Rational Broadcast Protocols against Timid Adversaries

Abstract

We present a constant-round deterministic broadcast protocol against timid adversaries in the synchronous authenticated setting. A timid adversary is a game-theoretically rational adversary who tries to attack the protocol but prefers the actions to be undetected. Our protocol is secure against such an adversary corrupting t out of n parties for any t < n. The round complexity is 5 for timid adversaries and is at most t + 5 for general malicious adversaries. Our results demonstrate that game-theoretic rationality enables us to circumvent the impossibility of constructing constant-round deterministic broadcast protocols for t = ω(1)

    Similar works