<div class="csl-bib-body">
<div class="csl-entry">Aumayr, L., Avarikioti, Z., Maffei, M., Scaffino, G., & Zindros, D. (2026). Blink: An Optimal Proof of Proof-of-Work. In C. Garman & Pedro Moreno-Sanchez (Eds.), <i>Financial Cryptography and Data Security : 29th International Conference, FC 2025, Miyakojima, Japan, April 14–18, 2025, Revised Selected Papers, Part II</i> (pp. 173–190). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-032-07035-7_11</div>
</div>
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dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12708/225210
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dc.description.abstract
Designing light clients to securely and efficiently read Proof of-Work blockchains has been a foundational problem since the inception
of blockchains. Nakamoto themselves, in the original Bitcoin paper, pre sented the first client protocol, i.e., the Simplified Payment Verification,
which consumes an amount of bandwidth, computational, and storage
resources that grows linearly in the system’s lifetime C.
Today, the blockchain ecosystem is more mature and presents a variety
of applications and protocols deployed on-chain and, often, cross-chain.
In this landscape, light clients have become the cornerstone of decen tralized bridges, playing a pivotal role in the security and efficiency of
cross-chain operations. These new use cases, combined with the growth
of blockchains over time, raise the need for more minimalist clients, which
further reduce the resource requirements and, when applicable, on-chain
costs. Over the years, the light client resource consumption has been
reduced from O(C) to O(polylog(C)), and then down to O(1) with zero knowledge techniques at the cost of often assuming a trusted setup.
In this paper, we present Blink, the first interactive provably secure
O(1) PoW light client without trusted setup. Blink can be used for a vari ety of applications ranging from payment verification and bootstrapping,
to bridges. We prove Blink secure in the Bitcoin Backbone model, and
we evaluate its proof size demonstrating that, at the moment of writing,
Blink obtains a commitment to the current state of Bitcoin by download ing only 1.6KB, instead of 67.3 MB and 197 KB for SPV and zk-based
clients, respectively.
en
dc.description.sponsorship
Christian Doppler Forschungsgesells
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dc.language.iso
en
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dc.relation.ispartofseries
Lecture Notes in Computer Science
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dc.subject
blockchain
en
dc.subject
Proof-of-Work
en
dc.subject
light client
en
dc.title
Blink: An Optimal Proof of Proof-of-Work
en
dc.type
Inproceedings
en
dc.type
Konferenzbeitrag
de
dc.contributor.affiliation
University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (the)
-
dc.contributor.affiliation
Stanford University, United States of America (the)
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dc.contributor.editoraffiliation
Purdue University West Lafayette, United States of America (the)
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dc.relation.isbn
978-3-032-07035-7
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dc.relation.doi
10.1007/978-3-032-07035-7
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dc.relation.issn
0302-9743
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dc.description.startpage
173
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dc.description.endpage
190
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dc.relation.grantno
CDL-BOT
-
dc.type.category
Full-Paper Contribution
-
dc.relation.eissn
1611-3349
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tuw.booktitle
Financial Cryptography and Data Security : 29th International Conference, FC 2025, Miyakojima, Japan, April 14–18, 2025, Revised Selected Papers, Part II
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tuw.container.volume
15752
-
tuw.peerreviewed
true
-
tuw.relation.publisher
Springer
-
tuw.relation.publisherplace
Cham
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tuw.project.title
Blockchaintechnologien für das Internet der Dinge
-
tuw.researchTopic.id
I1
-
tuw.researchTopic.id
I2
-
tuw.researchTopic.id
C5
-
tuw.researchTopic.name
Logic and Computation
-
tuw.researchTopic.name
Computer Engineering and Software-Intensive Systems
-
tuw.researchTopic.name
Computer Science Foundations
-
tuw.researchTopic.value
40
-
tuw.researchTopic.value
40
-
tuw.researchTopic.value
20
-
tuw.publication.orgunit
E192-06 - Forschungsbereich Security and Privacy
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tuw.publication.orgunit
E056-10 - Fachbereich SecInt-Secure and Intelligent Human-Centric Digital Technologies
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tuw.publication.orgunit
E056-13 - Fachbereich LogiCS
-
tuw.publication.orgunit
E056-26 - Fachbereich Automated Reasoning
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tuw.publisher.doi
10.1007/978-3-032-07035-7_11
-
dc.description.numberOfPages
18
-
tuw.author.orcid
0000-0001-8006-3172
-
tuw.author.orcid
0000-0002-1978-594X
-
tuw.editor.orcid
0009-0006-5077-5404
-
tuw.editor.orcid
0000-0003-2315-7839
-
tuw.event.name
29th International Conference on Financial Cryptography and Data Security (FC'25)
en
tuw.event.startdate
14-04-2025
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tuw.event.enddate
18-04-2025
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tuw.event.online
On Site
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tuw.event.type
Event for scientific audience
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tuw.event.place
Miyakojima
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tuw.event.country
JP
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tuw.event.presenter
Aumayr, Lukas
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wb.sciencebranch
Informatik
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wb.sciencebranch
Mathematik
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wb.sciencebranch.oefos
1020
-
wb.sciencebranch.oefos
1010
-
wb.sciencebranch.value
80
-
wb.sciencebranch.value
20
-
item.openairetype
conference paper
-
item.openairecristype
http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_5794
-
item.cerifentitytype
Publications
-
item.languageiso639-1
en
-
item.grantfulltext
none
-
item.fulltext
no Fulltext
-
crisitem.author.dept
E192-06 - Forschungsbereich Security and Privacy
-
crisitem.author.dept
E192-06 - Forschungsbereich Security and Privacy
-
crisitem.author.dept
E192-06 - Forschungsbereich Security and Privacy
-
crisitem.author.dept
E192-06 - Forschungsbereich Security and Privacy
-
crisitem.author.dept
Stanford University, United States of America (the)