On the Manipulability of Voting Systems: Application to Multi-Carrier Networks
Fran\c{c}ois Durand (LINCS, INRIA Rocquencourt), Fabien Mathieu, (LINCS, INRIA Rocquencourt), Ludovic Noirie (LINCS)

TL;DR
This paper empirically investigates the manipulability of voting systems in multi-carrier networks, finding that the Single Transferable Vote (STV) system is more resistant to manipulation and often selects near-optimal paths.
Contribution
It provides the first empirical analysis of voting system manipulability in multi-carrier networks, highlighting STV's robustness and efficiency in practical scenarios.
Findings
STV is more resistant to manipulation than other voting systems.
STV often selects paths close to the economical optimum.
Voting systems can be effectively applied to network path selection.
Abstract
Today, Internet involves many actors who are making revenues on it (operators, companies, service providers,...). It is therefore important to be able to make fair decisions in this large-scale and highly competitive economical ecosystem. One of the main issues is to prevent actors from manipulating the natural outcome of the decision process. For that purpose, game theory is a natural framework. In that context, voting systems represent an interesting alternative that, to our knowledge, has not yet been considered. They allow competing entities to decide among different options. Strong theoretical results showed that all voting systems are susceptible to be manipulated by one single voter, except for some "degenerated" and non-acceptable cases. However, very little is known about how much a voting system is manipulable in practical scenarios. In this paper, we investigate empirically…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInternet Traffic Analysis and Secure E-voting · Game Theory and Voting Systems · Game Theory and Applications
