Witnessing the Truth on Peerplays

in #peerplays8 years ago

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"A man with a watch knows what time it is. A man with two watches is never sure."

Peerplays is a provably fair peer-to-peer gaming network that will be going live on May 30, 2017. Its back-end infrastructure is a Graphene blockchain that utilizes delegated proof of stake (DPOS). Witnesses on this network validate blocks, and also independently report on various off-chain events in a timely manner.

Verifying an Off-Chain Event

Any witness can verify whether a binary event occurred (e.g. “Did FC Barcelona beat AC Milan by greater than 2 goals?”). If sufficient witnesses verify this event, then the blockchain code will consider the event to be resolved.
However, how should the operator of a witness verify the truth of an event? The gold standard would be for an operator of a witness to personally witness each of the various off-chain events, and to then report about them on the chain. Barring this difficult feat, various alternatives are possible. Before discussing the proposals, some terms will be defined.

Definitions

Although various sources could be used to determine whether any event did occur, any particular report might not be attributable to a firsthand witness of the actual event. Therefore, the following definitions will be used when discussing the criteria for verifying any particular event.

Authoritative source is an entity that regulates the conduct and/or scoring of an event (e.g. sports league, league official, etc.)

Authenticated source is an entity whose identity is known in some manner (e.g. sports league web site, news site, or eyewitness, etc.) and whose report can be attributed to them by some means (e.g. a cryptographically secure connection to their website; observing the source on radio or television or in-person; etc.)
The distinction between these two characteristics is necessary because a source may be neither authoritative nor authenticated.

Verification Criteria

When reporting on any particular event, I propose that at least one of the following criteria should be used when verifying the truth of any particular event:

(a) a single authoritative and authenticated source reporting on an event;

  • e.g. sports league reporting the results of a game

(b) at least two non-authoritative yet authenticated sources reporting on an event;

  • e.g. two independent and respected sources that publish their results through an authenticated connection such as a secure website or television channel

(c) at least one non-authoritative and authenticated source and two unauthenticated sources reporting on an event;

  • e.g. one independent and respected sources that publishes its results through an authenticated connection, and two unathenticated other sources whose reporting on the event could theoretically be altered by a third-party during transmittal of the information

(d) a stricter criterion that is determined by the Peerplays Blockchain Standards Association (PBSA).

If any one of these criteria cannot be met, then a witness should not verify an event.

Notice that I do not list any option for which unauthenticated sources alone should be used to verify an event. This is because it is possible for the transmittal of the information to be manipulated between the source and the witness.

Feedback Welcome

Do you see any problems with these criteria in principle? Are there better alternatives? Please share your thoughts below.

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This is exactly the type of information I've been requesting on the Friday mumble sessions for quite some time now. I didn't articulate my request very well but this is the type of information I was looking for. I don't know whether any of this type of thinking has been published before this post, and if it has, I haven't found it. That's on me if so.

I have been so busy since February I haven't made the time to really dig into this, so I am very appreciative of your efforts here @taconator. I'm also disappointed there are no responses or suggestions to this line of thought.

I would be shocked if these ideas have not already been thoroughly thought of and discussed by Jonathon & the PeerPlays team. I do NOT believe that is the case. We've all been quite busy lately, and I'm certain that's especially true of the PeerPlays team as they have been preparing for the launch of their service.

However this is a very important topic that directly relates to "Provably fair gaming", so explicit rules and procedures need to be well thought out, explained and available to witnesses as well as the public. With the debut of PeerPlays gaming only a few short weeks away expectations and standards need to be in place so when gaming starts confidence will be high concerning the reliability of these event oracles.

If there are other definitive sources for this type of info it would be good to publish a link to them here. I look forward to seeing how these standards will be established for various sporting events as PeerPlays goes live.