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Ari Juels: Authenticated Data Feeds and Criminal Smart Contracts
FromEpicenter - Learn about Crypto, Blockchain, Ethereum, Bitcoin and Distributed Technologies
Ari Juels: Authenticated Data Feeds and Criminal Smart Contracts
FromEpicenter - Learn about Crypto, Blockchain, Ethereum, Bitcoin and Distributed Technologies
ratings:
Length:
61 minutes
Released:
Jan 3, 2017
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
Ari Juels, a Professor at Cornell Tech (Jacobs Institute) and former Chief Scientist of RSA, joins us to discuss his work two of his blockchain-related research topics: Authenticated Data Feeds for Smart Contracts and criminal smart contracts.
One of the shortcomings of decentralized smart contracts is their inability to retrieve information from the outside world. Smart contracts can’t make API calls to websites and data feeds, but rely on oracles to feed real-world information to the chain. This potentially requires a high trust in the oracle operators. Authenticated data feeds promise to solve the problem by relying on Intel’s novel SGX hardware.
We also talked about how criminals could use smart contracts to more efficiently conduct crimes such as incentivizing the theft of private keys or even soliciting real-world crimes such as murder.
Topics covered in this episode:
Ari’s background in cryptography and cryptocurrencies
The pain points with oracles as we describe them today
The idea behind Authenticated Data Feeds
The hardware and software architecture of the Authenticated Data Feed model and how hardware isolation works
How Authenticated Data Feeds could be used to create criminal smart contracts
The differents ways in which criminals could use Authenticated Data Feeds to release bounties for crimes such as private key theft or even murder
Countermeasures to fight criminal smart contracts
The Initiative For Cryptocurrencies & Contracts (IC3) and its raison d’être
Episode links:
Ari Juels' website
Town Crier: An Authenticated Data Feed for Smart Contracts (white paper)
The Ring of Gyges: Investigating the Future of Criminal Smart Contracts (white paper)
IC3 - The Initiative For Cryptocurrencies & Contracts
CCS 2016: Criminal Smart Contracts Talk
Zero Days: Stuxnet Documentary
This episode is hosted by Brian Fabian Crain and Sébastien Couture. Show notes and listening options: epicenter.tv/164
One of the shortcomings of decentralized smart contracts is their inability to retrieve information from the outside world. Smart contracts can’t make API calls to websites and data feeds, but rely on oracles to feed real-world information to the chain. This potentially requires a high trust in the oracle operators. Authenticated data feeds promise to solve the problem by relying on Intel’s novel SGX hardware.
We also talked about how criminals could use smart contracts to more efficiently conduct crimes such as incentivizing the theft of private keys or even soliciting real-world crimes such as murder.
Topics covered in this episode:
Ari’s background in cryptography and cryptocurrencies
The pain points with oracles as we describe them today
The idea behind Authenticated Data Feeds
The hardware and software architecture of the Authenticated Data Feed model and how hardware isolation works
How Authenticated Data Feeds could be used to create criminal smart contracts
The differents ways in which criminals could use Authenticated Data Feeds to release bounties for crimes such as private key theft or even murder
Countermeasures to fight criminal smart contracts
The Initiative For Cryptocurrencies & Contracts (IC3) and its raison d’être
Episode links:
Ari Juels' website
Town Crier: An Authenticated Data Feed for Smart Contracts (white paper)
The Ring of Gyges: Investigating the Future of Criminal Smart Contracts (white paper)
IC3 - The Initiative For Cryptocurrencies & Contracts
CCS 2016: Criminal Smart Contracts Talk
Zero Days: Stuxnet Documentary
This episode is hosted by Brian Fabian Crain and Sébastien Couture. Show notes and listening options: epicenter.tv/164
Released:
Jan 3, 2017
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
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