CRSEMay 5

Firmware Distribution as Attack Surface: A Security Study of ASIC Cryptocurrency Miners

arXiv:2605.037701.0
Predicted impact top 97% in CR · last 90 daysOriginality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

For the cryptocurrency mining ecosystem, this work reveals that firmware distribution is a critical attack surface, lowering the barrier to compromise.

This paper studies the security of ASIC cryptocurrency miners by analyzing 134 firmware images from manufacturers covering over 99% of deployed miners. It finds that firmware distribution mechanisms enable large-scale attacks like firmware phishing and exploitation of Stratum V1, validated on real devices.

ASIC cryptocurrency miners are a core component of blockchain infrastructures, directly converting computation and energy into monetary value. Despite their economic im- portance, their security is rarely evaluated in a structured manner. In this paper, we show that the firmware distribution ecosystem of mining devices fundamentally challenges existing trust assumptions. We introduce a scalable methodology based on the collection and static analysis of publicly distributed firmware artifacts, requiring neither device access nor runtime interaction. Applying this approach, we reconstruct and analyze 134 firmware images spanning manufacturers that account for over 99% of deployed miners (Bitmain, MicroBT, Canaan, Iceriver). Our re- sults reveal that firmware artifacts alone are sufficient to recover internal architecture, identify security weaknesses, and recon- struct complete attack paths leading to high-impact adversarial objectives. In particular, our analysis reveals vulnerabilities that enable realistic large-scale attack scenarios, including firmware phishing and the exploitation of miners still operating over Stratum V1. Validation on two real devices confirms that publicly distributed artifacts closely reflect deployed software and that these weaknesses translate into attack capabilities. Overall, our study shows that firmware distribution mechanisms themselves constitute a primary attack surface, significantly lowering the barrier to compromise in the ASIC mining ecosystem.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes