Threshold Logical Clocks for Asynchronous Distributed Coordination and Consensus
Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 20:37 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Threshold logical clocks let asynchronous networks support synchronous-style consensus protocols.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
By defining logical time through threshold agreement on clock ticks rather than real-time or leader decisions, the approach decouples upper-layer coordination from the challenges of asynchrony, enabling a modular consensus protocol that operates with constant expected rounds without common coins.
What carries the argument
The threshold logical clock, an abstraction where time advances when a sufficient threshold of nodes agree on the next logical tick.
If this is right
- The consensus protocol requires no common coins.
- Consensus is achieved in a constant expected number of rounds.
- The protocol may be simpler and more robust than Paxos for fail-stop nodes.
- It supports extension to Byzantine failures via tamper-evident logs and threshold signatures.
- It provides a layered approach for building services like randomness beacons.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- This could make implementing reliable distributed systems more accessible by reducing protocol complexity.
- Similar abstractions might apply to other asynchronous coordination tasks like leader election or mutual exclusion.
- Practical deployments could test the constant-round property under real network delays.
Load-bearing premise
The threshold of nodes can reliably agree on logical clock ticks despite arbitrary message delays and failures.
What would settle it
A demonstration that no threshold-based tick agreement can be maintained in a fully asynchronous network with even one faulty node.
Figures
read the original abstract
Consensus protocols for asynchronous networks are usually complex and inefficient, leading practical systems to rely on synchronous protocols. This paper attempts to simplify asynchronous consensus by building atop a novel threshold logical clock abstraction, which enables upper layers to operate as if on a synchronous network. This approach yields an asynchronous consensus protocol for fail-stop nodes that may be simpler and more robust than Paxos and its leader-based variants, requiring no common coins and achieving consensus in a constant expected number of rounds. The same approach can be strengthened against Byzantine failures by building on well-established techniques such as tamper-evident logging and gossip, accountable state machines, threshold signatures and witness cosigning, and verifiable secret sharing. This combination of existing abstractions and threshold logical clocks yields a modular, cleanly-layered approach to building practical and efficient Byzantine consensus, distributed key generation, time, timestamping, and randomness beacons, and other critical services.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper introduces a threshold logical clock abstraction that lets upper-layer protocols operate as if the underlying asynchronous fail-stop network were synchronous. This is used to derive a consensus protocol claimed to be simpler and more robust than Paxos variants, requiring no common coins and terminating in a constant expected number of rounds; the same layering is then extended to Byzantine faults via tamper-evident logs, threshold signatures, and related primitives.
Significance. If the threshold logical clock construction is shown to deliver the synchronous abstraction without reintroducing leader election, timing bounds, or shared randomness, the result would supply a genuinely modular foundation for consensus and related services, reducing the complexity of asynchronous protocols while preserving their fault-tolerance guarantees.
major comments (2)
- [§3] §3 (definition and implementation of the threshold logical clock): the central claim that upper layers may treat the system as synchronous rests on this construction; the manuscript must explicitly demonstrate that clock advancement requires neither implicit timing assumptions nor any form of leader election or common coins, otherwise the reduction to a synchronous protocol and the complexity comparison to Paxos both fail.
- [§4] §4 (fail-stop consensus protocol): the stated constant expected round complexity is derived from the logical clock; the analysis must quantify the expected number of clock ticks per round under fully asynchronous scheduling and show that it remains constant, independent of network delays.
minor comments (2)
- Notation for threshold parameters (e.g., t and n) is introduced without a consolidated table; adding one would improve readability across sections.
- [§5] The Byzantine extension in §5 cites several existing techniques but does not include a single diagram showing the layering; a figure would clarify the modular boundaries.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their thorough review and valuable comments on our manuscript. We address each major comment below and plan to incorporate revisions to strengthen the paper.
read point-by-point responses
-
Referee: [§3] §3 (definition and implementation of the threshold logical clock): the central claim that upper layers may treat the system as synchronous rests on this construction; the manuscript must explicitly demonstrate that clock advancement requires neither implicit timing assumptions nor any form of leader election or common coins, otherwise the reduction to a synchronous protocol and the complexity comparison to Paxos both fail.
