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Yu, G. (2020). Blockchain stealth address schemes, Cryptology ePrint Archive. Added by: Jack (06/06/2023, 21:03) Last edited by: Jack (06/06/2023, 21:04) |
Resource type: Journal Article BibTeX citation key: Yu2020 View all bibliographic details |
Categories: Monero-focused Creators: Yu Collection: Cryptology ePrint Archive |
Views: 41/2750
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Attachments blockchain_stealth_address_schemes.pdf [10/760] | URLs https://eprint.iacr.org/2020/548.pdf |
Abstract |
In a blockchain system, address is an essential primitive which is used in transaction. The Stealth Address, which has an underlying address info of two public keys (π΄, π΅), was developed by Monero blockchain in 2013, in which a one-time public key is used as the transaction destination, to protect the recipient privacy. At almost same time, hierarchical deterministic wallets scheme was proposed as bip-32 for Bitcoin, which makes it possible to share an extended public key (πΎ, π) between sender and receiver, where πΎ is a public key and π is a 256-bits chain code, and only receiver knows the corresponding private key of this πΎ. With the bip-32 scheme, the sender may derive the ***** public key πΎ! with the ***** number π by him/herself, without needing to request a new address for each payment from the receiver, make each transaction have a different destination key for privacy. This paper introduces an improved stealth address scheme (and some enhanced variants) which has an underlying address data of (π΄ ! , π΅! , π), where π is a ***** number and π ∈ [0, 2"# − 1]. The sender gets the receiver’s address info (π΄ ! , π΅! , π), generates a random secret number π ∈ [0, 2$% − 1] and calculate a Pedersen commitment πΆ = π΄ ! π΅! β & ! .( where π
) = π΅! * , then the sender may use this commitment πΆ or π»ππ β(πΆ) as the destination key for the output and packs the (π
, π) somewhere into the transaction. This improved stealth address scheme makes it possible to manage multiple stealth addresses in one wallet, therefore the user is able to share different addresses for different senders.
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