

Washington State Utility Raises Power Rates on Bitcoin Miners

A Washington State utility is raising rates on bitcoin miners, months after a dispute with the local industry began over its power usage.
The Chelan County Public Utility District (PUD) announced earlier this week that, effective January 2017, electrical rates will rise for so-called "high-density load customers", or those that use 250 kilowatt hours per square foot per year. The definition, as stated by the PUD, is intended specifically to cover server farms and bitcoin mines, or data centers that specifically service network transactions.
The increase won't be immediately felt by the region’s bitcoin miners, however, as the PUD said that a five-year transition period is being initiated for existing customers who can show they’ve made "substantial investment" and meet additional criteria.
The process dates back several years, to when the industrial bitcoin mining boom began. At the time, several firms sought to establish a presence in the hydroelectric power-rich Chelan County. A reported influx of phone calls and on-site visits by prospective bitcoin miners prompted PUD officials to put a moratorium on new high-density load customers in late 2014.
Bitcoin miners run high-powered machinery in a race to discover the next block of transactions, a process for which they earn rewards from the network. Cheaper power means more profitability for miners, and some of the least expensive electricity can be found in Washington State, particularly in places like Chelan.
PUD representatives said in statements that they believe the rate increase is a fair one, resulting from months of discussion between utility officials and members of the public.
"There was a lot of individual and collective effort involved in bringing this proposal forward, and I think it's a good product," Commissioner Dennis Bolz said in a statement.
It’s not yet clear how bitcoin miners in the region are taking the news. Phone calls to miners in Chelan County were not immediately returned.
In interviews with CoinDesk earlier this year, miners working both in Chelan and in nearby counties criticized the planned rate increase harshly, with at least one suggesting that the move could put them out of business.

Credit - coindesk.com

Central Bankers: If You Can’t Beat Bitcoin, Print it and Control it

Ahead of a session of key cryptocurrency experts in the UK witnessing before the Economic Affairs Committee of the Parliament on Tuesday July 19 to explore blockchain technology, theBank of England has released a research paper that studied the macroeconomic consequences of issuing central bank digital currency (CBDC).
“I don’t see how banks could compete,” said Peter Stella, former central-banking head of the International Monetary Fund and director of Stellar Consulting LLC.
The Wall Street Journal suggests that a central-bank-issued bitcoin would be a “means for policy makers to completely control the amount of money in the economy, much like full-reserve banking.”
Is that really so? Let’s take a closer look at the Bank of England proposals.

Central bank issued digital currencies

Using a dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) model calibrated to match the pre-crisis United States, the Staff Working Paper No. 605: The macroeconomics of central bank issued digital currencies finds that issuing a CBDC of 30% of GDP, against government bonds, could permanently raise GDP by as much as 3%, due to reductions in real interest rates, distortionary taxes, and monetary transaction costs.
Issued on Monday July 18, the paper by John Barrdear and Michael Kumhof studied the macroeconomic consequences of a central bank granting universal, electronic, 24x7, national-currency-denominated and interest-bearing access to its balance sheet via the issuance of a CBDC.
The paper says:
“Our analysis suggests that the only conditions needed to secure these gains are that a sufficiently large stock of CBDC is issued in steady state, and that the issuance mechanism for CBDC ensures that the central bank only trades CBDC against government debt instruments.”

Structural issues

A broader and qualitative analysis of the pros and cons of a CBDC regime by the researchers distinguished between structural issues, price and output stability issues and financial stability issues.
In the structural issues, they looked at risk and the level of interest rates; CBDC stock issuance arrangements, balance sheets, and real economic outcomes; CBDC flow issuance arrangements, fiscal policy, and real economic outcomes; reduced cost of providing transaction services; competition in payment services; competition in accounts services; final settlement and collateral; and time of operation.
In summary, they concluded on the basis of the preliminary discussion that it seems safe to assume that the implementation of a CBDC system would be a net positive for the steady-state economy, through the alleviation of a number of frictions.

