Dependency-based targeted attacks in interdependent networks
Dong Zhou, Amir Bashan

TL;DR
This paper investigates how different dependency-based attack strategies affect the robustness of interdependent networks, revealing counter-intuitive findings about system stability and failure cascades.
Contribution
It introduces and analyzes dependency-based targeted attack strategies in interdependent networks, showing how attack order influences network vulnerability and stability.
Findings
Dependency-first attacks can be more stable than random attacks.
Dependency-last attacks increase network vulnerability.
Counter-intuitive failure cascades depend on attack strategy.
Abstract
Modern large network systems normally work in cooperation and incorporate dependencies between their components for purposes of efficiency and regulation. Such dependencies may become a major risk since they can cause small scale failures to propagate throughout the system. Thus, the dependent nodes could be a natural target for malicious attacks that aim to exploit these vulnerabilities. Here, we consider for the first time a new type of targeted attacks that are based on the dependency between the networks. We study strategies of attacks that range from dependency-first to dependency-last, where a fraction of the nodes with dependency links, or nodes without dependency links, respectively, are initially attacked. We systematically analyze, both analytically and numerically, the percolation transition of partially interdependent Erd\H{o}s-R\'{e}nyi (ER) networks, where a fraction…
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