Authors: We agree that an explicit demonstration is important for the central claim. In the current manuscript, Section 3 defines the threshold logical clock using only asynchronous message exchanges and threshold-based quorums without relying on timing, leaders, or shared randomness. To make this clearer, we will revise the section to include a dedicated proof or argument explicitly ruling out these assumptions. This will support the reduction to synchronous protocols and the comparison to Paxos. revision: yes
-
Referee: [§4] §4 (fail-stop consensus protocol): the stated constant expected round complexity is derived from the logical clock; the analysis must quantify the expected number of clock ticks per round under fully asynchronous scheduling and show that it remains constant, independent of network delays.
Authors: The manuscript claims constant expected rounds based on the logical clock abstraction. However, we acknowledge that a more detailed quantification of the expected clock ticks per round under arbitrary asynchronous scheduling is required to fully substantiate the claim. We will add this analysis in the revised manuscript, deriving that the expectation is constant and independent of delays due to the threshold mechanism ensuring progress with high probability in each logical step. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity: novel abstraction defined independently of target consensus properties
full rationale
The paper introduces a new threshold logical clock abstraction whose definition and properties are presented as the foundation for the consensus protocol. The abstract and description frame the work as building atop this novel construct rather than deriving the abstraction from fitted parameters, prior self-citations, or equations that reduce the claimed synchronous behavior to its own inputs by construction. No load-bearing steps in the provided text exhibit self-definitional reduction, fitted-input prediction, or self-citation chains that force the result. The derivation is therefore self-contained as a definitional proposal.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Upper layers can operate as if on a synchronous network using the threshold logical clock abstraction
invented entities (1)
-
threshold logical clock
no independent evidence
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
-
[1]
Ittai Abraham, Dahlia Malkhi, Kartik Nayak, and Ling Ren. Dfinity Consensus, Explored. Cryptol- ogy ePrint Archive, Report 2018/1153, November 2018
work page 2018
-
[2]
Ittai Abraham, Dahlia Malkhi, and Alexander Spiegelman. V alidated Asynchronous Byzantine Agreement with Optimal Resilience and Asymp- totically Optimal Time and Word Communication. CoRR, abs/1811.01332, 2018
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2018
-
[3]
Asymptotically Optimal V alidated Asynchronous Byzantine Agreement
Ittai Abraham, Dahlia Malkhi, and Alexander Spiegelman. Asymptotically Optimal V alidated Asynchronous Byzantine Agreement. In ACM Symposium on Principles of Distributed Comput- ing (PODC), July 2019
work page 2019
- [4]
-
[5]
ANSI X9.95-2016: Trusted Time Stamp Management And Security, December 2016
American National Standards Institute. ANSI X9.95-2016: Trusted Time Stamp Management And Security, December 2016
work page 2016
-
[6]
Prime: Byzantine replication under at- tack
Y air Amir, Brian Coan, Jonathan Kirsch, and John Lane. Prime: Byzantine replication under at- tack. IEEE Transactions on Dependable and Se- cure Computing, 8(4):564–577, July 2011
work page 2011
-
[7]
Hijacking Bitcoin: Large-scale Network At- tacks on Cryptocurrencies
Maria Apostolaki, Aviv Zohar, and Laurent V an- bever. Hijacking Bitcoin: Large-scale Network At- tacks on Cryptocurrencies. 38th IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy , May 2017
work page 2017
-
[8]
Randomized protocols for asyn- chronous consensus
James Aspnes. Randomized protocols for asyn- chronous consensus. Distributed Computing , 16(2–3):165–175, September 2003