Price and output stability issues

They looked at a second policy instrument. The zero lower bound on nominal policy interest rates; increasing interdependence of monetary and fiscal policies; and more and more timely, data under price and output stability issues.
The researchers, again, say it seems safe to assume that the implementation of a CBDC system would be a net positive for price and output stability, through the availability of a second monetary policy instrument that complements the policy rate.

Financial stability issues

In the financial stability issues,  they looked at transition risks; the risk of a run from bank deposits to CBDC; the potential partial removal of Too Big To Fail concerns; the resiliency of the payment system; and the provision of more data on interconnectedness, and
The paper concludes:
“There is one very clear financial stability risk, that of mismanaging the transition to a new and as yet untested monetary and financial environment. Mainly for this reason, policymakers would clearly have to carry out a very careful due diligence before deciding on the transition to a CBDC regime. But if that due diligence found the transition risks to be manageable, a CBDC regime could be considered a serious option, given the many other sizeable benefits of CBDC identified in this paper.”

Is it a good idea after all?

Jon Sindreu of the Wall Street Journal is rather pessimistic about the whole idea, as it has long appeared false. First of all, since central banks started bond-buying programs in 2008 the amount of central-bank money has exploded, but no inflation has materialized.
Secondly, experiments to control the quantity of money in the 1980s, also ended in failure. And finally, the point of a digital currency is that it’s money without government.
Marco Streng, chief executive at Genesis Mining, says to WSJ:
“The key benefit is decentralization. The best scenario is where people would not necessarily need to trust the government, they would just need to trust the blockchain.”


Credit -  cointelegraph.com

Wednesday, July 20, 2016

UK Legislators Cast Critical Eye on Bitcoin and Blockchain at Parliament Event

A committee of the UK House of Lords, the upper chamber of Parliament, struck a curious and at times critical tone when discussing blockchain technology and its impact on finance and government.
During an afternoon hearing of the The Economic Affairs Committee, members heard from academics and representatives of the blockchain industry, as well as Ben Broadbent, the deputy governor for monetary policy of the Bank of England. Lasting about three hours, the hearing demonstrated a mixture of genuine interest and skepticism on the part of committee members.
It was the first major committee discussion of the technology within Parliament, and follows a period of growing interest within the UK government to pursue possible applications.
In addition to Broadbent, witnesses who spoke included Digital Asset Holdings CEO Blythe Masters (who spoke via phone); 11:FS co-founder and director of blockchain Simon Taylor; Imperial College Centre for Cryptocurrency Research associate director Dr Catherine Mulligan; Gresham College professor of commerce Michael Mainelli; and PwC transformation and assurance director Lord Spens.
During his appearance, Broadbent discussed both the concept of a central bank issued digital currency – which he indicated is an evolving, years-long process – as well as the technology’s broader impact on financial markets.
Broadbent went on to frame the conversation about blockchain within a broader question of how financial markets should be structured at all, telling committee members:
"When you think of things on these scales, the benefits are clear and quite large, and so are the costs. And what I was really trying to say is, even though this is a very new technology, I think it's possible, once you think through, to realize that some of the big questions involved are very old, not to say ancient."

On bitcoin

Committee members asked a number of questions about bitcoin, though at times the digital currency was branded as "anonymous" (bitcoin is by design a pseudonymous system).
The topic came up when one member asked how the Bank of England would operate a central-bank issued digital currency.
Broadbent dismissed the idea that the Bank of England would use a similar model, indicating that any network, if it came to fruition, would be a permissioned one.
"We would never have a system like that," he said.
He elaborated on this point during the hearing, suggesting that market participants wouldn't want an open, permissionless system when asked whether financial institutions might use a bitcoin-like system to escape regulatory scrutiny Further, he indicated that financial system players would prefer one that includes oversight from regulators.
"I don't think that's what we would be most worried about, because I think people would want us involved," he added.

