Steem Witnesses Freeze $3.2M in Latest Tit-for-Tat With Hard Fork Insurgents

Witnesses on Steem have frozen eight accounts, putting a total of 17.6 million steem (worth approximately $3.2 million) in limbo. The accounts can be seen listed on GitHub.

Steem recently underwent a contentious split into two blockchains, launching a new version of the software called Hive on March 20. Hive’s token has held parity or better with Steem’s since launch.

A tit-for-tat between Steem’s old and new leadership has been ongoing for almost two months now, creating a case study on the dangers inherent to delegated proof-of-stake (DPoS), the consensus model underlying a number of blockchains, including Steem.

Related: Splinter Cryptocurrency Hive Outperforms Justin Sun’s Steem After One Week Trading

This fight dates back to Feb. 14, when Justin Sun’s Tron Foundation announced the acquisition of Steemit, Inc. and its coveted “ninja-mined stake” of roughly 70 million steem tokens.

Read more: Steem Community Plans Hostile Hard Fork to Flee Justin Sun’s Steemit

Steem leaders, wary of how Sun would use those funds, went on to freeze the Steemit Inc. accounts he had then just purchased in a Feb. 23 soft fork. Sun later ascribed the action to “malicious hackers.”

Dan Notestein, founder of BlockTrades, an exchange that helps keep Steem liquid, is the holder of the second-largest account frozen by Saturday’s soft fork. Notestein told CoinDesk in an email, “Seems like it’s par for the course for Justin Sun; I’m not really surprised. This is why we don’t hold TRON in the BlockTrades portfolio. I often wonder why anyone invests in it.”

Related: Block.one Absorbs Team Behind Now-Defunct Block Producer EOS New York

Steemit and the Tron Foundation have not replied to a request for comment, but the company did post a statement to the account “steemitblog” claiming neutrality. Sources have expressed skepticism to CoinDesk about this because the witnesses backed by the Tron Foundation stake have signaled for the new soft fork.

Softfork 22.888

The Steem soft fork was announced in a Steemit post early Saturday morning. The unsigned post, from a new account (“softfork22888”) created to announce the development, dwells largely on the March 20 chain split.

“We are at an extremely difficult time in the history of Steem, and the power of communities are [sic] the key to make Steem great again,” the post states.

The post lists three criteria for accounts that have been temporarily frozen, all relating to the March 20 hard fork. It should be noted that when the new Hive blockchain was launched, all steem accounts were carried over to the new chain. All accounts, that is, except for the “ninja-mined” development fund controlled by Sun’s Steemit, Inc.