暂无分享,去创建一个
Bitcoins have recently become an increasingly popular cryptocurrency through which users trade electronically and more anonymously than via traditional electronic transfers. Bitcoin's design keeps all transactions in a public ledger. The sender and receiver for each transaction are identified only by cryptographic public-key ids. This leads to a common misconception that it inherently provides anonymous use. While Bitcoin's presumed anonymity offers new avenues for commerce, several recent studies raise user-privacy concerns. We explore the level of anonymity in the Bitcoin system. Our approach is two-fold: (i) We annotate the public transaction graph by linking bitcoin public keys to "real" people - either definitively or statistically. (ii) We run the annotated graph through our graph-analysis framework to find and summarize activity of both known and unknown users.
[1] Fergal Reid,et al. An Analysis of Anonymity in the Bitcoin System , 2011, PASSAT 2011.
[2] Adi Shamir,et al. Quantitative Analysis of the Full Bitcoin Transaction Graph , 2013, Financial Cryptography.
[3] Adi Shamir,et al. How Did Dread Pirate Roberts Acquire and Protect his Bitcoin Wealth? , 2014, Financial Cryptography Workshops.