Doubts raised about welfare trial

One notable moment in the hearing came during the second of three sessions, when the topic of a welfare payments proof-of-concept developed for the UK government’s Department of Works and Pensions was criticized by some members as ethically unsound.
Committee member and former UK chancellor Alistair Darling was vocally critical of the move, echoing past concerns raised by privacy advocates in the country.
"It does raise an ethical issue as to whether the state should know if someone is spending money on one thing or another," he said.
In the back-and-forth that followed, Mulligan suggested that, according to her best knowledge, the proof-of-concept calls for an opt-in approach that wouldn’t require such oversight. That said, she conceded that there are privacy concerns that need to be worked through before such a system becomes production-ready.
Mulligan told the committee:
"There are, really, a number of profound issues that need to be looked at from a regulatory perspective, and also these kind of moral and ethical questions, it raises them, very large questions for our society if we wish to use these technologies."


Credit - www.coindesk.com 

Russian Regulator Intends to Allow Bitcoin Buying and Selling Abroad

An official from Russia’s Ministry of Finance has indicated the financial regulator now supports changes to a proposed law that would still ban bitcoin domestically but carve out provisions for its use as a foreign currency.
In a new interview with state-owned newspaperRossiyskaya Gazeta, deputy finance minister Alexei Moiseev said the change in tone is part of a broader effort to limit the use of alternatives to the ruble domestically, while removing uncertainty for those working with blockchain, its underlying distributed ledger technology.
The announcement represents a significant change in tone for the organization, which has long pressed forward on a bill to ban digital currencies, as well as impose criminal penalties on their users, despite more favorable remarks from the Russian central bank.
According to the interview, the Ministry of Finance continues to support a ban on the use of bitcoin in Russia, a move it believes is supported by its Constitution, which mandates the ruble be the sole currency in use for national commerce.
Still, Moiseev suggested his agency will seek to adjust the law to allow citizens to use bitcoin, and even profit from using bitcoin as a "foreign currency" in areas where such activities are legal.
Moiseev said:
"Can Russian citizens have a wallet and pay bitcoins in those countries where it is allowed? Why not? Therefore, we are formulating the law in such a way in order to allow buying cryptocurrencies for foreign operations and allow Russian citizens to sell bitcoins for profit reasons in foreign countries."
Moiseev also clarified that, at present, there is nothing preventing the use of bitcoin domestically, and that the intent isn’t to limit development of blockchain technology, but prevent its use from threatening the ruble.
"We must remove responsibility for bitcoin emission from data operators in order to avoid risk of their punishment," Moiseev told the news source.
He said an updated version of the law could be submitted to the state law-making body, the Duma, before the end of 2016.


Credit - www.coindesk.com

Sunday, July 17, 2016

Why Bitcoin's Halving Was a Boring Vindication



An event anticipated in the bitcoin community for years came and went last week with little fanfare and, a week later, little impact.
At approximately 12:48 EST, the 420,000th block on the bitcoin blockchain was mined and sealed by F2Pool, one of the largest bitcoin pools, earning its members 12.5 BTC. This marked the second halving, and the first time a miner would receive the reduced subsidy.
Programmed into bitcoin's code, a halving event is when the subsidy for miners securing the network is cut in half. When bitcoin creator Satoshi Nakamoto first released bitcoin, miners earned 50 BTC per sealed block. Three-and-a-half years later, or 210,000 sealed blocks, that reward was automatically cut in half.
This cut in the subsidy is bitcoin's way of controlling the total supply of currency that will ever be released. When the last bitcoin is released in 2140, there will be a total of 21m total bitcoin in the market, though many will not be in circulation due to loss.
Heading into the event, there were predictions on what would happen, with some speculating that the price would drop immediately after to others suggesting worst-case scenarios.
But what has become clear, at least in the first week after halving, is that halving was just another day for bitcoin.

