'Slippery slope' as new Bitcoin mining pool censors transactions

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Blockchain analytics platform BlockSeer has launched the private beta version of a new Bitcoin mining pool that censors transactions from blacklisted wallets.

The pool will use BlockSeer and Walletscore's labeling data among other verified sources, such as the United States Office of Foreign Assets Control blacklist for crypto, to identify BTC transactions it does not wish to process.

The pool also requires all miners to pass Know-Your-Customer protocols.

"The pool is focused on being devoid of transactions from known nefarious wallets which use this medium in ways that continue to sully the reputation of crypto currencies, specifically Bitcoin, in the mainstream as well as to impede widespread adoption".

He speculated that transaction censorship from Bitcoin mining pools may become widespread as a result of regulatory pressure and said the concern was of: "Regulators looking at this and thinking it's a good idea 'for extreme cases like the OFAC crypto list', then it becomes enforceable."

P2pool is a decentralized Bitcoin mining pool that was established in 2011.

The Stratum V2 draft, by Braiins, is a complete overhaul that implements BetterHash, a secondary protocol that enables mining pool constituents to decide the composition of the block they will mine - instead of pools having control over which transactions to include in each block.

Founder of Wallet Scrutiny website Leo Wandersleb suggested the "Slippery slope" of censorship "Will lead to a soft fork" where pools following this approach will reject building "On blocks that don't use their filters."

This slippery slope will lead to a soft for where pools following this approach will reject to build on blocks that don't use their filters.

In August 2019, Bitcoiner Eric Voskuil predicted that government pools will mine at a loss in order to censor, while black market pools will harvest black market fees.

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