{"id":366532,"date":"2022-12-26T17:29:39","date_gmt":"2022-12-26T22:29:39","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/insidebitcoins.com\/?p=366532"},"modified":"2022-12-26T17:32:24","modified_gmt":"2022-12-26T22:32:24","slug":"why-do-proof-of-reserves-matter-and-what-are-they","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/insidebitcoins.com\/news\/why-do-proof-of-reserves-matter-and-what-are-they","title":{"rendered":"Why Do Proof of Reserves Matter And What Are They?"},"content":{"rendered":"
Following the FTX collapse<\/a>, proof of reserves has been a hot topic, with the investor community demanding that exchanges give certifications of their cryptocurrency holdings.<\/p>\n But what are they exactly, and why are they important?<\/p>\n Proof of reserves (PoR)<\/a> is a technique for confirming that a trading platform or cryptocurrency company actually has 1:1 backing across the digital assets it is keeping in custody on behalf of its clients.<\/p>\n A third-party organization is frequently used by businesses to carry out the attestation. To help investors understand a centralized exchange’s financial situation and whether they have adequate funds to match customer deposits, they publish the results with some caveats (which will be explained in more detail below).<\/p>\n Since the trend started, a huge variety of attestations have been performed, some of which provide a corporation more credibility than others.<\/p>\n A PoR protocol that employs a Merkle Tree proof to combine vast quantities of data into a single hash and confirm the accuracy of the data set is one technique to carry out an attestation.<\/p>\n The PoR protocol checks the legitimacy of user balances and transactions using cryptographic proofs.<\/p>\n Merkle Tree-based PoR attestations may be published by cryptocurrency exchanges at regular intervals, such as weekly, monthly, or quarterly, in the form of snapshots. As an alternative, businesses may offer real-time attestations that are accessible on their website.<\/p>\n While snapshots may be adequate to demonstrate a cryptocurrency company’s solvency at a specific point in time, real-time attestations are preferred for confirming an exchange’s reserves since they enable anyone to check that money are truly held by an exchange at any time.<\/p>\n A proof-of-reserves system is being offered by Chainlink Labs<\/a>, the organization that created the well-known decentralized oracle network. According to Chainlink Labs, this technology is “intended to let projects spanning Web2 and Web3 prove asset reserves through automated verification.”<\/p>\n Launched in 2020, the system connects Chainlink nodes to an exchange’s API, its vault addresses, and a proof-of-reserve smart contract that can be queried by any other account on the network to ascertain whether the exchange’s crypto reserves are equal to its liabilities. The system’s first user was the TrueUSD stablecoin.<\/p>\n Its blockchain-independent technology offers information on the amount that is ever deposited, borrowed, and staked at a certain protocol.<\/p>\n Additionally, exchanges can use Chainlink’s mechanism to give security for the promises that they are not allowed to issue more tokens than they have in reserve.<\/p>\n Before FTX collapsed, certain exchanges and crypto lending platforms, including as Kraken, Nexo, BitMEX, and Gate.io, pushed to introduce own proof of reserves.<\/p>\n However, November 2022 events revealed that more trading platforms were attempting to create their own proof of reserves, which varied in depth depending on the exchange.<\/p>\n Among them was Binance, the biggest cryptocurrency exchange in the world by trading volume, which unveiled a Merkle Tree-based system for Bitcoin and Ethereum. OKX, Crypto.com, and ByBit also adopted a related strategy.<\/p>\n Coinbase<\/a>, on the other hand, asserted that as it is a publicly traded corporation, it has already provided audited SEC filings to demonstrate its reserves.<\/p>\n The San Francisco-based cryptocurrency exchange, however, stated on November 25 that “on-chain accounting is the future” and that it is looking at “several novel ways to prove reserves utilizing more crypto native approaches.”<\/p>\n Coinbase’s recently introduced $500,000 developer grant program is a component of the initiative. Theoretically assisting to ensure that customer funds are secure and cryptographically demonstrating that the corporation has adequate liquidity, proof of reserves is unquestionably a positive move. However, it can also provide users a false sense of security.<\/p>\n Exchanges, with rare exceptions, do not disclose the company’s liabilities to consumers, thus users must rely on the auditor’s attestation concerning the relevant assets. This is because exchanges only present a snapshot of the assets held on the platform’s linked addresses.<\/p>\n A situation where an exchange leverages its proof of reserves to look transparent without disclosing its real solvency risk could result from this.<\/p>\n According to Kraken<\/a> CEO Jesse Powel, attestations must include these three elements: a total of client liabilities (the auditor must exclude negative balances), user-verifiable cryptographic proof that each account was included in the total, and signatures demonstrating the custodian’s ownership of the wallets.<\/p>\n Binance’s November attestation received particular criticism from Powell, who labeled it as as “either ignorance or purposeful distortion” and claimed that “the disclosure of assets is pointless without liabilities.”<\/p>\n I'm sorry but no. This is not PoR. This is either ignorance or intentional misrepresentation.<\/p>\n The merkle tree is just hand wavey bullshit without an auditor to make sure you didn't include accounts with negative balances. The statement of assets is pointless without liabilities. https:\/\/t.co\/b5KSr2XKLB<\/a><\/p>\n — Jesse Powell (@jespow) November 25, 2022<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\nProof of Reserves based on Merkle Trees<\/h2>\n
Launch of the Proof-of-Reserves Protocol by Chainlink<\/h2>\n
Which markets have evidence of reserves?<\/h2>\n
\nThe purpose of these grants is<\/p>\n[to assist people or groups] who are advancing the state of the art in on-chain accounting, privacy-preserving techniques related to proof of assets or liabilities (including the application of zero-knowledge techniques) and or closely related technologies.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
What worries exist?<\/h2>\n
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