Price unaffected

One of the primary expectations leading up to halving was that the price would drop due to an expected rumor-and-event cycle, whereby traders would accumulate the asset, riding the excitement up until the actual halving took place, at which point they would exit positions.
Petar Zivkovski, the director of operations at WhaleClub, for example, predicted that the smart money – institutions, professional traders, and other knowledgeable bitcoin traders – would sell their bitcoin holdings at the event.
The day before halving, the price of bitcoin dropped by close to 10%, from $674 to $618, according to CoinDesk’s USD Bitcoin Price Index (BPI). While slightly premature to the actual event, this could have been a sign of that event-based selling.
Yet, since the halving, the price has been in a tight trading pattern between $637 and $673 per bitcoin, or 5% fluctuations.
One possible explanation is that the smart money believes the price of bitcoin is going to go even higher, and that the new supply to the market is being bought, offsetting any sales by the smart money.
Terrence Thurber, founder of Oregon Mines, originally told CoinDesk that he believed the price could reach as high as $900, double the $445 bitcoin had been hovering around prior to the massive run-up in June.
He said:
“The price of bitcoin after the halving would normally be expected to rise as decreasing supply meets increasing demand.”

If 25 BTC is being released into the market every 10 minutes at $660 per bitcoin and the price stays constant, the demand is also 25 BTC every 10 minutes. If the price continues to stay relatively constant after halving, with the number dropped to 12.5 BTC, miners were either not selling all of their coins when they were receiving 25 BTC, or the smart money is selling, offsetting the cut in new supply.
A similar behavior occurred when bitcoin last halved on 28th November, 2012, when the price was $12.35. The price increased by approximately a $1 over the next month, a relative calm despite the predictable nature of the approaching halving. However, by January, the price was beginning to increase until it peaked at approximately $230 on 9th April.
While the price of bitcoin is always in flux, the immediate response to halving was for the price to stay relatively stagnant.

Hashrate stays contact

While price proved stable, bitcoin miners were more immediately impacted.
When Antpool sealed the 419,999th block, it received a 25 BTC subsidy, valued at approximately $16,250 at the time of the block. Only a few minutes later, when F2Pool sealed the 420,000th block, it earned 12.5 BTC, valued at approximately $8,125.
Miners effectively saw their revenue cut in half, which was to be expected. But the anticipated outcome was for the hashrate to drop significantly as well. And while it did drop, from 1,600 petahash/second to a little under 1,400 petahash/second, this is well within the fluctuation of hashing power over the past few months.
Marco Streng, CEO of Genesis Mining, told CoinDesk that efficiency is what matters for bitcoin mining.
He explained:
"For us, the halving didn't surprise us at all. We were prepared for that event to happen. The most important rule for mining is still: 'If you are the most efficient miner you will be able to continue mining while others need to step out leaving you a bigger share of the pie.'"

Further, even with a revenue drop from $16,250 to $8,125, revenues were still nowhere near as bad as they had once been when the price of bitcoin hovered in the range of $200-$300 through much of 2015.
According to data collected from Blockchain.info, revenue from mining was lower than today’s levels from January 2015 to November 2015, with some periods where it rose above today’s daily revenue of $1.07m. During that time, bitcoin's hashrate continued to increase from approximately 300 PH/s to 500 PH/s in the same time period.
But, mining has evolved considerably since that time.
At the start of 2015, miners were still deploying 28nm chips, such as what was found in Bitmain’s Antminer S3, which provided approximately 450GH/s of hashing power per device. Today, Bitmain has its S9, which provides 14TH/s of hashing power per device.
Point being, the hardware that miners use today is far more efficient than it has ever been before, making it possible for miners to earn a return on investment even when revenue gets cut in half.
Eric Mu, CMO at HaoBTC, a mining firm with 5.5% of the hashrate, explained that the vast majority of the cost for the miner was in the actual hardware. Now that they own that, so long as the electricity is cheap, profits can continue to be made.
Ultimately, any miner that was able to survive earning between $5,000 to $7,500 per sealed block (when bitcoin traded in the $200-$300 range) back in 2015, earning $8,125 is still better. For those that couldn’t stomach revenues that low, they likely dropped off back in 2015.

