We study classic cake-cutting problems, but in discrete models rather than
using infinite-precision real values, specifically, focusing on their
communication complexity. Using general discrete simulations of classical
infinite-precision protocols (Robertson-Webb and moving-knife), we roughly
partition the various fair-allocation problems into 3 classes: "easy" (constant
number of rounds of logarithmic many bits), "medium" (poly-logarithmic total
communication), and "hard". Our main technical result concerns two of the
"medium" problems (perfect allocation for 2 players and equitable allocation
for any number of players) which we prove are not in the "easy" class. Our main
open problem is to separate the "hard" from the "medium" classes.Comment: Added efficient communication protocol for the monotone crossing
proble