My first comment here I couldn't get my post to submit on reddit (don't like Tor IP?)
I was browsing X on my phone searching for monero tags to catch up on news and it popped up on my feed no likes no shares. Real or fake? Wth is this antidarknet stuff? Something monero developers should be informed about or nah? anyone tried it?
I couldn't submit to archive.org the link here's what it said
Monero 0-day. The Black Marble Attack. How we did it
The attacker;
doesn’t know;
DoS’ing isn’t 0day and bug -- **There is indeed a bug and it has been classified as such by the monero dev team. I'm talking about the fee selection bug that was fixed in the last wallet release. Whether it's 0day or not that's semantics. As it was pointed out on another board this same type of attack was first spotted in 2020 and as I explained there example PDF rendering vulnerabilities exist so when a new vulnerability is found and not reported it is a 0day. Same analogy. Whether you believe it is "0day" or not is irrelevant. No where does it describe how to do the "Black Marble" attack, we described it first.**
Dynamic block size -- **Do your own research before talking? No? Read the comments here https://www.reddit.com/r/Monero/comments/1ebshvh/we_now_know_who_was_behind_the_recent_spam_attack/ then look at the analysis of the attack. There are ways to bypass it we're not as ignorant as yourself. **
CIA drug trafficking allegations (which is different from drug selling) -- **Okay? They sell drugs so we selling drugs is okay they kill we kill no problem logic? Hello 14th century.**
Corrupt government structures (such as fiat money and others) -- **Relevancy? Trash talk.**
Pharmacies also sell hard drugs -- **More nonsense non-related trash talk.**
calls “donation” to collateral damage -- **Who was the collateral damage? Darknet market admins? Poor them they only got away with hundreds of thousands when they exited and left their customers and vendors out to dry.**
thinks they’re “saving” our children -- **Better than doing nothing? What are YOU doing for that then?**
complains official wallet is so slow when 200k sub-accounts used -- **Using the RPC it is slow and it shouldn't be. Imagine, I know imagination in your simpleton mind not possible but try hard for us here, you run an exchange. You have 10,000 making exchanges every day. 1000 of them use Monero in either direction. 1000 x 30 days that's 30,000 subaccounts for a month. In 3-4 months that wallet will be clogged up and won't be working correctly. And then you cry when shops or other places don't accept Monero. If it can't deal with high volume is it enterprise-ready? Basic logic says no.**
didn’t prove they really made the attack -- **Take a look at the post once again. Try it out yourself. Post back the results. Really simple for the smoothest of brains to understand.**
Now that I've proven you've got no idea what you're talking about, try again and this time try to use the thing between your ears.
This settles my limit for answering questions with hardened stupidity level for today.
It doesn't seem actionable. They spent 30,000 US to generate a bunch of traffic, which slowed down transactions. Well I don't appreciate the sentiment, these attacks help evolve the network infrastructure to become resilient
How can it be not actionable but slow down transactions too? I remember when i wasn't able to submit transactions for many hours on end. Wasn't the black marble attack exactly slowing down transaction? seems contradictory to say it wasn't actionable if its end result? i am confusion
They claim they've made-off several illegal markets over 300k i mean that's a 10x investment don't know if they care about the initial 30 grand lol
I totally agree resilience is needed on monero and if it's how the attacks were done it could give developers insight how to fix it. Almost seems like a simulation where many more people would use xmr. More confusion should we thank them or tell them to go f themselves??
This attack highlighted several issues that have been addressed. The biggest issue was wallets not automatically raising the default fee which led to transactions getting stuck for hours. Without the bug, you would have paid 2 cents instead of 0.5 for a transaction and it would have been confirmed at regular speed.
Partially. For the Monero blockchain itself this is basically it but the spam also enabled them to withdraw funds ($300k) from darknet markets multiple times in a row, since their withdrawal systems didn't account for transactions being this delayed.
Which is undoubtedly an exploit, but it seems to be one in the exchange rather than one in Monero. Still a massive bug though, and I hate to say this but I kind of agree that any exchange that lets you do that shouldn't be in business