Bitcoin survived

Bitcoin has now experienced two halving events, which, theoretically, should have had a jolting effect on the network and price.
However, what both events showed is that, for the most part, a halving can be pretty boring. While miners are affected, at today’s prices, there doesn’t appear to be an exodus any greater than what the network shows each month.
Segregated witness, an improvement to the code that will solve transaction malleability and open the door to technology like Lightning Network, is still on its way. Companies like OpenBazaarcontinue to roll out what could be among the first promising consumer apps.
Further, new financial products, like the ETFs proposed by SolidX and the Winklevoss Twinscontinue to seek regulatory approval. And ultimately, bitcoin continues forward.
While the halving event was an especially boring day for bitcoin, it showed, again, that it continues its journey from a risky experiment to real-world tool.
Tiny trophy image via Shutterstock

Credit - www.coindesk.com

Saturday, July 16, 2016

China’s Constant Bubbles Drive Investors to Bitcoin in Droves

Chinese Investors Moving into Bitcoin

Investors in China are bouncing from one asset to the next hoping to maximize returns, which is nothing uncommon for Chinese investors. This time, however, growing chinese investorsconcerns about ongoing devaluation of the Chinese yuan has led investors to pick up bitcoin, and the next time the yuan is weakened, or another bubble pops, the bitcoin bull run could reach a record level.
There’s already been considerable movement this year. Since the end of 2015, bitcoin’s value in yuan has increased 50 percent to approximately 4,300 yuan, or $642 USD, from a level of roughly 2,800 yuan.

Bitcoin-Friendly Monetary Policy

At a roundtable discussion last week, Chinese President Xi Jinping emphasized that his administration will “continue its aggressive fiscal policy and moderate monetary policy to expand demand adequately.”president
This is the same accommodative monetary policy that has allowed the bitcoin market in China to thrive. Bitcoin trading in China currently accounts for 40 percent of global bitcoin investment, and makes up 80 percent of the transactions recorded on the blockchain.
An official at BTC Trade, one of the largest Chinese bitcoin exchanges by volume, shed some light on the further reasons for bitcoin’s popularity in the country:
“SOME CUSTOMERS USE BITCOINS TO TRANSFER MONEY ABROAD, WHILE OTHERS DO SO FOR SPECULATIVE INVESTMENT.”

Bitcoin Safe for Now

Investors who have moved into bitcoin are not likely to move their money out unless market conditions change, making the digital currency less attractive. For example, new government regulations could restrict bitcoin trading. However, the Chinese government has been forthcoming about its regulations so far, and Chinese bitcoin investors feel safer than ever before, at least for now.

Ongoing Chinese Bubble Problems

China’s bubble problems, which began around the year 2000, are nothing if not persistent. Some have noticed that it has become the standard way of life for all Chinese to live this way, chasing bubble after bubble with any money they have left over at the end of the month. 2007 was the year of their largest stock market bubble, which was followed by a 4 trillion yuan stimulus package in 2008 in response to the global financial crisis.bubble
The Chinese people responded by flooding to buy condominiums in coastal cities such as Beijing and Shanghai. When the government imposed restrictions on the number of condo purchases, they flocked to wealth management products instead.
Then in 2014, regulations became stricter for these products too, creating significant concerns about high-interest investments that drove investors to the “shadow banking industry,” and many subsequently moved their money back to the stock market.
However, after the stock market peak in June of last year, share prices have plunged once more, and investors sought better returns in online finance, commodity futures, and property markets. Bitcoin has soared during this time, and the property bubble has spread to more major cities. At least for now, this appears to be a self-enforcing, positive-feedback loop that could take bitcoin to new heights.

