Chenghan Zhou will present her MSE talk "Profitable Manipulations of Cryptographic Self-Sortition are Statistically Detectable" on April 25, 2024 in CS 402.

Chenghan Zhou will present her MSE talk "Profitable Manipulations of Cryptographic Self-Sortition are Statistically Detectable" on April 25, 2024 in CS 402. Thesis advisor: Matt Weinberg Thesis reader: Mark Braverman Public seminar time: Apr 25, 2024, 12:30 - 1pm Location: CS402 Thesis Title: Profitable Manipulations of Cryptographic Self-Sortition are Statistically Detectable Abstract: Cryptographic Self-Selection is a common primitive underlying leader-selection for Proof-of-Stake blockchain protocols. The concept was first popularized in Algorand [CM19], who also observed that the protocol might be manipulable. [FHWY22] provide a concrete manipulation that is strictly profitable for a staker of any size (and also prove upper bounds on the gains from manipulation). Separately, [BW23] initiate the study of undetectable profitable manipulations of consensus protocols with a focus on the seminal Selfish Mining strategy [ES14] for Bitcoin’s Proof-of-Work longest-chain protocol. They design a Selfish Mining variant that, for sufficiently large miners, is strictly profitable yet also indistinguishable to an onlooker from routine latency (that is, a sufficiently large profit-maximizing miner could use their strategy to strictly profit over being honest in a way that still appears to the rest of the network as though everyone is honest but experiencing mildly higher latency. This avoids any risk of negatively impacting the value of the underlying cryptocurrency due to attack detection). We investigate the detectability of profitable manipulations of the canonical cryptographic self-selection leader selection protocol introduced in [CM19] and studied in [FHWY22], and establish that every strictly profitable manipulation is statistically detectable. Specifically, we consider an onlooker who sees only the random seed of each round (and does not need to see any other broadcasts by any other players). We show that the distribution of the sequence of random seeds when any player is profitably manipulating the protocol is inconsistent with any distribution that could arise by honest stakers being offline or timing out (for a natural stylized model of honest timeouts).
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