work page 2003
-
[9]
Faster randomized consensus with an oblivious adversary
James Aspnes. Faster randomized consensus with an oblivious adversary. Distributed Computing , 28(1):21–29, February 2015
work page 2015
-
[10]
Pierre-Louis Aublin, Rachid Guerraoui, Nikola Kneˇ zevi´ c, Vivien Qu´ ema, and Marko Vukoli´ c. The next 700 BFT protocols. ACM Trans. Comput. Syst., 32(4):12:1–12:45, January 2015. 37
work page 2015
-
[11]
Y onatan Aumann and Michael A. Bender. Efficient Asynchronous Consensus with the V alue-Oblivi- ous Adversary Scheduler. In 23rd International Colloquium on Automata, Languages and Pro- gramming (ICALP), July 1996
work page 1996
-
[12]
Y onatan Aumann and Michael A. Bender. Efficient low-contention asynchronous consensus with the value-oblivious adversary scheduler. Distributed Computing, 17(3):191–207, March 2005
work page 2005
-
[13]
Complexity of Network Syn- chronization
Baruch A werbuch. Complexity of Network Syn- chronization. Journal of the Association for Com- puting Machinery, 32(4):804–823, October 1985
work page 1985
-
[14]
Identity-Based Threshold Decryption
Joonsang Baek and Y uliang Zheng. Identity-Based Threshold Decryption. In 7th International W ork- shop on Theory and Practice in Public Key Cryp- tography (PKC), March 2004
work page 2004
-
[15]
Multisignatures secure under the discrete logarithm assumption and a generalized forking lemma
Ali Bagherzandi, Jung Hee Cheon, and Stanisław Jarecki. Multisignatures secure under the discrete logarithm assumption and a generalized forking lemma. In 15th ACM Conference on Computer and Communications Security (CCS) , October 2008
work page 2008
-
[16]
Hashgraph Consensus: fair, fast, Byzantine fault tolerance
Leemon Baird. Hashgraph Consensus: fair, fast, Byzantine fault tolerance. Technical Report TR- 2016-01, Swirlds, May 2016
work page 2016
-
[17]
Almost-Surely Terminating Asynchronous Byzantine Agreement Revisited
Laasya Bangalore, Ashish Choudhury, and Arpita Patra. Almost-Surely Terminating Asynchronous Byzantine Agreement Revisited. In Principles of Distributed Computing (PODC) , pages 295–304, July 2018
work page 2018
-
[18]
Another advantage of free choice: Completely asynchronous agreement protocols
Michael Ben-Or. Another advantage of free choice: Completely asynchronous agreement protocols. In Principles of Distributed Computing (PODC) , Au- gust 1983
work page 1983
-
[19]
Fast Asynchronous Byzantine Agreement (Extended Abstract)
Michael Ben-Or. Fast Asynchronous Byzantine Agreement (Extended Abstract). In 4th Principles of Distributed Computing (PODC) , pages 149– 151, August 1985
work page 1985
- [20]
-
[21]
Secure Multiparty Computation Goes Live
Peter Bogetoft, Dan Lund Christensen, Ivan Dam˚ gard, Martin Geisler, Thomas Jakobsen, Mikkel Krøigaard, Janus Dam Nielsen, Jes- per Buus Nielsen, Kurt Nielsen, Jakob Pagter, Michael Schwartzbach, and Tomas Toft. Secure Multiparty Computation Goes Live. In 13th In- ternational Conference on Financial Cryptography and Data Security (FC) , February 2009
work page 2009
-
[22]
Romain Boichat, Partha Dutta, Svend Frlund, and Rachid Guerraoui. Deconstructing Paxos. ACM SIGACT News, 34(1), March 2003
work page 2003
-
[23]
Alexandra Boldyreva. Threshold Signatures, Mul- tisignatures and Blind Signatures Based on the Gap-Diffie-Hellman-Group Signature Scheme. In 6th International W orkshop on Practice and The- ory in Public Key Cryptography (PKC) , January 2003
work page 2003
-
[24]
Dan Boneh, Joseph Bonneau, Benedikt B¨ unz, and Ben Fisch. V erifiable delay functions. In 38th Ad- vances in Cryptology (CRYPTO) , August 2018
work page 2018
-
[25]
Compact Multi-Signatures for Smaller Blockchains
Dan Boneh, Manu Drijvers, and Gregory Neven. Compact Multi-Signatures for Smaller Blockchains. In Advances in Cryptology – ASIACRYPT 2018, December 2018
work page 2018
-
[26]
Identity-based en- cryption from the Weil pairing
Dan Boneh and Matt Franklin. Identity-based en- cryption from the Weil pairing. In 21st IACR Inter- national Cryptology Conference (CRYPTO). 2001
