In the context of the Multiparty Interaction Model, fairness is used to insure that an interaction that is enabled sufficiently often in a concurrent program will eventually be selected for execution. Unfortunately, this notion does not take conspiracies into account, i.e. situations in which an interaction never becomes enabled because of an unfortunate interleaving of independent actions; furthermore, eventual execution is usually too weak for practical purposes since this concept can only be used in the context of infinite executions. In this article, we present a new fairness notion, k-conspiracy-free fairness, that improves on others because it takes finite executions into account, alleviates conspiracies that are not inherent to...
We introduce the notion of {\em resource-fair} protocols. Informally, this property states that if o...
AbstractWe present two randomized algorithms, one for message passing and the other for shared memor...
The advent of decentralized trading markets introduces a number of new challenges for consensus prot...
Strong fairness is a notion we can use to ensure that an element that is enabled infinitely often i...
AbstractThis is the first part of a two-part paper in which we discuss the implementability of fairn...
AbstractThis is the second part of a two-part paper in which we discuss the implementability of fair...
Transactional events are a recent concurrency abstraction that combines first-class synchronous mess...
Secure multiparty computation allows mutually distrusting parties to compute a function on their pri...
Fitzi, Garay, Maurer, and Ostrovsky (J. Cryptology 2005) showed that in the presence of a dishonest ...
A fair distributed protocol ensures that dishonest parties have no advantage over honest parties in ...
Avoiding conspiratorial executions is useful for debugging, model checking or refinement, and helps ...
AbstractIn the analysis and design of concurrent systems, it can be useful to assume fairness among ...
Fitzi, Garay, Maurer, and Ostrovsky (Journal of Cryptology 2005) showed that in the presence of a di...
Multi-agent systems are complex systems in which multiple autonomous entities, called agents, cooper...
Secure computation is a fundamental problem in modern cryptography in which multiple parties join to...
We introduce the notion of {\em resource-fair} protocols. Informally, this property states that if o...
AbstractWe present two randomized algorithms, one for message passing and the other for shared memor...
The advent of decentralized trading markets introduces a number of new challenges for consensus prot...
Strong fairness is a notion we can use to ensure that an element that is enabled infinitely often i...
AbstractThis is the first part of a two-part paper in which we discuss the implementability of fairn...
AbstractThis is the second part of a two-part paper in which we discuss the implementability of fair...
Transactional events are a recent concurrency abstraction that combines first-class synchronous mess...
Secure multiparty computation allows mutually distrusting parties to compute a function on their pri...
Fitzi, Garay, Maurer, and Ostrovsky (J. Cryptology 2005) showed that in the presence of a dishonest ...
A fair distributed protocol ensures that dishonest parties have no advantage over honest parties in ...
Avoiding conspiratorial executions is useful for debugging, model checking or refinement, and helps ...
AbstractIn the analysis and design of concurrent systems, it can be useful to assume fairness among ...
Fitzi, Garay, Maurer, and Ostrovsky (Journal of Cryptology 2005) showed that in the presence of a di...
Multi-agent systems are complex systems in which multiple autonomous entities, called agents, cooper...
Secure computation is a fundamental problem in modern cryptography in which multiple parties join to...
We introduce the notion of {\em resource-fair} protocols. Informally, this property states that if o...
AbstractWe present two randomized algorithms, one for message passing and the other for shared memor...
The advent of decentralized trading markets introduces a number of new challenges for consensus prot...