Event
Ph.D. Dissertation Defense: Georgios Tsimos
Monday, April 7, 2025
9:00 a.m.
AVW 1146
Maria Hoo
301 405 3681
mch@umd.edu
A recurring trilemma of consensus when utilized in practice is striking the balance in order to construct protocols that are: i) efficient, ii) resilient under harsh adversarial conditions, and iii) with minimal assumptions for the corresponding setting. These properties are usually negatively associated; efficient protocols often either require stronger assumptions, or are less resilient to strong adversaries.
In this dissertation we aim to improve the efficiency of consensus protocols under harsh adversarial conditions and weak assumptions. We explore directions towards improving the two major metrics of efficiency of such protocols; i.e. their communication and round complexities. We focus on protocols operating in a synchronous communication network, and show how to achieve efficiency of either rounds or communication under different assumptions, against weakly adaptive adversaries with high corruption threshold. We will construct i) (Parallel) Broadcast protocols with improved state of the art communication, ii) the first Broadcast protocol with sublinear rounds without trusted setup in the adaptive dishonest majority, and iii) the first Deterministic Byzantine Agreement protocol with adaptive O(n · f) communication.