work page 2001
-
[27]
On Bitcoin as a public randomness source
Joseph Bonneau, Jeremy Clark, and Steven Goldfeder. On Bitcoin as a public randomness source. IACR eprint archive, October 2015
work page 2015
-
[28]
An asynchronous [(n-1)/3]-Resilient Consensus Protocol
Gabriel Bracha. An asynchronous [(n-1)/3]-Resilient Consensus Protocol. In 3rd ACM Symposium on Principles of Distributed Computing (PODC) , pages 154–162, August 1984
work page 1984
-
[29]
Asynchronous Consensus and Broadcast Protocols
Gabriel Bracha and Sam Toueg. Asynchronous Consensus and Broadcast Protocols. Journal of the Association for Computing Machinery (JACM), 32(4):824–840, October 1985. 38
work page 1985
-
[30]
Above Us Only Stars: Exposing GPS Spoofing in Russia and Syria, April 2019
C4ADS. Above Us Only Stars: Exposing GPS Spoofing in Russia and Syria, April 2019
work page 2019
-
[31]
Asynchronous V erifiable Secret Sharing and Proactive Cryptosystems
Christian Cachin, Klaus Kursawe, Anna Lysyan- skaya, and Reto Strobl. Asynchronous V erifiable Secret Sharing and Proactive Cryptosystems. In 9th ACM Conference on Computer and Communi- cations Security (CCS) , November 2002
work page 2002
-
[32]
Secure and Efficient Asyn- chronous Broadcast Protocols
Christian Cachin, Klaus Kursawe, Frank Petzold, and Victor Shoup. Secure and Efficient Asyn- chronous Broadcast Protocols. In Advances in Cryptology (CRYPTO), August 2001
work page 2001
-
[33]
Random oracles in constantinople: Practi- cal asynchronous byzantine agreement using cryp- tography
Christian Cachin, Klaus Kursawe, and Victor Shoup. Random oracles in constantinople: Practi- cal asynchronous byzantine agreement using cryp- tography. Journal of Cryptology , 18(3):219–246, 2005
work page 2005
-
[34]
Introduction to Reliable and Secure Dis- tributed Programming
Christian Cachin and Rachid Guerraoui Lu´ ıs Ro- drigues. Introduction to Reliable and Secure Dis- tributed Programming. Springer, February 2011
work page 2011
-
[35]
Joseph A. Calandrino, J. Alex Halderman, and Ed- ward W . Felten. Machine-Assisted Election Au- diting. In USENIX/ACCURATE Electronic V oting T echnology W orkshop (ETV), August 2007
work page 2007
-
[36]
Fast Asynchronous Byzantine Agreement with Optimal Resilience
Ran Canetti and Tal Rabin. Fast Asynchronous Byzantine Agreement with Optimal Resilience. In 25th ACM Symposium on Theory of computing (STOC), pages 42–51, May 1993
work page 1993
-
[37]
Fast Asynchronous Byzantine Agreement with Optimal Resilience, September 1998
Ran Canetti and Tal Rabin. Fast Asynchronous Byzantine Agreement with Optimal Resilience, September 1998
work page 1998
-
[38]
SCRAPE: Scalable Randomness Attested by Public Entities
Ignacio Cascudo and Bernardo David. SCRAPE: Scalable Randomness Attested by Public Entities. In 15th International Conference on Applied Cryp- tography and Network Security (ACNS), July 2017
work page 2017
-
[39]
Practical Byzantine Fault Tolerance
Miguel Castro and Barbara Liskov. Practical Byzantine Fault Tolerance. In 3rd USENIX Sym- posium on Operating Systems Design and Imple- mentation (OSDI), February 1999
work page 1999
-
[40]
V erifiable Secret Sharing and Achieving Simultaneity in the Presence of Faults
Benny Chor, Shafi Goldwasser, Silvio Micali, and Baruch A werbuch. V erifiable Secret Sharing and Achieving Simultaneity in the Presence of Faults. In 26th Symposium on F oundations of Computer Science (SFCS), October 1985
work page 1985
-
[41]
D. D. Clark and D. L. Tennenhouse. Architectural considerations for a new generation of protocols. In ACM SIGCOMM, pages 200–208, 1990
work page 1990
-
[42]
On the Use of Financial Data as a Random Beacon
Jeremy Clark and Urs Hengartner. On the Use of Financial Data as a Random Beacon. In Electronic V oting T echnology W orkshop/W orkshop on Trust- worthy Elections (EVT/WOTE), August 2010
work page 2010
-
[43]
