ETHPoW team says its miner-led Ethereum fork is ‘inevitable’ PlatoBlockchain Data Intelligence. Vertical Search. Ai.

ETHPoW team says its miner-led Ethereum fork is ‘inevitable’

The team behind ETHPoW today published an open letter claiming its proof-of-work fork of Ethereum was “inevitable.”

ETHPoW is a planned fork of Ethereum. Led by a miner called Chandler Guo, it aims to split away from the Ethereum main network. Guo claims the fork will allow miners to continue their mining operations after Ethereum transitions to a proof-of-stake consensus during what’s called the merge. But it would result in two blockchains, each with their own versions of the protocols and tokens running on the chain.

ETHPoW issued an open letter addressed to ETC Cooperative, the development team behind Ethereum Classic. This came in response to ETC Cooperative’s prior letter addressed to Chandler Guo, discussing the reasons why ETHPoW fork would not succeed and that miners should simply migrate to Ethereum Classic

In the statement, it argued that Ethereum Classic will not accommodate all the existing Ethereum miners. Hence it claimed there’s need for not one but multiple PoW forks.

“The small pool of ETC cannot hold the entire computing power pool of ETH at all. This is a hard fact. In the face of such hard facts, this hard fork is inevitable,” the ETHPoW team said. 

The project also shed light on its preparations. The team said it had removed the “difficulty bomb” feature on its version of the Ethereum code, among many other development changes. 

The difficulty bomb is a mechanism designed by Ethereum core developers to prevent miners from interrupting the merge by making Ethereum blocks harder to mine. By removing this mechanism, ETHPoW is hoping to allow miners to readily produce fresh blocks when its fork takes place. 

In addition, the ETHPoW team provided details on other developments. It said it is planning an ETHPoW testnet where developers can test the fork code before it’s deployed. The team also updated the chain ID, a network identifier used to connect to crypto wallets and claimed to have added protection against replay attacks, a type of network exploit that may occur during blockchain forks.

According to the letter, the ETHPoW would execute the fork in September, potentially around the same time as the merge.

© 2022 The Block Crypto, Inc. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

About Author

Vishal Chawla is a reporter who has covered the ins and outs of the tech industry for more than half a decade. Prior to joining The Block, Vishal worked for media firms like Crypto Briefing, IDG ComputerWorld and CIO.com. Follow him on Twitter @vishal4c.

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