Plausible Deniability and Cryptocurrency Privacy Workshop: Difference between revisions
Mountainlion (talk | contribs) |
Mountainlion (talk | contribs) |
||
Line 35: | Line 35: | ||
== What Participants Should Bring to the Workshop (if anything) == | == What Participants Should Bring to the Workshop (if anything) == | ||
If you'd like, bring a laptop with a browser wallet funded with some change. | |||
== Links == | == Links == | ||
any links go here | any links go here |
Revision as of 06:06, 21 July 2022
Plausible Deniability and Cryptocurrency Privacy workshop
This workshop will be given:
Day 1: Friday, 22-July-2022, 7:30pm - 10:30pm, Workshop A (D'Angelo 309)
NOTE: You do NOT need to register to take this workshop -- please show up early to ensure a seat at Workshop A (D'Angelo 309).
Abstract
Hackers around the world use cryptocurrencies like bitcoin and ether every day under the mistaken assumption that these networks are somehow privacy-preserving (often conflating pseudonymity for privacy). This couldn't be further from the truth, as it is in fact often easier to trace crypto transactions than fiat transactions. Even so-called private networks like Zcash and Monero aren't failsafe from a privacy perspective. However, with a few tricks and tools it is possible to preserve privacy on cryptographic networks in a robust way. This workshop will present a brief history of privacy successes and failures in cryptocurrency and blockchain with important case studies, will demonstrate tracing and de-anonymization of actual transactions in real time, and will present tools and techniques for guaranteeing strong privacy.
Presenter(s)
Lane Rettig
Michelle Lai
Arctic Byte
Ahmed Ghappour
Full Description
Understand where information about your activity may be leaked, across the stack: hardware, software, protocol, and network.
See case studies of how users were identified through their on-chain traces.
Learn a framework for how to think about what parts of a transaction can be made private.
Follow along as we demo tools to stay safe at a network level.
We will also demo some privacy-centric wallets and cryptocurrency protocols.
Registration -- NOT required
You do not need to register in advance to take this workshop -- just show up early to ensure a seat.:
Required Software
any required software goes here
What Participants Should Bring to the Workshop (if anything)
If you'd like, bring a laptop with a browser wallet funded with some change.
Links
any links go here