About: Kilobyte is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 38 publications have been published within this topic receiving 426 citations. The topic is also known as: kB.
TL;DR: In this article, a new signature scheme for isogenies was proposed that combines the class group actions of CSIDH with the notion of Fiat-Shamir with aborts.
Abstract: We give a new signature scheme for isogenies that combines the class group actions of CSIDH with the notion of Fiat-Shamir with aborts. Our techniques allow to have signatures of size less than one kilobyte at the 128-bit security level, even with tight security reduction (to a non-standard problem) in the quantum random oracle model. Hence our signatures are potentially shorter than lattice signatures, but signing and verification are currently very expensive.
TL;DR: An empirical study of a recent spam campaign that resulted in a DoS attack on Bitcoin, using a clustering based method to detect spam transactions and pointing out changes that could be made to Bitcoin transaction fees that would mitigate some of the spam techniques used to effectively DoS Bitcoin.
Abstract: In this paper, we present an empirical study of a recent spam campaign (a “stress test”) that resulted in a DoS attack on Bitcoin. The goal of our investigation being to understand the methods spammers used and impact on Bitcoin users. To this end, we used a clustering based method to detect spam transactions. We then validate the clustering results and generate a conservative estimate that 385,256 (23.41 %) out of 1,645,667 total transactions were spam during the 10 day period at the peak of the campaign. We show the impact of increasing non-spam transaction fees from 45 to 68 Satoshis/byte (from $0.11 to $0.17 USD per kilobyte of transaction) on average, and increasing delays in processing non-spam transactions from 0.33 to 2.67 h on average, as well as estimate the cost of this spam attack at 201 BTC (or $49,000 USD). We conclude by pointing out changes that could be made to Bitcoin transaction fees that would mitigate some of the spam techniques used to effectively DoS Bitcoin.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose an improved communication protocol for networks of devices employing a plurality of nodes which communicate using message packets over private or shared access media network message packets support efficient and reliable transmission of data from simple sensor or control devices and complex devices requiring kilobyte or larger file transfers.
Abstract: An improved communication protocol for networks of devices employing a plurality of nodes which communicate using message packets over private or shared access media Network message packets support efficient and reliable transmission of data from simple sensor or control devices and complex devices requiring kilobyte or larger file data transfers In implementations where a plurality of nodes share a common network media, the system regulates the access to the network based on the priority and type of the device and reduces mutually destructive collisions
TL;DR: In the context of research and development activities for future hadron colliders, competitive implementations of real-time algorithms for feature extraction have been made on various forms of commercial pipelined and parallel architectures.
Abstract: In the context of research and development activities for future hadron colliders, competitive implementations of real-time algorithms for feature extraction have been made on various forms of commercial pipelined and parallel architectures. The algorithms used for benchmarking serve for decision making and are of relative complexity; they are required to run with a repetition rate of 100 kHz on data sets of kilobyte size. Results are reported and discussed in detail. Among the commercially available architectures, pipelined image processing systems can compete with custom-designed architectures. General-purpose processors with systolic mesh connectivity can also be used. Massively parallel systems of the SIMD type (many processors executing the same program on different data) are less suitable in the presently marketed form. >
TL;DR: Research shows that every gigabyte of network traffic results in approximately 400 kilobyte of accounting data when using refinements to existing methods for storing accounting data – less by a factor twenty than previously assumed.
Abstract: Proposed EU regulations on data retention could require every provider to keep accounting logs of its customers' Internet usage. Although the technical consequences of these requirements have been investigated by consultancy companies, this paper investigates what this accounting data could be, how it can be obtained and how much data storage is needed. This research shows that every gigabyte of network traffic results in approximately 400 kilobyte of accounting data when using our refinements to existing methods for storing accounting data – less by a factor twenty than previously assumed.