681 research outputs found
A privacy-preserving, decentralized and functional Bitcoin e-voting protocol
Bitcoin, as a decentralized digital currency, has caused extensive research
interest. There are many studies based on related protocols on Bitcoin,
Bitcoin-based voting protocols also received attention in related literature.
In this paper, we propose a Bitcoin-based decentralized privacy-preserving
voting mechanism. It is assumed that there are n voters and m candidates. The
candidate who obtains t ballots can get x Bitcoins from each voter, namely nx
Bitcoins in total. We use a shuffling mechanism to protect voter's voting
privacy, at the same time, decentralized threshold signatures were used to
guarantee security and assign voting rights. The protocol can achieve
correctness, decentralization and privacy-preservings. By contrast with other
schemes, our protocol has a smaller number of transactions and can achieve a
more functional voting method.Comment: 5 pages;3 figures;Smartworld 201
Systematizing Decentralization and Privacy: Lessons from 15 Years of Research and Deployments
Decentralized systems are a subset of distributed systems where multiple
authorities control different components and no authority is fully trusted by
all. This implies that any component in a decentralized system is potentially
adversarial. We revise fifteen years of research on decentralization and
privacy, and provide an overview of key systems, as well as key insights for
designers of future systems. We show that decentralized designs can enhance
privacy, integrity, and availability but also require careful trade-offs in
terms of system complexity, properties provided, and degree of
decentralization. These trade-offs need to be understood and navigated by
designers. We argue that a combination of insights from cryptography,
distributed systems, and mechanism design, aligned with the development of
adequate incentives, are necessary to build scalable and successful
privacy-preserving decentralized systems
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