Entities that manage decentralized multisigs are called “orchestrators,” who run both a Bitcoin node and a Spiderchain node. With every request to move BTC to the Spiderchain, a new multisig is created that’s controlled by a random subset of 100 participants within the staker set.
Drivechain was introduced as BIP 300 and BIP 301 back in 2015, and is still yet to be widely embraced for implementation by Bitcoiners.
In Lopp’s Monday blog post, the CTO cited the nearly decade-old Rootstock proposal, and pointed out some technical vulnerabilities with Spiderchain. Among them is the risk that its BTC peg is “broken” if the main Bitcoin blockchain experiences a reorg of longer than five blocks, due to the system by which Spiderchain orchestrators are determined.
“It would be unlikely to be catastrophic due to how the funds are dispersed across many multi-sig wallets,” he noted.
Schroé also admitted that in the network’s early stages, Spiderchain will be centralized until more users can come in to stake their BTC. “We need to start off centralized in the sense that initially we will have to make the staking permissioned,” he said.
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Source: https://decrypt.co/197687/how-spiderchain-plans-to-build-ethereum-on-bitcoin