Credit - https://news.bitcoin.com

The DAO Crisis: Or How Vigilantism and Blockchain Democracy Became the Best Hope for Burned Investors




Christoph Jentzsch wrote the first lines of code for what would eventually become The DAO in the summer of 2015, he says, on a plane trip from the US to Germany.
The software, originally intended as a crowdfunding contract, evolved into the first large-scale ethereum-based project, quickly raising $150m worth of ether from investors to be distributed to other projects on the platform. However, the meteoric rise was met with an equal and opposite fall, as a still-anonymous hacker or hackers exploited a vulnerability in the code and confiscated tens of millions of dollars in cryptocurrency (estimates suggest around $60m at the time of the event).
That value now sits in what are called child DAOs, or 'Dark DAOs', where funds remain frozen to this day, under the control of unknown entities. At issue, is that on 27th July, per the rules of The DAO's original contract, this will change, and the perpetrator or perpetrators of the theft will be able to withdraw the drained funds.
Complicating matters is that unlike traditional corporations Jetzsch’s open-source codebase was written on the ethereum blockchain and free for anyone to use. No one has ever publicly claimed responsibility for the launch of this particular DAO that has come to be known simply as "The DAO", and no single person or group exists with the explicit authority or mandate to rectify the situation.
This means the task of cleaning up the mess has fallen largely to altruistic community members. Initially, two solutions were considered, though this has become more complex in recent weeks.
A soft fork that would have resulted in the blacklisting of the Dark DAO was discarded last month after a vulnerability was exposed. Still on the table is a hard fork that would roll back the blockchain and restart the distributed ledger with the funds in question in a new smart contract.
This new contract is being designed so it can’t do anything except let the original cryptocurrency owners withdraw their funds.
But any changes to the organization's code must be agreed upon by consensus from the members. This means addressing the nearly $60m worth of drained ether is not only a matter of financial urgency for the 23,000 addresses who bought voting rights, but an exercise in problem solving in a totally new technology's experimental form of governance.

The lay of the land

Within the decentralized community, there remains disagreement on the path forward, a factor that has given rise to vigilante efforts, most notably the mysterious Robin Hood group.
This group of coders, whose identities are largely unknown as a matter of security, has prepared a two-prong maneuver – or white-hat attack – against the Dark DAO exploiters.
The measure is a safety net of sorts, in case the hard fork, now the only option developers have to regain the funds, fails in any way.
At stake in this epic computer battle between white hats and Dark DAOs is more than investor funds, but potentially the future of a new business model without leaders.
Some, including Jentzsch, are now worried that, should efforts by the community to resolve the situation be unsuccessful, government authorities will step in.
"Right now there is no discussion going on with regulators. I hope this is one reason for the hard fork," said Jentzsch, adding:
"If you do a refund through the hard fork there will be less problems."
The co-founder of Slock.it, the startup that published code used in the creation of The DAO, Jentzsch told CoinDesk he has not yet been contacted by any regulatory body.
However, there’s already indications that at least the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), which is responsible for overseeing the nation's securities laws, is paying attention.

Consensus amidst crisis

Last month, the deputy director of the SEC’s trading and markets division, Gary Goldsholle, pointed to the hack as illustrative of his concerns over consumer protection in similar instances in the future, according to a Wall Street Journal report.
To minimize the negative impact the hack might have on those consumers, Jentzsch said a series of measures have been organized within the community.
Informal conversations behind the scenes have occurred in person, on the phone and in writing, and impromptu groups have formed online in places like Reddit, DAOHub, a community website for the project, and on Twitter and other social media outlets.
The goal of all this conversing is to reach consensus, which it turns out is much more difficult to do than the ideal frequently depicted by cryptographers in the industry.
In this instance, consensus means either agreeing that a hard fork should take place, setting back the Dark DAO transactions to a their state prior to the hack, or that nothing should be done, leaving those who invested to learn a tough lesson.
It is the latter option that Jentzsch is concerned might lead to regulatory action. What will likely happen – and what has already taken place to some degree – are so-called coin-votes cast by anyone who sends ether to an address that stands as either a yes or no vote.
For example, one simple coin vote hosted at carbonvote.com last week asked ether owners to vote by sending units of the digital currency to addresses representing their view on whether a hard fork should be implemented. The ethereum address for a "Yes" vote has received 83% of the vote.
In a more complicated coin-voting proposal, voters would be asked to "lock" ether for a pre-determined time, and the more funds they lock, the more strongly the vote is considered.

