I understand, I am just pointing out the ultimate situation the exchange arrives in once they (hopefully) patch up the vulnerability you described.
Making parties known via explicit market ids leaves them open to spoofers gaming that process and finding other people to sign up and shred their orders across a pool of ids the spoofer controls. (what I refer to as rat-holing and has been done here [1]). Note that even if a participant doesn't rat-hole/shred their orders doesn't preclude them from spoofing, it just makes it less profitable to do so, and easier for advanced counterparty's to track and recognize bad reputation of a spoofer.
Not making it explicit allows spoofers to trivially run their algorithms without having to rat-hole/shred so it lowers the barrier to entry for spoofers and blends their orders in among the non-spoof orders resting in the book making their strategies more effective.
In any case spoofing is a felony because of dodd-frank. [2]
The only question that remains is does this exchange fall under the scope of dodd-frank's provisions against disruptive practices? What will they do to ensure that spoofing doesn't take place on their exchange? The law doesn't contemplate an exchanges ability to opt-out of this provision. If they are running an exchange that allows people to spoof they could be seen as allowing those felonies to occur through indifference because it generates volume and hence makes them more money, making them an accessory to the crime. In any case someone will need to enforce the provision on their exchange otherwise a perverse moral hazard is created where some participants are willing to risk breaking the law because the worst they will expect is a slap on the wrist, while those that do follow the law are at a severe informational disadvantage.
Making parties known via explicit market ids leaves them open to spoofers gaming that process and finding other people to sign up and shred their orders across a pool of ids the spoofer controls. (what I refer to as rat-holing and has been done here [1]). Note that even if a participant doesn't rat-hole/shred their orders doesn't preclude them from spoofing, it just makes it less profitable to do so, and easier for advanced counterparty's to track and recognize bad reputation of a spoofer.
Not making it explicit allows spoofers to trivially run their algorithms without having to rat-hole/shred so it lowers the barrier to entry for spoofers and blends their orders in among the non-spoof orders resting in the book making their strategies more effective.
In any case spoofing is a felony because of dodd-frank. [2]
The only question that remains is does this exchange fall under the scope of dodd-frank's provisions against disruptive practices? What will they do to ensure that spoofing doesn't take place on their exchange? The law doesn't contemplate an exchanges ability to opt-out of this provision. If they are running an exchange that allows people to spoof they could be seen as allowing those felonies to occur through indifference because it generates volume and hence makes them more money, making them an accessory to the crime. In any case someone will need to enforce the provision on their exchange otherwise a perverse moral hazard is created where some participants are willing to risk breaking the law because the worst they will expect is a slap on the wrist, while those that do follow the law are at a severe informational disadvantage.
1: http://www.fbi.gov/chicago/press-releases/2014/high-frequenc...
2: http://www.cftc.gov/ucm/groups/public/@newsroom/documents/fi...