Broadcast protocols enable a set of $n$ parties to agree on the input of a designated sender, even facing attacks by malicious parties. In the honest-majority setting, randomization and cryptography were harnessed to achieve low-communication broadcast with sub-quadratic total communication and balanced sub-linear cost per party. However, comparatively little is known in the dishonest-majority setting. Here, the most communication-efficient constructions are based on Dolev and Strong (SICOMP '83), and sub-quadratic broadcast has not been achieved. On the other hand, the only nontrivial $\omega(n)$ communication lower bounds are restricted to deterministic protocols, or against strong adaptive adversaries that can perform "after the fact" re...
This paper considers unconditionally secure protocols for reliable broadcast among a set of n player...
Inspired by the astonishing success of cryptocurrencies, most notably the Bitcoin system, several re...
The full-information model was introduced by Ben-Or and Linial in 1985 to study collective coin-flip...
Broadcast protocols enable a set of $n$ parties to agree on the input of a designated sender, even f...
Traditional protocols for secure multi-party computation among n parties communicate at least a line...
Byzantine Broadcast is crucial for many cryptographic protocols such as secret sharing, multiparty c...
Byzantine Broadcast is crucial for many cryptographic pro- tocols such as secret sharing, multiparty...
Broadcast among n parties in the presence of t ≥ n/3 malicious parties is possible only with some ad...
Byzantine Broadcast (BB) is a central question in distributed systems, and an important challenge is...
Broadcast is a primitive which allows a specific party to distribute a message consistently among $n...
Byzantine broadcast is a distributed primitive that allows a specific party (called ``sender\u27\u27...
In 1985, Ben-Or and Linial (Advances in Computing Research \u2789) introduced the collective coin-fl...
Minimizing the round complexity of byzantine broadcast is a fundamental question in distributed comp...
Broadcast is a fundamental primitive in distributed computing. It allows a sender to consistently di...
Broadcast is a fundamental primitive in distributed computing. It allows a sender to consistently di...
This paper considers unconditionally secure protocols for reliable broadcast among a set of n player...
Inspired by the astonishing success of cryptocurrencies, most notably the Bitcoin system, several re...
The full-information model was introduced by Ben-Or and Linial in 1985 to study collective coin-flip...
Broadcast protocols enable a set of $n$ parties to agree on the input of a designated sender, even f...
Traditional protocols for secure multi-party computation among n parties communicate at least a line...
Byzantine Broadcast is crucial for many cryptographic protocols such as secret sharing, multiparty c...
Byzantine Broadcast is crucial for many cryptographic pro- tocols such as secret sharing, multiparty...
Broadcast among n parties in the presence of t ≥ n/3 malicious parties is possible only with some ad...
Byzantine Broadcast (BB) is a central question in distributed systems, and an important challenge is...
Broadcast is a primitive which allows a specific party to distribute a message consistently among $n...
Byzantine broadcast is a distributed primitive that allows a specific party (called ``sender\u27\u27...
In 1985, Ben-Or and Linial (Advances in Computing Research \u2789) introduced the collective coin-fl...
Minimizing the round complexity of byzantine broadcast is a fundamental question in distributed comp...
Broadcast is a fundamental primitive in distributed computing. It allows a sender to consistently di...
Broadcast is a fundamental primitive in distributed computing. It allows a sender to consistently di...
This paper considers unconditionally secure protocols for reliable broadcast among a set of n player...
Inspired by the astonishing success of cryptocurrencies, most notably the Bitcoin system, several re...
The full-information model was introduced by Ben-Or and Linial in 1985 to study collective coin-flip...