Skip to main content
USENIX
  • Conferences
  • Students
Sign in
  • Home
  • Attend
    • Registration Information
    • Registration Discounts
    • Venue, Hotel, and Travel
    • Students and Grants
    • Co-located Workshops
  • Program
    • At a Glance
    • Technical Sessions
  • Activities
    • Birds-of-a-Feather Sessions
    • Poster Session
    • Work-in-Progress Reports (WiPs)
  • Sponsorship
  • Participate
    • Instructions for Authors and Speakers
    • Call for Papers
      • Important Dates
      • Symposium Organizers
      • Symposium Topics
      • Refereed Papers
      • Symposium Activities
      • Submitting Papers
  • About
    • Symposium Organizers
    • Questions
    • Services
    • Help Promote
    • Past Symposia
  • Home
  • Attend
  • Program
  • Activities
  • Sponsorship
  • Participate
  • About

sponsors

Platinum Sponsor
Gold Sponsor
Silver Sponsor
Silver Sponsor
Silver Sponsor
Silver Sponsor
Bronze Sponsor
Bronze Sponsor
Media Sponsor
Media Sponsor
Media Sponsor
Media Sponsor
Media Sponsor
Media Sponsor
Media Sponsor
Media Sponsor
Industry Partner
Industry Partner

help promote

USENIX Security '16 button

Get more
Help Promote graphics!

connect with usenix


  •  Twitter
  •  Facebook
  •  LinkedIn
  •  Google+
  •  YouTube

twitter

Tweets by USENIXSecurity

usenix conference policies

  • Event Code of Conduct
  • Conference Network Policy
  • Statement on Environmental Responsibility Policy

You are here

Home » Enhancing Bitcoin Security and Performance with Strong Consistency via Collective Signing
Tweet

connect with us

Enhancing Bitcoin Security and Performance with Strong Consistency via Collective Signing

Authors: 

Eleftherios Kokoris Kogias, Philipp Jovanovic, Nicolas Gailly, Ismail Khoffi, Linus Gasser, and Bryan Ford, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL)

Abstract: 

While showing great promise, Bitcoin requires users to wait tens of minutes for transactions to commit, and even then, offering only probabilistic guarantees. This paper introduces ByzCoin, a novel Byzantine consensus protocol that leverages scalable collective signing to commit Bitcoin transactions irreversibly within seconds. ByzCoin achieves Byzantine consensus while preserving Bitcoin’s open membership by dynamically forming hash power-proportionate consensus groups that represent recently-successful block miners. ByzCoin employs communication trees to optimize transaction commitment and verification under normal operation while guaranteeing safety and liveness under Byzantine faults, up to a near-optimal tolerance of f faulty group members among 3f +2 total. ByzCoin mitigates double spending and selfish mining attacks by producing collectively signed transaction blocks within one minute of transaction submission. Tree-structured communication further reduces this latency to less than 30 seconds. Due to these optimizations, ByzCoin achieves a throughput higher than Paypal currently handles, with a confirmation latency of 15-20 seconds.

Eleftherios Kokoris Kogias, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL)

Philipp Jovanovic, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL)

Nicolas Gailly, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL)

Ismail Khoffi, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL)

Linus Gasser, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL)

Bryan Ford, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL)

Open Access Media

USENIX is committed to Open Access to the research presented at our events. Papers and proceedings are freely available to everyone once the event begins. Any video, audio, and/or slides that are posted after the event are also free and open to everyone. Support USENIX and our commitment to Open Access.

BibTeX
@inproceedings {197201,
author = {Eleftherios Kokoris Kogias and Philipp Jovanovic and Nicolas Gailly and Ismail Khoffi and Linus Gasser and Bryan Ford},
title = {Enhancing Bitcoin Security and Performance with Strong Consistency via Collective Signing},
booktitle = {25th USENIX Security Symposium (USENIX Security 16)},
year = {2016},
isbn = {978-1-931971-32-4},
address = {Austin, TX},
pages = {279--296},
url = {https://www.usenix.org/conference/usenixsecurity16/technical-sessions/presentation/kogias},
publisher = {USENIX Association},
month = aug,
}
Download
Kokoris-Kogias PDF
View the slides

Presentation Video 

Presentation Audio

MP3 Download

Download Audio

  • Log in or    Register to post comments

Platinum Sponsors

Gold Sponsors

Silver Sponsors

Bronze Sponsors

Media Sponsors & Industry Partners

© USENIX

  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us