TY - JOUR
T1 - Epass
T2 - Efficient and Privacy-Preserving Asynchronous Payment on Blockchain
AU - Wang, Weijie
AU - Liang, Jinwen
AU - Zhang, Chuan
AU - Liu, Ximeng
AU - Zhu, Liehuang
AU - Guo, Song
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2004-2012 IEEE.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL) is a rapidly proliferating e-commerce model, offering consumers to get the product immediately and defer payments. Meanwhile, emerging blockchain technologies endow BNPL platforms with digital currency transactions, allowing BNPL platforms to integrate with digital wallets. However, the transparency of transactions causes critical privacy concerns because malicious participants may derive consumers’ financial statuses from on-chain asynchronous payments. Furthermore, the newly created transactions for deferred payments introduce additional time overhead, which weakens the scalability of BNPL services. To address these issues, we propose an efficient and privacy-preserving blockchain-based asynchronous payment scheme (Epass), which has promising scalability while protecting the privacy of on-chain consumer transactions. Specifically, Epass leverages locally verifiable signatures to guarantee the privacy of consumer transactions against malicious acts. Then, a privacy-preserving asynchronous payment scheme can be further constructed by leveraging time-release encryption to control trapdoors of the redactable blockchain, reducing time overhead by modifying transactions for deferred payment. We give formal definitions and security models, generic structures, and formal proofs for Epass. Extensive comparisons and experimental analysis show that Epass achieves KB-level communication costs, and reduces time overhead by more than four times in comparisons with locally verifiable signatures and Go-Ethereum private test networks.
AB - Buy Now Pay Later (BNPL) is a rapidly proliferating e-commerce model, offering consumers to get the product immediately and defer payments. Meanwhile, emerging blockchain technologies endow BNPL platforms with digital currency transactions, allowing BNPL platforms to integrate with digital wallets. However, the transparency of transactions causes critical privacy concerns because malicious participants may derive consumers’ financial statuses from on-chain asynchronous payments. Furthermore, the newly created transactions for deferred payments introduce additional time overhead, which weakens the scalability of BNPL services. To address these issues, we propose an efficient and privacy-preserving blockchain-based asynchronous payment scheme (Epass), which has promising scalability while protecting the privacy of on-chain consumer transactions. Specifically, Epass leverages locally verifiable signatures to guarantee the privacy of consumer transactions against malicious acts. Then, a privacy-preserving asynchronous payment scheme can be further constructed by leveraging time-release encryption to control trapdoors of the redactable blockchain, reducing time overhead by modifying transactions for deferred payment. We give formal definitions and security models, generic structures, and formal proofs for Epass. Extensive comparisons and experimental analysis show that Epass achieves KB-level communication costs, and reduces time overhead by more than four times in comparisons with locally verifiable signatures and Go-Ethereum private test networks.
KW - E-commerce
KW - locally verifiable signatures
KW - redactable blockchain
KW - time-released encryption
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105020991420
U2 - 10.1109/TDSC.2025.3629834
DO - 10.1109/TDSC.2025.3629834
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105020991420
SN - 1545-5971
JO - IEEE Transactions on Dependable and Secure Computing
JF - IEEE Transactions on Dependable and Secure Computing
ER -