English

On Counteracting Byzantine Attacks in Network Coded Peer-to-Peer Networks

Networking and Internet Architecture 2016-11-17 v1 Cryptography and Security

Abstract

Random linear network coding can be used in peer-to-peer networks to increase the efficiency of content distribution and distributed storage. However, these systems are particularly susceptible to Byzantine attacks. We quantify the impact of Byzantine attacks on the coded system by evaluating the probability that a receiver node fails to correctly recover a file. We show that even for a small probability of attack, the system fails with overwhelming probability. We then propose a novel signature scheme that allows packet-level Byzantine detection. This scheme allows one-hop containment of the contamination, and saves bandwidth by allowing nodes to detect and drop the contaminated packets. We compare the net cost of our signature scheme with various other Byzantine schemes, and show that when the probability of Byzantine attacks is high, our scheme is the most bandwidth efficient.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0904.2722,
  title  = {On Counteracting Byzantine Attacks in Network Coded Peer-to-Peer Networks},
  author = {MinJi Kim and Luísa Lima and Fang Zhao and Joao Barros and Muriel Medard and Ralf Koetter and Ton Kalker and Keesook Han},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0904.2722},
  year   = {2016}
}

Comments

26 pages, 9 figures, Submitted to IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications (JSAC) "Mission Critical Networking"

R2 v1 2026-06-21T12:52:33.176Z