Distributed Ledger Privacy: Ring Signatures, Möbius and CryptoNote

02/07/2019
by   Christopher D. Clack, et al.
0

Distributed ledger and blockchain systems are expected to make financial systems easier to audit, reduce counter-party risk and transfer assets seamlessly. The key concept is a token controlled by a cryptographic private key for spending, and represented by a public key for receiving and audit purposes. Ownership transfers are authorized with digital signatures and recorded on a ledger visible to numerous participants. Several ways to enhance the privacy of such ledgers have been proposed. In this paper we study two major techniques to enhance privacy of token transfers with the help of improved cryptography: Möbius and CryptoNote. The comparison is illuminating: both techniques use "ring signatures" and some form of "stealth addressing" or key derivation techniques, yet each does it in a completely different way. Möbius is more recent and operates in a more co-operative way (with permission) and is not yet specified at a sufficiently detailed level. Our primary goal is to explore the suitability of these two techniques for improving the privacy of payments on cryptographic ledgers. We explain various conflicting requirements and strategic choices which arise when trying to conceal the identity of participants and the exact details of transactions in our context while simultaneously enabling fast final settlement of tokens with a reasonable level of liquidity. We show that in these systems, third-party observers see obfuscated settlement. We finish with a summary of explicit warnings and advice for implementors of such systems.

READ FULL TEXT
research
10/01/2020

An Anonymous Trust-Marking Scheme on Blockchain Systems

During the Coincheck incident, which recorded the largest damages in cry...
research
10/10/2021

Group Signatures and Accountable Ring Signatures from Isogeny-based Assumptions

Group signatures are an important cryptographic primitive providing both...
research
07/27/2018

Coloured Ring Confidential Transactions

Privacy in block-chains is considered second to functionality, but a vit...
research
09/27/2018

Privacy in Blockchain Systems

In this literature review, we first briefly provide an introduction on t...
research
10/10/2018

True2F: Backdoor-resistant authentication tokens

We present True2F, a system for second-factor authentication that provid...
research
07/30/2018

A Flexible Network Approach to Privacy of Blockchain Transactions

For preserving privacy, blockchains can be equipped with dedicated mecha...
research
03/20/2023

Evidential Transactions with Cyberlogic

Cyberlogic is an enabling logical foundation for building and analyzing ...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset