Private, Auditable, and Distributed Ledger for Financial Institutes
Shaltiel Eloul, Yash Satsangi, Yeoh Wei Zhu, Omar Amer, Georgios, Papadopoulos, and Marco Pistoia

TL;DR
This paper introduces PADL, a privacy-preserving, auditable, and flexible distributed ledger tailored for financial institutions, enabling secure multi-asset transactions and regulatory compliance with proven security and improved performance.
Contribution
It proposes a novel cryptography-based framework for private, auditable distributed ledgers that support complex financial use-cases with enhanced privacy and efficiency.
Findings
Supports fast confidential multi-asset transactions
Ensures integrity and anonymity under strong threat models
Demonstrates improved performance over existing schemes
Abstract
Distributed ledger technology offers several advantages for banking and finance industry, including efficient transaction processing and cross-party transaction reconciliation. The key challenges for adoption of this technology in financial institutes are (a) the building of a privacy-preserving ledger, (b) supporting auditing and regulatory requirements, and (c) flexibility to adapt to complex use-cases with multiple digital assets and actors. This paper proposes a framework for a private, audit-able, and distributed ledger (PADL) that adapts easily to fundamental use-cases within financial institutes. PADL employs widely-used cryptography schemes combined with zero-knowledge proofs to propose a transaction scheme for a `table' like ledger. It enables fast confidential peer-to-peer multi-asset transactions, and transaction graph anonymity, in a no-trust setup, but with customized…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFinTech, Crowdfunding, Digital Finance
