Griefing-Penalty: Countermeasure for Griefing Attack in Lightning Network
This addresses a security vulnerability in blockchain payment networks, specifically for users of the Lightning Network, by making attacks more costly, though it is an incremental improvement on existing protocols.
The paper tackles the griefing attack in the Lightning Network, where an adversary blocks channel capacity by not resolving payments, and proposes Griefing-Penalty as a countermeasure that requires attackers to pay a penalty, resulting in a 12 times higher budget needed for attacks compared to existing protocols.
Lightning Network can execute unlimited number of off-chain payments, without incurring the cost of recording each of them in the blockchain. However, conditional payments in such networks is susceptible to Griefing Attack. In this attack, an adversary doesn't resolve the payment with the intention of blocking channel capacity of the network. We propose an efficient countermeasure for the attack, known as Griefing-Penalty. If any party in the network mounts a griefing attack, it needs to pay a penalty proportional to the collateral cost of executing a payment. The penalty is used for compensating affected parties in the network. We propose a new payment protocol HTLC-GP or Hashed Timelock Contract with Griefing-Penalty to demonstrate the utility of the countermeasure. Upon comparing our protocol with existing payment protocol Hashed Timelock Contract, we observe that the average revenue earned by the attacker decreases substantially for HTLC-GP as compared to HTLC. We also study the impact of path length for routing a transaction and rate of griefing-penalty on the budget invested by an adversary for mounting the attack. The budget needed for mounting griefing attack in HTLC-GP is 12 times more than the budget needed by attacker in HTLC, given that each payment instance being routed via path length of hop count 20.