Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Technology

Terraform Restarts Blockchain Behind UST Stablecoin, Luna (bloomberg.com) 33

Terraform Labs restarted the Terra blockchain following a software update to help avoid attacks against the network in the wake of the collapse of its algorithmic stablecoin and the related Luna token that had roiled cryptocurrency markets. From a report: The fix is designed to help avoid so-called governance attacks against its protocol -- a way of manipulating the fundamentals of a given blockchain by acquiring enough tokens to force a majority vote. Following the patch's release, Terra said earlier that the network would go live again once two-thirds of the voting power belonging to validators came online to finalize the update. In previous outages for blockchain networks like Solana, this process has taken several hours to complete as validators can reside across multiple time zones.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Terraform Restarts Blockchain Behind UST Stablecoin, Luna

Comments Filter:
  • Again? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Torodung ( 31985 ) on Thursday May 12, 2022 @02:40PM (#62526942) Journal

    Can we count how many times crypto is mentioned a day here?

    Can we limit it to once or twice?

    Please?

    This used to be news for nerds. Now it's news for crypto bros.

    • Pure comedy. (Score:5, Informative)

      by Fly Swatter ( 30498 ) on Thursday May 12, 2022 @02:55PM (#62526992) Homepage
      But the antics are comedy gold! So long as you are not invested this is very funny to watch.

      Imagine if ten years ago you said 'money would be like apps, there will be frequent bug fixes and complete reboots'. Everyone would think you were a clown, now the clown money apps are-a-multiplyin.
    • by leonbev ( 111395 )

      Slashdot seems to post whatever flamebait is popular at the time to generate discussion.

      Crypto has always been a hot topic over the past few years, just like anything regarding COVID mandates.

      • > Slashdot seems to post whatever flamebait is popular at the time to generate discussion.

        A complaint click sells ads. The complainers make the stories profitable.

        That said, it's way past time for crypto.slashdot.org and fixing the ignore sections preferences. I'd still read the crypto stories but it would be nice to have less complainers in the comments.

    • by GoTeam ( 5042081 )
      We have a "technology" section on slashdot, couldn't they just add a "crypto" section? I'd be cool with that.
    • Re:Again? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by NoMoreDupes ( 8410441 ) on Thursday May 12, 2022 @03:12PM (#62527048)

      This used to be news for nerds. Now it's news for crypto bros.

      Looks like I was right.. [slashdot.org]

      It never fails: anytime you see a slew of crypto stories on /., it's because they're trying to get it propped up again, after losing value recently.

    • This used to be news for nerds. Now it's news for crypto bros.

      Slashdot relies on submissions. Submit news you think is better and Slashdot will run those stories. The fact is the biggest stories in tech right now is the insanity around the so called stable coin.

      If you want to ignore reality you can always tune out for a couple of days, like we all do around April 1st.

  • by Computershack ( 1143409 ) on Thursday May 12, 2022 @02:41PM (#62526944)
    Whats gone on over the past couple of years in crypto with seemingly increasing intensity doesn't exactly fill one with confidence that this is something you should really put anything into.
  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Thursday May 12, 2022 @02:42PM (#62526948)

    Was reading a sad story on Twitter about some buy that was just barley prevented from committing suicide as he had moved most of his retirement funds into Luna... would be nice if the people that still held it could get something. But this is the danger...

    • by jacks smirking reven ( 909048 ) on Thursday May 12, 2022 @03:24PM (#62527086)

      Would we feel the same if he put his retirement into selling Amway or Avon? What about trying to flip houses? What if he just put it all on red and lost the coin flip? Buying into crypto is the same as doing any other type of day trading, don't put in what you can't afford to lose.

      ETFs, mutual funds and even bonds still exist, all very safe but slow and boring. I imagine his retirement funds were in some sort of 401 or IRA type account and that's where they should stay. That money could still be doing a part in the actual economy.

      What's worth feeling bad over is Americans having the feeling that having no money is paramount to life not being able to be worth living. I would prefer it if people falling on hard times had a better ssocietal support system, even the dumb crypto-bros.

      • Seeing desperate people scammed out of their life savings would make me feel bad and I would want to protect them. It would all be in my best interests to protect them because of enough of them gets scammed that will damage the broader economy and hurt me personally. No man is an island.

        And yeah it would be nice to live in a country where being broke doesn't make suicide a viable option.
        • True but "feeling bad for people caught up in a scam", "wanting to educate and regulate against scams" and "desiring policies to improve material conditions for the impoverished" are all separate things.

          I want people who are losing their savings to still have a place to live, have health care and able to still live in some dignity.

          I also want this dumb market to regulated to a stringent degree.

          How I feel about this person is a matter of emotion. A small but responsible investor in 2008 caught in the crash

        • by gweihir ( 88907 )

          If it is a clever scam, with no or very little warning available, yes. But this is a very obvious scam with tons of warnings and a lot of greed and not a lot of effective intelligence on the side of those scammed. Anybody that loses their life savings in something like this was going to lose them anyways, sooner or later. There really is no way to protect such people without taking away their freedom to do with their money as they please.

      • Would we feel the same if he put his retirement into selling Amway or Avon? What about trying to flip houses? What if he just put it all on red and lost the coin flip?

        Kind of depends... for the house flipping, or Amway? I would still feel pretty bad for them, as they were just trying to improve their situation, I would have said to make sure not to put everyone on one option but sometimes life does not give you enough resources to diversify.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      I have zero compassion for anybody that was blinded by greed and fell for this. Just remember that every moron that "invests" into this increases the damage done.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 12, 2022 @03:06PM (#62527030)

    Remember kids, "DeFi" really means "Deregulated Finance"

  • by splutty ( 43475 ) on Thursday May 12, 2022 @03:30PM (#62527124)

    Oh no! Your crypto is failing? Have you tried turning it off and back on again?

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Hmm. They could actually build that in: Whenever the crapcoin crashes, just do an automatic restart! That will ensure stability!

  • Shared and distributed governance, until it is not. Given the lofty principals behind these projects they sure do a terrible job of implementing them. Like a bunch of puppies that get so excited and then they wet themselves, which just leaves a mess.

    • > Shared and distributed governance, until it is not

      >> by acquiring enough tokens to force a majority vote

      Yeah, proof of stake is stupid because it fails like this (among other reasons). You could probably take over the whole project for a relatively small amount of money now.

      They're panicking because their design can't handle this situation.

      Before long the central banks will do the same to Ethereum and use it to build their SCS/CBDC system.

  • You mean a 51% attack. Call it what everyone else does. Without the euphemism. When I hear you using euphemisms I know you're on to something bad.

    Also, two words: currency manipulation. There's a damn good reason we regulate the global currency markets. And a whole bunch of people just found out what that reason is.
    • Most people will find "51% attack" more perplexing than "Governance attack". Call it dumbing down, but you're not really hiding some unpleasant or prudish thing here, unlike when you switch making love for having sex.
  • Not a single post explaining that the terra/luna disaster is very different from what befell solana.

    That tells me how many on /. actually know a fucking thing.

  • Did buyers at 3 cents make any profit on the restart?
  • Pretty impressive. The cryptocurrency-morons must be even more excessively stupid if they are going to fall for this a second time. Quite possibly they will...

  • If I wanted a "stablecoin" I'd just buy a fiat currency. WTF is the point of this and when will the clue sink in that crypto currencies (and NFTs) are extremely volatile because they're basically scams stacked upon scams. The only winners are the people able to shift markets and get the rubes to buy in or sell out and the exchanges raking a % from each txn.

If you aren't rich you should always look useful. -- Louis-Ferdinand Celine

Working...