A Game-Theoretic Analysis of Shard-Based Permissionless Blockchains Article

Manshaei, MH, Jadliwala, M, Maiti, A et al. (2018). A Game-Theoretic Analysis of Shard-Based Permissionless Blockchains . IEEE Access, 6 78100-78112. 10.1109/ACCESS.2018.2884764

cited authors

  • Manshaei, MH; Jadliwala, M; Maiti, A; Fooladgar, M

abstract

  • Low transaction throughput and poor scalability are significant issues in public blockchain consensus protocols, such as Bitcoins. Recent research efforts in this direction have proposed shard-based consensus protocols where the key idea is to split the transactions among multiple committees (or shards), which then process these shards or set of transactions in parallel. Such a parallel processing of disjoint sets of transactions or shards by multiple committees significantly improves the overall scalability and transaction throughout of the system. However, one significant research gap is a lack of understanding of the strategic behavior of rational processors within committees in such shard-based consensus protocols. Such an understanding is critical for designing appropriate incentives that will foster cooperation within committees and prevent free-riding. In this paper, we address this research gap by analyzing the behavior of processors using a game-theoretic model, where each processor aims at maximizing its reward at a minimum cost of participating in the protocol. We first analyze the Nash equilibria in an N-player static game model of the sharding protocol. We show that depending on the reward sharing approach employed, processors can potentially increase their payoff by unilaterally behaving in a defective fashion, thus resulting in a social dilemma. In order to overcome this social dilemma, we propose a novel incentive-compatible reward sharing mechanism to promote cooperation among processors. Our numerical results show that achieving a majority of cooperating processors (required to ensure a healthy state of the blockchain network) is easier to achieve with the proposed incentive-compatible reward sharing mechanism than with other reward sharing mechanisms.

publication date

  • January 1, 2018

published in

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • 78100

end page

  • 78112

volume

  • 6