Moderated Redactable Blockchains: A Definitional Framework with an Efficient Construct

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Abstract

Blockchain is a multiparty protocol to reach agreement on the order of events, and to record them consistently and immutably without centralized trust. In some cases, however, the blockchain can benefit from some controlled mutability. Examples include removing private information or unlawful content, and correcting protocol vulnerabilities which would otherwise require a hard fork. Two approaches to control the mutability are: moderation, where one or more designated administrators can use their private keys to approve a redaction, and voting, where miners can vote to endorse a suggested redaction. In this paper, we first present several attacks against existing redactable blockchain solutions. Next, we provide a definitional framework for moderated redactable blockchains. Finally, we propose a provable and efficient construct, which applies a single digital signature per redaction, achieving a much simpler and secure result compared to the prior art in the moderated setting.

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Dousti, M. S., & Küpçü, A. (2020). Moderated Redactable Blockchains: A Definitional Framework with an Efficient Construct. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 12484 LNCS, pp. 355–373). Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-66172-4_23

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