Flashbots to hasten open sourcing of its MEV-Boost relay code

Quick Take

  • Flashbots has announced plans to publish its MEV-Boost relay code as open source.
  • Flashbots says it hopes its competitors will commit to open source development as well.

Flashbots says it will accelerate the release of the relay code for its MEV-Boost as open source code, the project announced on Wednesday.

“Open sourcing our relay code will encourage competition and eschew monopoly and single points of failure,” the announcement stated.

Flashbots is a research project that provides MEV solutions to Ethereum users. MEV stands for maximal extractable value and it refers to the premium that block producers can charge for specially reordering or censoring transaction blocks. This premium is in excess of the normal transaction fee. Arbitrageurs use MEV to bribe miners or validators to place their transactions in specific blocks for significant financial gains. When used nefariously, MEV can lead to front-running and sandwich attacks.

The MEV-Boost is Flashbots’ latest offering for fair and transparent MEV extraction. By “open sourcing” its code, Flashbots says it is making the Ethereum transaction block market even more competitive.

THE SCOOP

Keep up with the latest news, trends, charts and views on crypto and DeFi with a new biweekly newsletter from The Block's Frank Chaparro

By signing-up you agree to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy
By signing-up you agree to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy

Flashbots also stated that the open source relay code for MEV-Boost is licensed under an aggressive coy-left license, also known as AGPL. This type of license prescribes open source development of derivatives from the parent code.

“We encourage all teams to develop their relays in the open, and for community members to trust relays only if they act consistent with AGPL norms of transparency and free software, Flashbots advised.”

The project’s decision to open source its relay code comes amid fears that relay providers for crypto services could come under regulatory pressure. These fears stem from the recent sanctions imposed on crypto mixer Tornado Cash.


© 2023 The Block. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

About Author

Osato is a news reporter at The Block as part of the crypto ecosystems team that focuses on DAO governance, staking, blockchain layers, and DeFi. He was previously a news reporter at Cointelegraph. Based in Lagos, Nigeria, he enjoys crosswords, poker, and attempting to beat his Scrabble high score. Follow him on Twitter at @OsatoNomayo.