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Proceedings ArticleDOI

A Secure Sharding Protocol For Open Blockchains

TLDR
ELASTICO is the first candidate for a secure sharding protocol with presence of byzantine adversaries, and scalability experiments on Amazon EC2 with up to $1, 600$ nodes confirm ELASTICO's theoretical scaling properties.
Abstract
Cryptocurrencies, such as Bitcoin and 250 similar alt-coins, embody at their core a blockchain protocol --- a mechanism for a distributed network of computational nodes to periodically agree on a set of new transactions. Designing a secure blockchain protocol relies on an open challenge in security, that of designing a highly-scalable agreement protocol open to manipulation by byzantine or arbitrarily malicious nodes. Bitcoin's blockchain agreement protocol exhibits security, but does not scale: it processes 3--7 transactions per second at present, irrespective of the available computation capacity at hand. In this paper, we propose a new distributed agreement protocol for permission-less blockchains called ELASTICO. ELASTICO scales transaction rates almost linearly with available computation for mining: the more the computation power in the network, the higher the number of transaction blocks selected per unit time. ELASTICO is efficient in its network messages and tolerates byzantine adversaries of up to one-fourth of the total computational power. Technically, ELASTICO uniformly partitions or parallelizes the mining network (securely) into smaller committees, each of which processes a disjoint set of transactions (or "shards"). While sharding is common in non-byzantine settings, ELASTICO is the first candidate for a secure sharding protocol with presence of byzantine adversaries. Our scalability experiments on Amazon EC2 with up to $1, 600$ nodes confirm ELASTICO's theoretical scaling properties.

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Posted Content

Managing Collaboration in Heterogeneous Swarms of Robots with Blockchains.

TL;DR: This paper proposes the utilization of proof of work systems to have an online estimation of the available computational resources at different robots and defines smart contracts that integrate information about the environment from different robots in order to evaluate and rank the quality and accuracy of each of the robots' sensor data.
Posted Content

Scalable and Secure Computation Among Strangers: Resource-Competitive Byzantine Protocols

TL;DR: It is proved that, in general, one cannot hope to design Byzantine protocols that have communication cost that is significantly smaller than the cost of the Byzantine adversary.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

A scalable semi-permissionless blockchain framework

TL;DR: The key idea is the introduction of trusted nodes to improve several aspects of the protocol: transaction execution is separated from agreement, thus reducing agreement latency and allowing the participation of lightweight nodes; agreement protocol is simplified for better performance and easier implementation.

Protecting Vaccine Safety: An Improved, Blockchain-Based, Storage-Efficient Scheme

TL;DR: This work first model the vaccine circulation process, then designs a system to protect vaccine circulation using blockchain, cloud, and cryptographic mechanisms, and evaluates the proposed conceptual model using a consortium blockchain.
Posted Content

Why is a Ravencoin Like a TokenDesk? An Exploration of Code Diversity in the Cryptocurrency Landscape.

TL;DR: It is observed that while many cryptocurrencies are largely unchanged copies of Bitcoin, the use of Ethereum as a platform has enabled the deployment of cryptocurrencies with more diverse functionalities.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: The Albanian Generals Problem as mentioned in this paper is a generalization of Dijkstra's dining philosophers problem, where two generals have to come to a common agreement on whether to attack or retreat, but can communicate only by sending messengers who might never arrive.
Book ChapterDOI

The Byzantine generals problem

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Book ChapterDOI

The Sybil Attack

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Distributed algorithms

Nancy Lynch
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Practical Byzantine fault tolerance

TL;DR: A new replication algorithm that is able to tolerate Byzantine faults that works in asynchronous environments like the Internet and incorporates several important optimizations that improve the response time of previous algorithms by more than an order of magnitude.
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