2018
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-01950-1_48
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Application of Public Ledgers to Revocation in Distributed Access Control

Abstract: There has recently been a flood of interest in potential new applications of blockchains, as well as proposals for more generic designs called public ledgers. Most of the novel proposals have been in the financial sector. However, the public ledger is an abstraction that solves several of the fundamental problems in the design of secure distributed systems: global time in the form of a strict linear order of past events, globally consistent and immutable view of the history, and enforcement of some application… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…The recent widely known compromises of popular service providers [2, 3,4] and government surveillances [16,18,28] have motivated quite a few proposals for public ledgers that have no centralized management. These public ledgers are basically public logs of events with the following properties [12]: immutability and global consistency of the event history, inclusiveness in the sense that all valid data is included. The ledgers might also define a linear order or have some built-in concept of time on all data entries.…”
Section: Public Ledgermentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The recent widely known compromises of popular service providers [2, 3,4] and government surveillances [16,18,28] have motivated quite a few proposals for public ledgers that have no centralized management. These public ledgers are basically public logs of events with the following properties [12]: immutability and global consistency of the event history, inclusiveness in the sense that all valid data is included. The ledgers might also define a linear order or have some built-in concept of time on all data entries.…”
Section: Public Ledgermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Enhanced Certificate Transparency [33] extends CT to handle certificate revocation and shows how this extension can be used in end-to-end email or messaging systems. Bui et al [12] apply public ledgers to group management in distributed systems where entities are represented by their public keys and authorization is in the form of signed certificates.…”
Section: Public Ledgermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It was invented to serve as the public transaction ledger of the cryptocurrency Bitcoin in 2008 [13], in which the need for a trusted third party is avoided: instead, this digital currency is based on the concept of 'proof of work' allowing users to execute payments by digitally signing their transactions using hashes through a distributed time-stamping service [15]. Because of its resistance to modifications, decentralized consensus, and proved robustness for supporting cryptocurrency transactions, this technology is seen to have great potential for new uses in other domains, including financial services [7,17], distributed data models [3], markets [16], government systems [9,14], healthcare [8,1,11], IoT [10], and video games [12]. As the blockchain technology matures, it is expected to change economics, business, and society [2] in the years to come.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%