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Author Topic: Bitcoin on arXiv  (Read 1515 times)
grondilu (OP)
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March 22, 2012, 03:48:12 PM
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arXiv is a cool website that gives, in my opinion, a glimpse of what science might look like in the future.

I've just noticed that there are three articles whith "bitcoin" in their title.

I haven't read them yet, but I thought it was worth mentionning.

http://arxiv.org/find/all/1/all:+bitcoin/0/1/0/all/0/1

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Meni Rosenfeld
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March 22, 2012, 04:07:49 PM
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Well, all three have been discussed on the forum before: Bitcoin is not anonymous, Microsoft Researchers Suggest Method to Improve Bitcoin Transaction Propagation, and my own Analysis of Bitcoin Pooled Mining Reward Systems.

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March 22, 2012, 04:10:10 PM
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Good idea to keep track of that.

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March 23, 2012, 04:35:01 AM
 #4

arXiv is a cool website that gives, in my opinion, a glimpse of what science might look like in the future.

http://snarxiv.org/



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grondilu (OP)
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August 07, 2012, 08:18:14 PM
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From the recent Forbes article about Silk Road and bitcoin, the arxiv article:

« Traveling the Silk Road: A measurement analysis of a large anonymous online marketplace »

http://arxiv.org/abs/1207.7139

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August 07, 2012, 09:51:09 PM
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arXiv is a cool website that gives, in my opinion, a glimpse of what science might look like in the future.

http://snarxiv.org/


Those are some really great papers. I really like the one examining how anonymous Bitcoin really is.

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April 04, 2013, 07:39:26 PM
 #7

Homomorphic Payment Addresses and the Pay-to-Contract Protocol

We propose an electronic payment protocol for typical customer-merchant relations which does not require a trusted (signed) payment descriptor to be sent from the merchant to the customer. Instead, the destination "account" number for the payment is solely created on the customer side. This eliminates the need for any encrypted or authenticated communication in the protocol and is secure even if the merchant's online infrastructure is compromised. Moreover, the payment transaction itself serves as a timestamped receipt for the customer. It proves what has been paid for and who received the funds, again without relying on any merchant signatures. In particular, funds and receipt are exchanged in a single atomic action. The asymmetric nature of the customer-merchant relation is crucial.
The protocol is specifically designed with bitcoin in mind as the underlying payment system. Thereby, it has the useful benefit that all transactions are public. However, the only essential requirement on the payment system is that "accounts" are arbitrary user-created keypairs of a cryptosystem whose keypairs enjoy a homomorphic property. All ElGamal-type cryptosystems have this feature. For use with bitcoin we propose the design of a deterministic bitcoin wallet whose addresses can be indexed by clear text strings.

http://arxiv.org/abs/1212.3257

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