Ethereum mining pool Sparkpool will launch its new mining network, Taichi Network, complete with a âprivate transactionâ feature in October, CoinDesk confirmed with Sparkpool co-founder Xin Xu.
The network âwill gradually go onlineâ this month in what could be one solution to decentralized financeâs (DeFi) long-standing problem with front running, the practice of trading based on information about future trades contained in a blockchainâs transaction queue in cryptocurrency markets.
Taichiâs features are ânot designed for selfish usageâ but instead for the âpublic goodâ of the Ethereum ecosystem, Xu told CoinDesk in an email.Â
âWe will offer Taichi Networkâs features as infrastructure to the Ethereum [ecosystem], and we will see how the reaction works out then,â he said. Think of it as a privacy shield meant to level the playing field for all traders.
Sparkpool currently makes up 23% of Ethereum hashing power, according to Etherscan.
Ethereumâs transaction queue â called a mempool â is often alluded to as a âdark forestâ due to the predatory nature of arbitrage bots spying on transactions.Â
First coined by venture capital firm Paradigmâs Dan Robinson, the âdark forestâ metaphor describes bots lurking in a blockchainâs mempool to copy and execute profitable trades before the original executes.
Bot arbitrage has long troubled Ethereum, most notably described in a 2019 Cornell University paper entitled âFlash Boys 2.0.â
Profits earned by arbitrage bots skyrocketed over the summer months with an average of 50-100 ether (ETH) earned per day in May, according to estimates shared with CoinDesk by one arbitrage trading firm that requested anonymity. These profits climbed as high as 2,000-3,000 ETH per day at the height of the DeFi mania in early September.
Read more: DeFi Traders Are Gaming Ethereum for Higher Profits, Researchers Say
Private transaction networks like Taichi can cut a path through the trees, however. The mining party, in this case Sparkpool, opts out of broadcasting the chosen transaction destined for its block to the rest of the network. By not communicating to other mempool lurkers, the minerâs transaction gains a higher degree of safety from hungry bots.
For example, Sparkpoolâs latest innovation enabled white-hat hacker Samczun to recently save 25,000 ether worth $9.6 million from broken decentralized finance (DeFi) project Lien Finance, according to a self-published account.
On the other hand, you are entrusting your transaction entirely to Sparkpool, meaning the mining giant could front run you itself more easily.
Xu said disrupting the current front-running issues plaguing DeFi transactions âis definitely a direction worth exploringâ with Taichi.
Certain aspects of Taichi Network are public, including a general domain registered in July 2020, according to WHOIS. The website remains under construction, but describes Taichi as a âviable Proof-of-Stake (mPoS) Ethereum sidechainâ complete with relayers and smart contract capabilities.
Relayers broadcast transactions faster than regular settlements on blockchains by constructing pathways between major nodes. Both Bitcoin and Ethereum have their own relayer networks, such as FIBRE and BloXroute.
Read more: Marlin Releases Open-Source âLayer 0â Transaction Relayer for Ethereum
Sparkpool data website GasNow also includes information on Taichi, describing the network as âgreatly improving the efficiency of transactions broadcastâ by âdirectly pushing received transactions into a mempool of mining pools.â
CoinDeskâs invest: ethereum economy is a fully virtual event Oct. 14 exploring the ramifications for investors of the sweeping changes underway within the Ethereum ecosystem. Learn more.