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Bitcoin miner concentration just exposed a gap in Bitcoin’s “six confirmations” rule

The Bitcoin network experienced a rare two-block reorg on Mar. 23, at block height 941,880. Foundry mined six consecutive blocks, AntPool and ViaBTC briefly extended a competing branch.

The chain resolved the fork as designed, following the path with the most hash rate. Bitcoin performed exactly as designed and validated its assumptions.

A fork visualization shows Foundry USA’s chain winning over a competing AntPool-ViaBTC branch at Bitcoin block height 941,880. Source: b10c

The heuristic nobody labeled

The six-confirmation rule is one of the pieces of received wisdom that have traveled so far from their origins that most people who repeat it can’t reconstruct why six is the number.

The answer traces back to Satoshi Nakamoto’s 2008 whitepaper, which modeled finality as a catch-up probability. As enough blocks pile up on top of a transaction, the computational cost of rewriting history becomes prohibitive for an attacker with limited hashpower.

Six blocks became the community shorthand for “safe enough,” even though the whitepaper treated it as a calculation that assumes the attacker controls about 10% of the network’s hashpower.

That assumption has been quietly doing a lot of work for sixteen years.

Jameson Lopp made the implication explicit in an analysis of confirmation risk. The comfort level baked into six confirmations is a function of who else is on the network and how much of it they run.

Under the Nakamoto catch-up model, six confirmations against an attacker holding 10% of hashpower yields a reversal risk of roughly 0.02%. Against 20%, that figure climbs to about 1.43%. Against 30%, it reaches approximately 13.2%.

At the 32.2% share Foundry held in recent pool-share snapshots, the same model puts six-confirmation reversal risk near 18.9%.

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Mining pools are not coordinated attackers by default, which is why they don’t fit in these model outputs. Foundry USA describes itself as an institutional-grade pool built for miners that coordinates many independent operators.

Miners can and do switch pools, making an overt attack would be economically self-destructive for any rational pool operator. Concentration in block production changes the risk model people use to decide when a payment feels final, regardless of how dispersed the underlying machines are.

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A 2022 latency security analysis noted that with a 10% adversary and a 10-second propagation delay, six confirmations still produce a safety-violation probability between 0.11% and 0.35%.

Six was never a hard ceiling, even under conditions far more favorable than those of today.

Modeled reversal risk after six Bitcoin confirmations climbs from 0.02% at 10% attacker hashpower to 18.9% at 32.2%.

Three conditions at once

The context surrounding the reorg carries the weight.

Bitcoin’s network is currently running three conditions simultaneously that put the six-confirmation heuristic under pressure, which it has rarely faced in practice.

In the past three days, Foundry has held roughly 31% of the global hashrate, while AntPool sits at about 18.4%, and ViaBTC at 10.5%, according to Hashrate Index data. Those three pools combined account for approximately 60% of block production.

That degree of concentration in coordinator power is elevated by any reasonable measure over the last several years.

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At the same time, mining economics have deteriorated sharply. Difficulty dropped 7.76% on Mar. 21 in one of 2026’s largest negative adjustments. Hashprice averaged $32.31 per petahash per day in February, down nearly 18% month over month, briefly touching a record low of $27.89.

Transaction fees contributed just 0.57% of total block rewards in the last 24 hours of available data.

When margins compress and fee revenue dries up, smaller and mid-sized miners face a growing incentive to pool into whichever coordinator offers the best variance reduction. This usually means the already-large pools get larger.

The January winter storm offered a counterpoint worth noting. Foundry’s hashrate reportedly dropped by around 60%, or nearly 200 exahashes per second, during that period, demonstrating that pool shares can redistribute quickly when external conditions change.

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Amid this backdrop, the six-confirmation rule lacks an automatic adjustment mechanism when pool shares move.

Condition Latest reading Why it matters for the 6-confirmation rule
Pool concentration Foundry ~31%; AntPool ~18.4%; ViaBTC ~10.5% A larger share of block production is concentrated in a few coordinators, making fixed-confirmation assumptions less comfortable for large-value settlement.
Top-three concentration ~60% of block production combined Finality depends not just on block count, but on how distributed hashpower is across competing pools.
Difficulty adjustment -7.76% on Mar. 21 A large negative adjustment signals stress in mining conditions and weaker economics across the network.
February hashprice $32.31 per PH/day Lower miner revenue increases the incentive for smaller miners to seek stability in larger pools.
Intramonth hashprice low $27.89 The deeper margins compress, the more pooling for variance reduction becomes attractive.
Fee contribution to rewards 0.57% in the last 24 hours Weak fee support leaves miners more dependent on shrinking block-subsidy economics.
Counterpoint: redistribution risk Foundry reportedly fell ~60% during the January winter storm Concentration is elevated, but not fixed; external shocks can still reshuffle pool shares quickly.

In practice, the industry’s largest venues have abandoned the six-confirmation standard in a quiet operational judgment made years ago.

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