Paper 2024/1154

Blockchain Space Tokenization

Aggelos Kiayias, University of Edinburgh, IOG, UK
Elias Koutsoupias, University of Oxford
Philip Lazos, Jump Trading
Giorgos Panagiotakos, IOG
Abstract

Handling congestion in blockchain systems is a fundamental problem given that the security and decentralization objectives of such systems lead to designs that compromise on (horizontal) scalability (what sometimes is referred to as the ``blockchain trilemma''). Motivated by this, we focus on the question whether it is possible to design a transaction inclusion policy for block producers that facilitates fee and delay predictability while being incentive compatible at the same time. Reconciling these three properties is seemingly paradoxical given that the dominant approach to transaction processing is based on first-price auctions (e.g., as in Bitcoin) or dynamic adjustment of the minimum admissible fee (e.g. as in Ethereum EIP-1559) something that breaks fee predictability. At the same time, in fixed fee mechanisms (e.g., as in Cardano), fees are trivially predictable but are subject to relatively inexpensive bribing or denial of service attacks where transactions may be delayed indefinitely by a well funded attacker, hence breaking delay predictability. In this work, we set out to address this problem by putting forward blockchain space tokenization (BST), namely a new capability of a blockchain system to tokenize its capacity for transactions and allocate it to interested users who are willing to pay ahead of time for the ability to post transactions regularly for a period of time. We analyze our system in the face of worst-case transaction-processing attacks by introducing a security game played between the mempool mechanism and an adversary. Leveraging this framework, we prove that BST offers predictable and asymptotically optimal delays, predictable fees, and is incentive compatible, thus answering the question posed in the affirmative.

Metadata
Available format(s)
PDF
Category
Cryptographic protocols
Publication info
Published elsewhere. Minor revision. Advances in Financial Technologies (AFT’24)
Keywords
Blockchain protocolsPredictable ServiceTransaction Fees
Contact author(s)
akiayias @ inf ed ac uk
elias @ cs ox ac uk
plazos @ gmail com
giorgos panagiotakos @ iohk io
History
2024-07-19: approved
2024-07-16: received
See all versions
Short URL
https://ia.cr/2024/1154
License
Creative Commons Attribution
CC BY

BibTeX

@misc{cryptoeprint:2024/1154,
      author = {Aggelos Kiayias and Elias Koutsoupias and Philip Lazos and Giorgos Panagiotakos},
      title = {Blockchain Space Tokenization},
      howpublished = {Cryptology {ePrint} Archive, Paper 2024/1154},
      year = {2024},
      url = {https://eprint.iacr.org/2024/1154}
}
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