Allen Clement, Manos Kapritsos, Sangmin Lee, Y ang Wang, Lorenzo Alvisi, Mike Dahlin, and Taylor Rich´ e. UpRight cluster services. In ACM Symposium on Operating Systems Principles (SOSP), October 2009
work page 2009
-
[44]
Making Byzantine Fault Tolerant Systems Tolerate Byzan- tine Faults
Allen Clement, Edmund L Wong, Lorenzo Alvisi, Michael Dahlin, and Mirco Marchetti. Making Byzantine Fault Tolerant Systems Tolerate Byzan- tine Faults. In 6th USENIX Symposium on Net- worked Systems Design and Implementation , April 2009
work page 2009
-
[45]
Programmers solve MITs 20-year-old cryptographic puzzle, April 2019
Adam Conner-Simons. Programmers solve MITs 20-year-old cryptographic puzzle, April 2019
work page 2019
-
[46]
From consensus to atomic broadcast: Time-free Byzantine-resistant protocols without signatures
Miguel Correia, Nuno Ferreira Neves, and Paulo V erssimo. From consensus to atomic broadcast: Time-free Byzantine-resistant protocols without signatures. The Computer Journal , 49(1), January 2006
work page 2006
-
[47]
Byzantine consensus in asynchronous message- passing systems: a survey
Miguel Correia, Giuliana Santos V eronese, Nuno Ferreira Neves, and Paulo V erissimo. Byzantine consensus in asynchronous message- passing systems: a survey. International Journal of Critical Computer-Based Systems , 2(2):141–161, July 2011
work page 2011
-
[48]
General Secure Multi-party Computation from any Linear Secret-Sharing Scheme
Ronald Cramer, Ivan Dam˚ gard, and Ueli Maurer. General Secure Multi-party Computation from any Linear Secret-Sharing Scheme. In Eurocrypt, May 2000. 39
work page 2000
-
[49]
Scott A. Crosby and Dan S. Wallach. Efficient data structures for tamper-evident logging. In USENIX Security Symposium, August 2009
work page 2009
-
[50]
On Blockchain Frontrunning, Febru- ary 2018
Matt Czernik. On Blockchain Frontrunning, Febru- ary 2018
work page 2018
-
[51]
Peter H. Dana. Global Positioning System (GPS) Time Dissemination for Real-Time Applications. Real Time Systems, 12(1):9–40, January 1997
work page 1997
-
[52]
Blockmania: from Block DAGs to Consensus
George Danezis and David Hrycyszyn. Blockma- nia: from block dags to consensus. arXiv preprint arXiv:1809.01620, 2018
work page internal anchor Pith review Pith/arXiv arXiv 2018
- [53]
-
[54]
Donald T. Davis, Daniel E. Geer, and Theodore Ts’o. Kerberos With Clocks Adrift: History, Pro- tocols, and Implementation. Computing systems , 9(1):29–46, 1996
work page 1996
-
[55]
Epidemic algorithms for repli- cated database maintenance
Alan Demers et al. Epidemic algorithms for repli- cated database maintenance. In 6th ACM Sym- posium on Principles of Distributed Computing (PODC), pages 1–12, 1987
work page 1987
-
[56]
Yvo Desmedt and Y air Frankel. Threshold cryp- tosystems. In Advances in Cryptology (CRYPTO) , August 1989
work page 1989
-
[57]
The Political Potential of Sorti- tion: A Study of the Random Selection of Citizens for Public Office
Oliver Dowlen. The Political Potential of Sorti- tion: A Study of the Random Selection of Citizens for Public Office. Imprint Academic, August 2008
work page 2008
-
[58]
On the security of two-round multi- signatures
Manu Drijvers, Kasra Edalatnejad, Bryan Ford, Eike Kiltz, Julian Loss, Gregory Neven, and Igors Stepanovs. On the security of two-round multi- signatures. In 40th IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy (SP) , May 2019
work page 2019
-
[59]
L´ ucia M. A. Drummond and V almir C. Barbosa. On reducing the complexity of matrix clocks. Par- allel Computing, 29(7):895–905, July 2003
work page 2003
-
[60]
Sisi Duan, Michael K. Reiter, and Haibin Zhang. BEA T: Asynchronous BFT Made Practical. In Computer and Communications Security (CCS) , October 2018
work page 2018
-
[61]
Transparent Dishonesty: front-run- ning attacks on Blockchain
Shayan Eskandari, Seyedehmahsa Moosavi, and Jeremy Clark. Transparent Dishonesty: front-run- ning attacks on Blockchain. In 3rd W orkshop on Trusted Smart Contracts (WTSC), February 2019
work page 2019
-
[62]
Optimal Algo- rithms for Byzantine Agreement
