The much anticipated hard fork of the ethereum blockchain has
been implemented, giving those building on the decentralized application
network at least the potential for stability after weeks of controversy
and sometimes terse disagreements in the wider community.
At approximately 14:30 UTC today, China-based ethereum miner
BW.com mined the ethereum blockchain's 192,000th block. Seconds later
the mining pool also mined the first block on the new blockchain, which
returned funds lost in the collapse of The DAO to an account available
to its original investors.
The achievement, which returns approximately $40m worth of ether
from an account owned by an unknown hacker to a new address, is being
met with celebration by many members of the ethereum community. However,
the actual implications of the decision, which essentially showed that a
supposedly immutable blockchain history can be altered, is yet to be
seen.”
Co-founder of ethereum startup Slock.it and author of most of the
DAO code, Christoph Jentzsch, wrote on his company’s blog to
acknowledge those who helped pull off the implementation and execution
of the hard fork code.
Jentzsch wrote:
"What I witnessed during this time was remarkable feedback and
support from many different sides. A lot of work needed to be done, and
many people came literally out of nowhere and helped in many ways."
The hard fork of the ethereum blockchain moved the funds tied to
The DAO to a new smart contract designed to to one thing: let the
original token owners withdraw the funds. The token owners were given
the original exchange rate of 1 ETH to 100 DAO tokens.
The original compromise occurred on 17th June when funds from The
DAO, a distributed autonomous organization built as a fund for
ethereum-based projects, were drained into an account controlled by an
unknown hacker or group of hackers. Following multiple so-called white
hat attacks designed to move the remaining funds to accounts controlled
by the tokenholders, a series of efforts were attempted to recover the
funds, or find another course of action.
The original compromise occurred on 17th June when funds from The
DAO, a distributed autonomous organization built as a fund for
ethereum-based projects, were drained into an account controlled by an
unknown hacker or group of hackers. Following multiple so-called white
hat attacks designed to move the remaining funds to accounts controlled
by the tokenholders, a series of efforts were attempted to recover the
funds, or find another course of action.
Any extra balance that now remains is expected to be withdrawn
and distributed by the DAO curators, individuals appointed yesterday to
oversee the distribution. Earlier curators appointed prior to the launch
have stepped down, according to Alex van de Sande, who was among the
original curators.
Multiple hard fork counters set up leading up to the event had
yesterday predicted it would occur almost two hours later than it did,
and it’s currently unclear why there was a discrepancy, though one
likely possibility is that the ethereum blocks are mined at an inexact
period of approximately 14 seconds.
Since the hard fork, an additional 153 blocks have been
successfully mined. However, as suggested earlier, the move may not be
without continued controversy.
The decision to hard fork was initially met with resistance by
some members of the ethereum community who were concerned it might
undermine the perception that the blockchain was immutable, and that
contract agreements, once settled to the blockchain, would be final.
With major banks and startups alike now building with ethereum, this is a concern that will likely be followed closely.