Skip to content

bethereumproject/lottery

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

12 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Lottery

To run the lottery, make sure you are on a Unix system with Python 2.7 installed.

First, clone this repository by running:

git clone https://github.com/bethereumproject/lottery

Navigate into the repository and run the following command with the correct seed generated by our smart contract:

python lottery.py 24720320868029256831056980548599233276942548680731582133364369473456750647913 > winners.json

The winners.json file should now contain the results of the lottery. To check that your generated result matches ours, simply run:

cat winners.json | md5sum

The output should be: 0773e8c356e4575581363544e8f56018

How this works

While the above process may seem unnecessarily complicated, it is actually the most transparent way of performing a random lottery. It ensures that nobody can influence or manupulate the outcome in any way, and it allows every participant to verify the correctness of the outcome.

Let's break this whole process down.

Earlier today, we published 3 different things: the tickets.json file, the lottery.py file and a smart contract.

The tickets.json file contains a list of all lottery participants and their corresponding ticket values. The lottery.py file contains an implementation of the weighted Reservoir Sampling algorithm, which is capable of simulating the random drawing of tickets as would happen in an actual real-world lottery. The smart contract is simply there to give us the ability to turn an arbitrary block on the blockchain into a random long string of characters.

The real trick here is that the lottery.py file requires an argument to run. We call this argument the Random Seed. While the lottery.py file does indeed randomly draw winners, the randomness is controlled by the Random Seed and as long as it is run with the exact same seed, it will always draw winners in the exact same order.

So the question is, what Random Seed to we use? Do we use "hello, I am a seed"? Do we use "bethereum bounty lottery"? Or do we perhaps use some string of random characters like "zineytvlukzsdfhmgzlrt"?

None of these seeds would truly be random, because someone could create a seed that ensures they get drawn among the first people! We needed a truly random seed that nobody could predict and nobody could manipulate. Thus we turned to the Blockchain. By deciding to use the hash of a block that had not been created yet as the Random Seed, we relinquish control over the lottery outcome and leave it entirely up to chance.

As our seed, we chose the hash of block number 3595000, which would not be created for another few hours. Once the block was created, we used the smart contract to transform it into a truly unpredictable Random Seed, which turned out to be: 24720320868029256831056980548599233276942548680731582133364369473456750647913.

This seed was then used to run the lottery and calculate the results that can be found in the Results.MD file.

About

No description, website, or topics provided.

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Contributors 3

  •  
  •  
  •  

Languages