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authorChristian Grothoff <christian@grothoff.org>2017-05-19 23:21:30 +0200
committerChristian Grothoff <christian@grothoff.org>2017-05-19 23:21:30 +0200
commita40d605d7cf2f9a654ced8b6a8d818b46fae9d6a (patch)
tree735c2b6e97bf3f6db4a6e1dde942f05154e280f8
parentc4d3b16e79ca05bafe15dd93c71b156de1154428 (diff)
add fwd ref to payback details
-rw-r--r--doc/paper/taler.tex5
1 files changed, 3 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/doc/paper/taler.tex b/doc/paper/taler.tex
index 4a9299a62..68b269137 100644
--- a/doc/paper/taler.tex
+++ b/doc/paper/taler.tex
@@ -703,7 +703,8 @@ than the total that was signed into existence using that denomination
key. In this case, the exchange can allow authentic customers to
redeem their unspent coins that were signed with the compromised
private key, while refusing further deposits involving coins signed by
-the compromised denomination key. As a result, the financial damage
+the compromised denomination key (see Section~\ref{sec:payback}).
+As a result, the financial damage
of losing a private signing key is limited to at most the amount
originally signed with that key, and denomination key rotation can be
used to bound that risk.
@@ -1744,7 +1745,7 @@ upholds the core principles described in~\cite{fc2014murdoch}. In
particular, in providing the cryptographic proofs as evidence none of
the participants have to disclose their core secrets.
-\subsection{Business concerns}
+\subsection{Business concerns} \label{sec:payback}
The Taler system implementation includes additional protocol elements
to address real-world concerns. To begin with, the exchange