Byzantine consensus is a fascinating topic in distributed systems. It refers to a problem where some nodes in a network behave maliciously, while others are honest. The goal is to ensure that the network reaches consensus even in the presence of these malicious nodes.
Key Papers on Byzantine Consensus
"The Byzantine Generals' Problem" by Leslie Lamport: This seminal paper introduced the concept of Byzantine fault tolerance and laid the foundation for distributed systems.
"Practical Byzantine Fault Tolerance and Proactive Recovery" by Mike Burrows: This paper presents a practical solution for achieving Byzantine fault tolerance in distributed systems.
"Viewstamped Replication: A New Primary Copy Method to Support Highly Available Distributed Systems" by Eric Brewer: This paper introduces the concept of viewstamped replication, which is a method for achieving consensus in distributed systems.
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