Ethereum Splits Into Two Chains After ‘Hades Gamma’ Update

Ethereum, the world’s second-largest cryptocurrency network, saw a chain split today as a software bug affected a large quantity of full node clients. Earlier in August developers found a vulnerability and distributed an update called “Hades Gamma” to resolve the problem. However, a a big portion of full node clients did not leverage the patch and the network forked.
Old Geth Clients Forgot to Upgrade, Ethereum Network Splits in Two
Several of reports and data from analytical web portals show that the Ethereum (ETH) blockchain has split into at least two versions as a number of Geth nodes did not update to the correct chain. The Twitter communication channel for the Ethereum network called “Go Ethereum” tweeted about the incident on Friday:
“A chain split has occurred on the Ethereum mainnet. The issue was resolved in the v1.10.8 release announced previously. Please update your nodes, if you haven’t already.”
Ethereum developers discovered a vulnerability and as a response released a patch in mid-August. The patch called Hades Gamma was a “hotfix release to patch a vulnerability in the EVM (CVE-2021-39137).” The blockchain fork, of course, caused it to be a very topical conversation in the crypto universe.
Lucas Nuzzi, tweeted:
“Ethereum has split into at least 2 versions and only a third of Geth nodes are in the ‘correct’ chain. The full impact is unclear at this point, but Openethereum may have also been indirectly impacted. Block difficulty has dropped 10% over the past few hours.”
Geth Clients Were Told to Upgrade Before the Chain Split
The old version of the Geth client is used by more than 70% of the Ethereum network’s nodes. On August 24, the Twitter account Go Ethereum told the public about the upgrade and said:
“Heads up. Geth v1.10.8 is out, fixing a security vulnerability in all live versions of Geth. All Geth users need to update. Further details will be provided at a later date to avoid attacks on Ethereum and downstream projects.”
Go Ethereum added:
“This issue has been allocated CVE-2021-39137, and a Github security advisory (to be filled in later) [has] been ublished at [Github].”
The founder of Yearn Finance, Andre Cronje, also discussed the situation on Twitter. Cronje said:
“Fork between latest Geth and older Geth on mainnet. Stay away from doing [transactions] for a while till confirmed, unless you are sure you are submitting to latest Geth. Go for a walk outside, we all need it.”
Ethereum’s price hasn’t reacted much to the split, and is currently trading at $3,262 with 4.52% gains on a daily chart.










