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Fair Leader Election for Rational Agents in Asynchronous Rings and Networks

12 May 2018
A. Yifrach
Yishay Mansour
    FedML
ArXiv (abs)PDFHTML
Abstract

We study a game theoretic model where a coalition of processors might collude to bias the outcome of the protocol, where we assume that the processors always prefer any legitimate outcome over a non-legitimate one. We show that the problems of Fair Leader Election and Fair Coin Toss are equivalent, and focus on Fair Leader Election. Our main focus is on a directed asynchronous ring of nnn processors, where we investigate the protocol proposed by Abraham et al. \cite{abraham2013distributed} and studied in Afek et al. \cite{afek2014distributed}. We show that in general the protocol is resilient only to sub-linear size coalitions. Specifically, we show that Ω(nlog⁡n)\Omega(\sqrt{n\log n})Ω(nlogn​) randomly located processors or Ω(n3)\Omega(\sqrt[3]{n})Ω(3n​) adversarially located processors can force any outcome. We complement this by showing that the protocol is resilient to any adversarial coalition of size O(n4)O(\sqrt[4]{n})O(4n​). We propose a modification to the protocol, and show that it is resilient to every coalition of size Θ(n)\Theta(\sqrt{n})Θ(n​), by exhibiting both an attack and a resilience result. For every k≥1k \geq 1k≥1, we define a family of graphs Gk{\mathcal{G}}_{k}Gk​ that can be simulated by trees where each node in the tree simulates at most kkk processors. We show that for every graph in Gk{\mathcal{G}}_{k}Gk​, there is no fair leader election protocol that is resilient to coalitions of size kkk. Our result generalizes a previous result of Abraham et al. \cite{abraham2013distributed} that states that for every graph, there is no fair leader election protocol which is resilient to coalitions of size ⌈n2⌉\lceil \frac{n}{2} \rceil⌈2n​⌉.

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