Related publications (12)

Analysis and Improvements of the Sender Keys Protocol for Group Messaging

Daniel Patrick Collins

Messaging between two parties and in the group setting has enjoyed widespread attention both in practice, and, more recently, from the cryptographic community. One of the main challenges in the area is constructing secure (end-to- end encrypted) and effici ...
2022

Atom: Horizontally Scaling Strong Anonymity

Bryan Alexander Ford, Henry Nathaniel Corrigan-Gibbs

Atom is an anonymous messaging system that protects against traffic-analysis attacks. Unlike many prior systems, each Atom server touches only a small fraction of the total messages routed through the network. As a result, the system’s capacity scales near ...
Association for Computing Machinery2017

Entity-based Classification of Twitter Messages

Karl Aberer, Zoltán Miklós, Surender Reddy Yerva

Twitter is a popular micro-blogging service on theWeb, where people can enter short messages, which then become visible to some other users of the service. While the topics of these messages varies, there are a lot of messages where the users express their ...
2012

On degraded two-message set broadcast

Christina Fragouli, Suhas Diggavi, Vinod Malathidevi Prabhakaran, Shirin Saeedi Bidokhti

We consider the two message set problem, where a source broadcasts a common message W1 to an arbitrary set of receivers U and a private message W2 to a subset of the receivers P ⊆U . Transmissions occur over linear deterministic channels. For the case wher ...
2009

On the Implementation and Use of Message Logging

Willy Zwaenepoel

We present a number of experiments showing that for compute-intensive applications executing in parallel on clusters of workstations, message logging has higher failure-free overhead than coordinated checkpointing. Message logging protocols, however, resul ...
1994

Graph Chatbot

Chat with Graph Search

Ask any question about EPFL courses, lectures, exercises, research, news, etc. or try the example questions below.

DISCLAIMER: The Graph Chatbot is not programmed to provide explicit or categorical answers to your questions. Rather, it transforms your questions into API requests that are distributed across the various IT services officially administered by EPFL. Its purpose is solely to collect and recommend relevant references to content that you can explore to help you answer your questions.