Modern vehicles rely on data from a vast array of sensors such as radar and GPS equipment that can be shared with surrounding vehicles and other interested parties. Vehicle-to-everything (V2X) is the collection of systems that enable such communication. Although this data sharing has the potential to improve both the safety and efficiency of vehicles, ensuring that what is shared has not been altered, deleted, forged, leaked, or otherwise tampered with remains a challenging problem. Today, blockchain technology allows a system's participants to come to an agreement (consensus) on the state of the system and its data in a decentralized, trustless manner. This new technology may be capable of securing V2X data, as well as enabling other useful V2X services such as payments. However, the V2X ecosystem poses several unique challenges that complicate the application of blockchain technology, not least of which is the vast number of communications that any proposed blockchain network will need to support. This paper gives an overview of V2X and blockchain technology, explores potential applications of blockchain within the V2X domain, and justifies its importance. It also reviews, analyzes, and discusses various blockchain architectures that could support V2X applications. Though there is a place for blockchain in the V2X environment, currently there is no robust or mature blockchain architecture available that could support the entire ecosystem's needs. As such, this paper proposes novel directions for future research towards the creation of such a blockchain.
Drawing upon data from the China Labor-force Dynamics Survey (CLDS) of 2012 and 2014, this paper uses the panel binary choice model to examine the determinants of the settlement intentions of rural-urban migrants. Results showed that both a sense of belonging and social identity play important roles in determining rural-urban migrants' settlement decisions. Besides these, wage, education, and health also affect the willingness of migrant workers to settle in a given area. Therefore, to promote urbanization, policy-makers should pay attention to the subjective demands of rural-urban migrants. We suggested that decision-and policy-makers help such migrants improve their social networks and eliminate identity discrimination, so as to encourage their willingness to settle in cities. Key words: sense of belonging, social identity, settlement intention, rural-urban migrants, China. RESUMO:Com base nos dados do Laboratório de Dinâmica da Força de Trabalho da China (CLDS) de 2012 e 2014, este artigo usa o modelo de escolha binária do painel para examinar os determinantes das intenções de assentamento de migrantes rurais-urbanos. Os resultados mostram que tanto o senso de pertencimento, quanto a identidade social, desempenham papéis importantes na determinação das decisões de assentamentos de migrantes rurais-urbanos. Além destes, salário, educação e saúde também afetam a disposição dos trabalhadores migrantes de se estabelecerem em uma determinada área. Portanto, a fim de promover a urbanização, os formuladores de políticas devem prestar atenção às demandas subjetivas dos migrantes rurais-urbanos. Sugerimos que autoridades e formuladores de políticas públicas ajudem esses migrantes a melhorar sua rede social e a eliminar a discriminação de identidade, de modo a incentivar sua disposição de se estabelecer nas cidades. Palavras-chave: senso de pertencer, identidade social, intenção de liquidação, migrantes rurais-urbanos, China. RURAL SOCIOLOGY
Leader-based consensus protocols must undergo a view-change phase to elect a new leader when the current leader fails. The new leader is often decided upon a candidate server that collects votes from a quorum of servers. However, votingbased election mechanisms intrinsically cause competition in leadership candidacy when each candidate collects only partial votes. This split-vote scenario can result in no leadership winner and prolong the undesired view-change period. In this paper, we investigate a case study of Raft's leader election mechanism and propose a new leader election protocol, called ESCAPE, that fundamentally solves split votes by prioritizing servers based on their log responsiveness. ESCAPE dynamically assigns servers with a configuration that offers different priorities through Raft's periodic heartbeat. In each assignment, ESCAPE keeps track of server log responsiveness and assigns configurations that are inclined to win an election to more up-to-date servers, thereby preparing a pool of prioritized candidates. Consequently, when the next election takes place, the candidate with the highest priority will defeat its counterparts and becomes the next leader without competition. The evaluation results show that ESCAPE progressively reduces the leader election time when the cluster scales up, and the improvement becomes more significant under message loss.
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