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2019

Incremental Proofs of Sequential Work

Summary

A proof of sequential work allows a prover to convince a verifier that a certain amount of sequential steps have been computed. In this work we introduce the notion of incremental proofs of sequential work where a prover can carry on the computation done by the previous prover incrementally, without affecting the resources of the individual provers or the size of the proofs. To date, the most efficient instance of proofs of sequential work [Cohen and Pietrzak, Eurocrypt 2018] for N steps require the prover to have √ N memory and to run for N + √ N steps. Using incremental proofs of sequential work we can bring down the prover’s storage complexity to log N and its running time to N. We propose two different constructions of incremental proofs of sequential work: Our first scheme requires a single processor and introduces a poly-logarithmic factor in the proof size when compared with the proposals of Cohen and Pietrzak. Our second scheme assumes log N parallel processors but brings down the overhead of the proof size to a factor of 9. Both schemes are simple to implement and only rely on hash functions (modelled as random oracles).

Conference Paper

International Conference on the Theory and Application of Cryptographic Techniques (EUROCRYPT)

Date published

2019

Date last modified

2024-11-19