Characterization of line width variation
Alfred K. Wong, Antoinette F. Molless, et al.
SPIE Advanced Lithography 2000
Byzantine agreement requires a set of parties in a distributed system to agree on a value even if some parties are maliciously misbehaving. A new protocol for Byzantine agreement in a completely asynchronous network is presented that makes use of new cryptographic protocols, specifically protocols for threshold signatures and coin-tossing. These cryptographic protocols have practical and provably secure implementations in the random oracle model. In particular, a coin-tossing protocol based on the Diffie-Hellman problem is presented and analyzed. The resulting asynchronous Byzantine agreement protocol is both practical and theoretically optimal because it tolerates the maximum number of corrupted parties, runs in constant expected rounds, has message and communication complexity close to the optimum, and uses a trusted dealer only once in a setup phase, after which it can process a virtually unlimited number of transactions. © 2005 Internationl Association for Cryptologic Research.
Alfred K. Wong, Antoinette F. Molless, et al.
SPIE Advanced Lithography 2000
Jonathan Ashley, Brian Marcus, et al.
Ergodic Theory and Dynamical Systems
A.R. Conn, Nick Gould, et al.
Mathematics of Computation
Salvatore Certo, Anh Pham, et al.
Quantum Machine Intelligence