Address Clustering
Address Clustering: Connecting Wallet Identities
Address clustering analyzes blockchain transactions to identify which addresses likely belong to the same user or entity. It's like detective work for digital money trails.
Address clustering is a blockchain analysis technique that groups cryptocurrency addresses believed to belong to the same user or entity based on transaction patterns and shared inputs. This analysis can deanonymize supposedly anonymous cryptocurrency transactions.
How Address Clustering Works
Common input analysis identifies addresses that are used together as inputs in the same transaction, suggesting shared ownership.
Change address detection tracks patterns where transaction outputs return to the sender, revealing additional addresses in the same wallet.
Behavioral analysis examines timing patterns, amounts, and interaction frequencies to identify related addresses.
[IMAGE: Address clustering visualization showing connected wallet addresses based on transaction relationships]
Real-World Examples
- Chainalysis and other blockchain analytics companies use clustering for compliance and investigation
- Exchange identification through clustering of deposit and withdrawal patterns
- Privacy coin analysis attempting to break anonymity through transaction graph analysis
Why Beginners Should Care
Privacy implications since address clustering can reveal spending patterns, wealth holdings, and transaction histories.
Pseudonymity limitations as blockchain transactions aren't truly anonymous when addresses can be linked to identities.
Protection strategies including address rotation, mixing services, and privacy coins to maintain transaction privacy.
Related Terms: Privacy, Transaction Analysis, Mixing Service, Privacy Coin
