We study tolerance and topology of random scale-free networks under attack
and defense strategies that depend on the degree k of the nodes. This situation
occurs, for example, when the robustness of a node depends on its degree or in
an intentional attack with insufficient knowledge on the network. We determine,
for all strategies, the critical fraction p_c of nodes that must be removed for
disintegrating the network. We find that for an intentional attack, little
knowledge of the well-connected sites is sufficient to strongly reduce p_c. At
criticality, the topology of the network depends on the removal strategy,
implying that different strategies may lead to different kinds of percolation
transitions.Comment: Accepted in PR