| Just because the majority of a field of research is not working on a certain subfield, doesn't mean that there aren't capable people working in such subfield. As far as I can tell, you seem to be confirming that there are "real" computer scientists and cryptographers currently working on such things. > P.S. By quickly searching through the list there are around 900 papers of which around 30 are blockchain, cryptocurrency and electronic/digital cash related. If you just Ctrl+F'd for those terms, it is likely that you are leaving out some (many?) papers. For example: did you count these two... "VCProof: Constructing Shorter and Faster-to-Verify zkSNARKs with Vector Oracles", by Yuncong Zhang and Ren Zhang and Geng Wang and Dawu Gu "On Simulation-Extractability of Universal zkSNARKs", by Markulf Kohlweiss and Michał Zając ? My point: it might not be 100% obvious whether a certain cryptographic primitive (or line of research) is "blockchain-related" or not. As far as I can tell, whether you like the subfield or not, it does seem like there is some fundamental cryptographical research being done as a consequence of the "blockchain" craze (e.g. zero-knowledge proof systems, robust consensus mechanisms in adversarial settings, ring confidential transactions). EDIT: if you Ctrl+F for "smart contract", for example, you'll get half a dozen more; if you Ctrl+F for "byzantine", you'll get some more; if you Ctrl+F for "zero-knowledge", you'll get 21 more; "cross-chain", "mining", etc. |
Maybe there are real people working on crypto problems or maybe there is some sort of Crypto winter akin to AI winter[1].
Let's take Satoshi for example a top notch computer scientist and a top notch C++ programmer. Who is even close to him? Vitalik? Kid who dropped out of college and rediscovered Satoshi's smart contract scripting language that Bitcoin had way back in 2008. Is Gavin Andresen[2] still involved? A 3D computer graphics programmer who worked in the Silicon Valley back in the 90s. These are the kind of people I am talking about.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AI_winter
[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gavin_Andresen