TY - JOUR
T1 - Sybil-Resilient Reality-Aware Social Choice
AU - Shahaf, Gal
AU - Shapiro, Ehud
AU - Talmon, Nimrod
N1 - To appear in Proceedings of IJCAI'19. We thank the generous support of the Braginsky Center for the Interface between Science and the Humanities.
PY - 2018/7/29
Y1 - 2018/7/29
N2 - Sybil attacks, in which fake or duplicate identities (\emph{sybils}) infiltrate an online community, pose a serious threat to such communities, as they might tilt community-wide decisions in their favor. While the extensive research on sybil identification may help keep the fraction of sybils in such communities low, it cannot however ensure their complete eradication. Thus, our goal is to enhance social choice theory with effective group decision mechanisms for communities with bounded sybil penetration. Inspired by Reality-Aware Social Choice, we use the status quo as the anchor of \emph{sybil resilience}, characterized by \emph{sybil safety} -- the inability of sybils to change the status quo against the will of the genuine agents, and \emph{sybil liveness} -- the ability of the genuine agents to change the status quo against the will of the sybils. We consider the social choice settings of deciding on a single proposal, on multiple proposals, and on updating a parameter. For each, we present social choice rules that are sybil-safe and, under certain conditions, satisfy sybil-liveness.
AB - Sybil attacks, in which fake or duplicate identities (\emph{sybils}) infiltrate an online community, pose a serious threat to such communities, as they might tilt community-wide decisions in their favor. While the extensive research on sybil identification may help keep the fraction of sybils in such communities low, it cannot however ensure their complete eradication. Thus, our goal is to enhance social choice theory with effective group decision mechanisms for communities with bounded sybil penetration. Inspired by Reality-Aware Social Choice, we use the status quo as the anchor of \emph{sybil resilience}, characterized by \emph{sybil safety} -- the inability of sybils to change the status quo against the will of the genuine agents, and \emph{sybil liveness} -- the ability of the genuine agents to change the status quo against the will of the sybils. We consider the social choice settings of deciding on a single proposal, on multiple proposals, and on updating a parameter. For each, we present social choice rules that are sybil-safe and, under certain conditions, satisfy sybil-liveness.
M3 - مقالة
SN - 2331-8422
JO - arXiv
JF - arXiv
ER -