> But a 51% attack (with e.g. a double spend) will be easily spotted by the community, right?
The real problem is that if it happens once, it's proven to be both possible and practical. And once it's proven to be possible and practical, how do you know it won't happen again and again?
> What would be the incentive for an actor with such a vast amount of specialised hardware just for Bitcoin mining, to undermine its security?
Most mining hardware is specific to hashing, not Bitcoin specifically.
The obvious attack is something like this: Imagine someone invents a Bitcoin competitor that is somehow more resistant to these types of attacks, yet can use the same mining hardware. To convince everyone to switch to their new alternative (which they have accumulated significant amounts of, similar to Satoshi), they spend the money to crash Bitcoin, while advertising themselves as the more secure alternative to Bitcoin.
A hacker that was able to hijack the mining pool just for malicious reasons could do it. Maybe they are motivated by not liking Bitcoin energy use.
The better argument here is that 98% of cryptocurrencies are very cheap to 51% attack, and they are attacked successfully. One would expect these to be exploited aggressively before a successful Bitcoin attack. Hints of unmanageable abuse would be exchanges de-listing alternative cryptocurrencies due to mounting losses.
The bottom line is if Bitcoin can't survive a 51% attack, then everything else below it is non-viable.
Personally I think the gaping vulnerabilities of altcoins and the scalability of Ethereum is a bigger issue than what may happen to Bitcoin over the next decade+. Major catastrophes with any of the other stuff could go a long way toward causing loss of trust, interest, and value in Bitcoin.
The real problem is that if it happens once, it's proven to be both possible and practical. And once it's proven to be possible and practical, how do you know it won't happen again and again?
> What would be the incentive for an actor with such a vast amount of specialised hardware just for Bitcoin mining, to undermine its security?
Most mining hardware is specific to hashing, not Bitcoin specifically.
The obvious attack is something like this: Imagine someone invents a Bitcoin competitor that is somehow more resistant to these types of attacks, yet can use the same mining hardware. To convince everyone to switch to their new alternative (which they have accumulated significant amounts of, similar to Satoshi), they spend the money to crash Bitcoin, while advertising themselves as the more secure alternative to Bitcoin.