The Communication Cost of Information Spreading in Dynamic Networks
Mohamad Ahmadi, Fabian Kuhn, Shay Kutten, Anisur Rahaman, Molla, Gopal Pandurangan

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the message complexity of information spreading in dynamic networks, establishing tight bounds for local broadcast and proposing algorithms with subquadratic complexity under certain conditions.
Contribution
It introduces a new complexity measure for dynamic networks and provides tight bounds and algorithms for efficient token dissemination in adversarial settings.
Findings
Tight lower bound of Ω(n^2) for local broadcast in dynamic networks.
Optimal amortized message complexity of O(n) for large number of tokens.
A randomized algorithm achieving subquadratic complexity under an oblivious adversary.
Abstract
This paper investigates the message complexity of distributed information spreading (a.k.a gossip or token dissemination) in adversarial dynamic networks, where the goal is to spread tokens of information to every node on an -node network. We consider the amortized (average) message complexity of spreading a token, assuming that the number of tokens is large. Our focus is on token-forwarding algorithms, which do not manipulate tokens in any way other than storing, copying, and forwarding them. We consider two types of adversaries that arbitrarily rewire the network while keeping it connected: the adaptive adversary that is aware of the status of all the nodes and the algorithm (including the current random choices), and the oblivious adversary that is oblivious to the random choices made by the algorithm. The central question that motivates our work is whether one can achieve…
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