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INNOVATIONS
2016

Rational Proofs with Multiple Provers

8 years 28 days ago
Rational Proofs with Multiple Provers
Interactive proofs model a world where a verifier delegates computation to an untrustworthy prover, verifying the prover’s claims before accepting them. These proofs have applications to delegation of computation, probabilistically checkable proofs, crowdsourcing, and more. In some of these applications, the verifier may pay the prover based on the quality of his work. Rational proofs, introduced by Azar and Micali (2012), are an interactive proof model in which the prover is rational rather than untrustworthy—he may lie, but only to increase his payment. This allows the verifier to leverage the greed of the prover to obtain better protocols: while rational proofs are no more powerful than interactive proofs, the protocols are simpler and more efficient. Azar and Micali posed as an open problem whether multiple provers are more powerful than one for rational proofs. We provide a model that extends rational proofs to allow multiple provers. In this model, a verifier can cross-...
Jing Chen, Samuel McCauley, Shikha Singh 0002
Added 05 Apr 2016
Updated 05 Apr 2016
Type Journal
Year 2016
Where INNOVATIONS
Authors Jing Chen, Samuel McCauley, Shikha Singh 0002
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