We consider the classical secret sharing problem in the case where all agents are selfish but rational. In recent work, Kol and Naor show that, when there are two players, in the non-simultaneous communication model, i.e. when rushing is possible, there is no Nash equilibrium that ensures both players learn the secret. However, they describe a mechanism for this problem, for any number of players, that is an -Nash equilibrium, in that no player can gain more than utility by deviating from it. Unfortunately, the Kol and Naor mechanism, and, to the best of our knowledge, all previous mechanisms for this problem require each agent to send O(n) messages in expectation, where n is the number of agents. This may be problematic for some applicati...
We consider the problem of rational secret sharing introduced by Halpern and Teague [1], where the p...
We study k-resilient Nash equilibria, joint strategies where no member of a coalition C of size up t...
We revisit the concept of non-malleable secret sharing (Goyal and Kumar, STOC 2018) in the computati...
We consider the \textit{rational secret sharing problem} introduced by Halpern and Teague\cite{ht04}...
We consider the problem of secret sharing among $n$ rational players. This problem was introduced by...
ABSTRACT We consider the problems of secret sharing and multiparty computation, assuming that agents...
We consider the concept of rational secret sharing, which was initially introduced by Halpern and Te...
Abstract. This paper introduces the Repeated Rational Secret Sharing problem. We borrow the notion o...
Abstract—Rational secret sharing shows that, in a setting with rational players, secret sharing and ...
Recent work has attempted to bridge the fields of Cryptography and Game Theory in order to create mo...
In order to prevent any arbitrary subsets of coalition in rational secret sharing, we propose a new ...
We provide a general construction that converts any rational secret-sharing protocol to a protocol w...
This thesis contains three main contributions as follows. First, we propose an information theoretic...
We consider the problems of secret sharing and multiparty computation, assuming that agents prefer t...
ABSTRACT We study k-resilient Nash equilibria, joint strategies where no member of a coalition C of ...
We consider the problem of rational secret sharing introduced by Halpern and Teague [1], where the p...
We study k-resilient Nash equilibria, joint strategies where no member of a coalition C of size up t...
We revisit the concept of non-malleable secret sharing (Goyal and Kumar, STOC 2018) in the computati...
We consider the \textit{rational secret sharing problem} introduced by Halpern and Teague\cite{ht04}...
We consider the problem of secret sharing among $n$ rational players. This problem was introduced by...
ABSTRACT We consider the problems of secret sharing and multiparty computation, assuming that agents...
We consider the concept of rational secret sharing, which was initially introduced by Halpern and Te...
Abstract. This paper introduces the Repeated Rational Secret Sharing problem. We borrow the notion o...
Abstract—Rational secret sharing shows that, in a setting with rational players, secret sharing and ...
Recent work has attempted to bridge the fields of Cryptography and Game Theory in order to create mo...
In order to prevent any arbitrary subsets of coalition in rational secret sharing, we propose a new ...
We provide a general construction that converts any rational secret-sharing protocol to a protocol w...
This thesis contains three main contributions as follows. First, we propose an information theoretic...
We consider the problems of secret sharing and multiparty computation, assuming that agents prefer t...
ABSTRACT We study k-resilient Nash equilibria, joint strategies where no member of a coalition C of ...
We consider the problem of rational secret sharing introduced by Halpern and Teague [1], where the p...
We study k-resilient Nash equilibria, joint strategies where no member of a coalition C of size up t...
We revisit the concept of non-malleable secret sharing (Goyal and Kumar, STOC 2018) in the computati...