157 research outputs found
Communication cost of consensus for nodes with limited memory
Motivated by applications in blockchains and sensor networks, we consider a
model of nodes trying to reach consensus on their majority bit. Each node
is assigned a bit at time zero, and is a finite automaton with bits of
memory (i.e., states) and a Poisson clock. When the clock of rings,
can choose to communicate, and is then matched to a uniformly chosen node
. The nodes and may update their states based on the state of the
other node. Previous work has focused on minimizing the time to consensus and
the probability of error, while our goal is minimizing the number of
communications. We show that when , consensus can be
reached at linear communication cost, but this is impossible if
. We also study a synchronous variant of the model, where
our upper and lower bounds on for achieving linear communication cost are
and , respectively. A key step is to
distinguish when nodes can become aware of knowing the majority bit and stop
communicating. We show that this is impossible if their memory is too low.Comment: 62 pages, 5 figure
Privacy in Cross-border Digital Currency. A Transatlantic Approach
This paper is one of four publications launched at the inaugural Frankfurt Forum on US-European GeoEconomics held in Germany from September 27 – 29, 2022. Co-hosted by the Atlantic Council GeoEconomics Center and Atlantik-Brücke, the Frankfurt Forum anchors critical work on transatlantic economic cooperation. The war in Ukraine, and the G7 response, reminded the world of the impact of transatlantic coordination. As part of the Frankfurt Forum, this new research aims to advance transatlantic dialogue from crisis response to addressing the key economic issues that will underpin the US-EU partnership over the next decade. The goal of the Frankfurt Forum is to deliver a blueprint for cooperation in four key areas: digital currencies, monetary policy, international trade, and economic statecraft
Deconstructing the Blockchain to Approach Physical Limits
Transaction throughput, confirmation latency and confirmation reliability are
fundamental performance measures of any blockchain system in addition to its
security. In a decentralized setting, these measures are limited by two
underlying physical network attributes: communication capacity and
speed-of-light propagation delay. Existing systems operate far away from these
physical limits. In this work we introduce Prism, a new proof-of-work
blockchain protocol, which can achieve 1) security against up to 50%
adversarial hashing power; 2) optimal throughput up to the capacity C of the
network; 3) confirmation latency for honest transactions proportional to the
propagation delay D, with confirmation error probability exponentially small in
CD ; 4) eventual total ordering of all transactions. Our approach to the design
of this protocol is based on deconstructing the blockchain into its basic
functionalities and systematically scaling up these functionalities to approach
their physical limits.Comment: Computer and Communications Security, 201
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