Robustness of Randomized Rumour Spreading
Rami Daknama, Konstantinos Panagiotou, Simon Reisser

TL;DR
This paper systematically analyzes the robustness of three randomized rumor spreading protocols—Push, Pull, and Push&Pull—against adversarial graph modifications and message failures, revealing distinct resilience properties for each model.
Contribution
It introduces a formal notion of local resilience for rumor spreading protocols and demonstrates a separation in robustness among Push, Pull, and Push&Pull models.
Findings
Pull is robust against all considered parameters.
Push can be significantly slowed by small adversarial modifications.
Push&Pull's robustness depends on message transmission success.
Abstract
In this work we consider three well-studied broadcast protocols: Push, Pull and Push&Pull. A key property of all these models, which is also an important reason for their popularity, is that they are presumed to be very robust, since they are simple, randomized, and, crucially, do not utilize explicitly the global structure of the underlying graph. While sporadic results exist, there has been no systematic theoretical treatment quantifying the robustness of these models. Here we investigate this question with respect to two orthogonal aspects: (adversarial) modifications of the underlying graph and message transmission failures. We explore in particular the following notion of Local Resilience: beginning with a graph, we investigate up to which fraction of the edges an adversary has to be allowed to delete at each vertex, so that the protocols need significantly more rounds to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOpportunistic and Delay-Tolerant Networks · Complex Network Analysis Techniques · Caching and Content Delivery
