More security for decentralised blockchains: ERC grant funding for TU Professor Sebastian Faust's cryptography project
Darmstadt, 26. September 2022. The European Research Council (ERC) is providing around two million euros of funding for a project at the Technical University of Darmstadt that aims to improve decentralised blockchain technologies. The project "CRYPTOLAYER - Cryptography for Second Layer Blockchain Protocols" by Computer Science professor Sebastian Faust is being supported with a renowned ERC Consolidator Grant for a term of five years. This will further strengthen TU Darmstadt's activities in cryptography and IT security research.
The aim of the "CRYPTOLAYER" project is to make decentralised blockchain technologies usable for a wide range of applications. These technologies present a new method to perform computations without trusting a central platform provider. For example, they can process payment transactions in a distributed fashion powered by a large number of computers. While this approach results in a very high level of security, it has many disadvantages for mass application. In particular, blockchain computation are currently very expensive, publicly visible and applications cannot communicate with outside world.
This is where the TU Darmstadt’s research project comes in. "With the help of the 'CRYPTOLAYER' project, a second protocol layer will run on top of the blockchain", Faust explains. This allows computations to be carried out quickly and at minimal cost. Additionally, a second step is to ensure the confidentiality of transaction data through the use of cryptographic protocols. This creates the prerequisite for running a multitude of applications via decentralised platforms. "In addition to the digitalisation of financial products with the help of cryptocurrencies, applications in classic cloud computing, for example, can also benefit from this", describes the scientist.
About the person
Sebastian Faust has been Professor at the Technical University of Darmstadt since 2017 and heads the Applied Cryptography Group. His research is funded in part by the Collaborative Research Centre "Crossing" - Cryptography-based Security Solutions as a Basis for Trust in Today's and Future IT Systems" at TU Darmstadt, which is supported by the German Research Foundation (DFG).
Background
The ERC Consolidator Grants are awarded by the European Research Council to researchers from all disciplines for a period of seven to twelve years after their doctorate. In this way, the European Union promotes promising research: the Consolidator Grant is aimed at researchers who already have an excellent track record and now need support for their groundbreaking research projects to achieve scientific consolidation.
About TU Darmstadt
TU Darmstadt is one of Germany’s leading technical universities and a synonym for excellent, relevant research. We are crucially shaping global transformations – from the energy transition via Industry 4.0 to artificial intelligence – with outstanding insights and forward-looking study opportunities.
TU Darmstadt pools its cutting-edge research in three fields: Energy and Environment, Information and Intelligence, Matter and Materials. Our problem-based interdisciplinarity as well as our productive interaction with society, business and politics generate progress towards sustainable development worldwide.
Since we were founded in 1877, we have been one of Germany’s most international universities; as a European technical university, we are developing a trans-European campus in the network, Unite! With our partners in the alliance of Rhine-Main universities – Goethe University Frankfurt and Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz – we further the development of the metropolitan region Frankfurt-Rhine-Main as a globally attractive science location.
MI-Nr. 51/2022, Faust/mih
Wissenschaftlicher Ansprechpartner:
Prof. Sebastian Faust, Ph.D.
sebastian.faust@cs.tu-darmstadt.de
+49 6151 16-25710
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