Choosing a fork

In an effort to reach consensus, Slock.it has published its code for a proposed hard fork solution and solicited community feedback.
According to the proposal, the funds from Dark DAO would be moved into a newly created smart contract designed to let the original ether owners withdraw them. Slock.it also forwarded the code to clients including gethparitycpp-ethereum and pyeth for review.
At some point in time, the miners that verify transactions on the ethereum blockchain will get involved by either endorsing, or not endorsing the proposed changes.
Though little is certain in this new leaderless business model, there are clues as to what might happen next. In the days leading up to the previously mentioned, failed soft fork proposal, miner activation was tracked at this link on Etherchain.
Ethereum developer Vlad Zamfir told CoinDesk that he believes a "similar miner voting process" will likely take place leading up to the hard fork.
According to Zamfir, other hard fork proposals with different solutions are also expected.
"It is likely that the hard fork code will not be exactly as described in Slock.it'st," he said.

Vigilante efforts

If all of these efforts come to naught and the ethereum hard fork isn’t implemented a group of coders including at least one from within Slock.it is preparing what Jentzsch describes as a "safety net" solution.
The self-described Robin Hood group, whose public face has been Slock.it’s lead technical engineer Lefteris Karapetsas, has proposed steps that could be implemented if all else fails.
On 4th July Karapetsas, the second most frequent contributor of 16 authors of the original DAO code, published two proposals designed to set the stage for a hacker duel if the hard fork fails.
In interview with CoinDesk, Karapetsas explained that some of the Robin Hood group’s plans are being kept secret to avoid sharing too much of their strategy.
The first proposed measure was to move the funds from an extra-balance account back to the original DAO, followed by another measure for the purchase of tokens in the dark DAO to be used – somehow – to prevent the attacker from withdrawing the drained funds.
But, the details of the effort are a closely held secret.
"The DAO attacker can either fight us or he can just do nothing. Keep in mind that there are multiple Dark DAOs and the Robin Hood group tries to tackle as many of them as possible," Karapetsas said.
"In some of the Dark DAOs we are in a much better position and in some of them in not such a good position."
In addition to smaller Dark DAOs, a so-called "white hat" hack was implemented by the Robin Hood group and investors to move the remaining funds to an account they control.
The measures advocated by Karapetsas were passed with unanimous acceptance, meaning that two other proposals also submitted at the same time do not need to be implemented. But the support without a single "no" vote should perhaps be taken with a grain of salt.

Damage control

So extreme are the actions that could be required to rescue The DAO that there are concerns from a prominent academic that informal voting efforts are not primed for success.
For example, the proposals, like all measures submitted to The DAO, are subject to a "yes" bias, according to Cornell University professor Emin Gün Sirer.
Sirer told CoinDesk that because people who vote "no" on any proposal temporarily lose access to their funds they are dis-incentivized to vote at all. The result is that the perception of support for the Robin Hood effort may not accurately reflect an actual consensus.
In more than just this instance, Gün Sirer has been an outspoken critic of the way the Slock.it team has handled The DAO, from the initial creation of the code, which he describes as inadequately vetted, through to the launch. Last month, he even went so far as to call for the ethereum community to ostracize Slock.it’s founders.
But when it comes to questions of whether Ethereum should hard fork to protect the interests of The DAO investors Gün Sirer finds himself in rare agreement with the leadership at Slock.it, even if his support only goes so far in a distributed community.
He told CoinDesk:
"Everybody who bought into The DAO with substantial cash wants a hard fork. People who have no conflict of interest with the DAO, like myself, want to see a hard fork. The Slock.it folks will be sued no matter what but they want to follow the path with least legal responsibility."
Information war image via Shutterstock

Credit - www.coindesk.com