Paul Feldman and Silvio Micali. Optimal Algo- rithms for Byzantine Agreement. In 20th Sympo- sium on Theory of Computing (STOC) , pages 148– 161, May 1988
work page 1988
-
[63]
Logical time in distributed comput- ing systems
Colin Fidge. Logical time in distributed comput- ing systems. IEEE Computer, 24(8):28–33, August 1991
work page 1991
- [64]
-
[65]
Impossibility of distributed consensus with one faulty process
Michael J Fischer, Nancy A Lynch, and Michael S Paterson. Impossibility of distributed consensus with one faulty process. Journal of the ACM (JACM), 32(2):374–382, 1985
work page 1985
-
[66]
Michael J. Fischer and Alan Michael. Sacrificing serializability to attain high availability of data in an unreliable network. In Symposium on Principles of Database Systems (PODS) , pages 70–75, March 1982
work page 1982
-
[67]
Experiment- ing with a Democratic Ideal: Deliberative Polling and Public Opinion
James S Fishkin and Robert C Luskin. Experiment- ing with a Democratic Ideal: Deliberative Polling and Public Opinion. Acta Politica, 40(3):284298, September 2005
work page 2005
-
[68]
Apple, FBI, and Software Trans- parency
Bryan Ford. Apple, FBI, and Software Trans- parency. Freedom to Tinker, March 2016
work page 2016
-
[69]
The Man Who Cracked the Lottery
Reid Forgrave. The Man Who Cracked the Lottery. The New Y ork Times Magazine, May 2018
work page 2018
-
[70]
Simple and efficient oracle-based con- sensus protocols for asynchronous Byzantine sys- tems
Roy Friedman, Achour Mostefaoui, and Michel Raynal. Simple and efficient oracle-based con- sensus protocols for asynchronous Byzantine sys- tems. IEEE Transactions on Dependable and Se- cure Computing, 2(1), January 2005
work page 2005
-
[71]
Saurabh Ganeriwal, Christina P¨ opper, Srdjan ˇCapkun, and Mani B. Srivastava. Secure Time 40 Synchronization in Sensor Networks. ACM Trans- actions on Information and System Security (TIS- SEC), 11(4), July 2008
work page 2008
-
[72]
V anish: Increasing Data Privacy with Self-Destructing Data
Roxana Geambasu, Tadayoshi Kohno, Amit A Levy, and Henry M Levy. V anish: Increasing Data Privacy with Self-Destructing Data. In USENIX Se- curity Symposium, pages 299–316, 2009
work page 2009
-
[73]
Secure Distributed Key Generation for Discrete-Log Based Cryptosys- tems
Rosario Gennaro, Stanisław Jarecki, Hugo Krawczyk, and Tal Rabin. Secure Distributed Key Generation for Discrete-Log Based Cryptosys- tems. 20(1):51–83, January 2007
work page 2007
-
[74]
Rosario Gennaro, Michael O. Rabin, and Tal Rabin. Simplified VSS and Fast-track Multi- party Computations with Applications to Thresh- old Cryptography. In 17th Principles of Dis- tributed Computing (PODC), June 1998
work page 1998
-
[75]
On the Security and Performance of Proof of Work Blockchains
Arthur Gervais, Ghassan O Karame, Karl W¨ ust, V asileios Glykantzis, Hubert Ritzdorf, and Srdjan ˇCapkun. On the Security and Performance of Proof of Work Blockchains. October 2016
work page 2016
-
[76]
Algorand: Scal- ing Byzantine Agreements for Cryptocurrencies, October 2017
Y ossi Gilad, Rotem Hemo, Silvio Micali, Georgios Vlachos, and Nickolai Zeldovich. Algorand: Scal- ing Byzantine Agreements for Cryptocurrencies, October 2017
work page 2017
-
[77]
The Go Programming Language, February 2018
work page 2018
-
[78]
Andreas Haeberlen, Paarijaat Aditya, Rodrigo Ro- drigues, and Peter Druschel. Accountable Virtual Machines. In 9th USENIX Symposium on Oper- ating Systems Design and Implementation (OSDI) , October 2010
work page 2010
-
[79]
PeerReview: Practical Accountability for Distributed Systems
Andreas Haeberlen, Petr Kouznetsov, and Peter Dr- uschel. PeerReview: Practical Accountability for Distributed Systems. In 21st ACM Symposium on Operating Systems Principles (SOSP) , October 2007
work page 2007
-
[80]
DFINITY Technology Overview Series: Consensus System, May 2018
Timo Hanke, Mahnush Movahedi, and Dominic Williams. DFINITY Technology Overview Series: Consensus System, May 2018
work page 2018
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.