TY - GEN
T1 - Sufficiently myopic adversaries are blind
AU - Dey, Bikash Kumar
AU - Jaggi, Sidharth
AU - Langberg, Michael
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 IEEE.
PY - 2015/9/28
Y1 - 2015/9/28
N2 - In this work we consider the communication setting in which a sender, Alice, wishes to communicate with a receiver, Bob, over a channel controlled by an adversarial entity, Calvin, who is myopic. Roughly speaking, for blocklength n, the codeword Xn transmitted by Alice is corrupted by Calvin who must base his adversarial decisions, on which characters of Xn to corrupt and how to corrupt them, not on the entire view of the codeword Xn but on Zn, the image of Xn through a noisy memoryless channel. More specifically, our communication model may be described by two channels. A memoryless channel p(zx) from Alice to Calvin, and an arbitrarily varying channel from Alice to Bob, p(yx, s) governed by a states Sn determined by Calvin. In standard adversarial channels, the states Sn may depend on the codeword Xn, however in our setting Sn depends only on Calvin's view Zn. The myopic channel captures a broad range of channels and bridges between the standard models of memoryless and adversarial (zero error) channels. In this work we present upper and lower bounds on the capacity of myopic channels. For a number of special cases of interest we show that our bounds are tight. We extend our results to the setting of secure communication in which we require that the transmitted message remain secret from Calvin. For example, we show that if (i) Calvin may flip at most a p fraction of the bits communicated between Alice and Bob, and (ii) Calvin views Xn through a binary symmetric channel with parameter q, then once Calvin is 'sufficiently myopic' (in this case, when q > p), then the optimal communication rate is that of an adversary who is 'blind' (that is, an adversary that does not see Xn at all), which is 1-H(p) for standard communication, and H(q)-H(p) for secure communication. A similar phenomena exists for our general model of communication.
AB - In this work we consider the communication setting in which a sender, Alice, wishes to communicate with a receiver, Bob, over a channel controlled by an adversarial entity, Calvin, who is myopic. Roughly speaking, for blocklength n, the codeword Xn transmitted by Alice is corrupted by Calvin who must base his adversarial decisions, on which characters of Xn to corrupt and how to corrupt them, not on the entire view of the codeword Xn but on Zn, the image of Xn through a noisy memoryless channel. More specifically, our communication model may be described by two channels. A memoryless channel p(zx) from Alice to Calvin, and an arbitrarily varying channel from Alice to Bob, p(yx, s) governed by a states Sn determined by Calvin. In standard adversarial channels, the states Sn may depend on the codeword Xn, however in our setting Sn depends only on Calvin's view Zn. The myopic channel captures a broad range of channels and bridges between the standard models of memoryless and adversarial (zero error) channels. In this work we present upper and lower bounds on the capacity of myopic channels. For a number of special cases of interest we show that our bounds are tight. We extend our results to the setting of secure communication in which we require that the transmitted message remain secret from Calvin. For example, we show that if (i) Calvin may flip at most a p fraction of the bits communicated between Alice and Bob, and (ii) Calvin views Xn through a binary symmetric channel with parameter q, then once Calvin is 'sufficiently myopic' (in this case, when q > p), then the optimal communication rate is that of an adversary who is 'blind' (that is, an adversary that does not see Xn at all), which is 1-H(p) for standard communication, and H(q)-H(p) for secure communication. A similar phenomena exists for our general model of communication.
KW - Arbitrarily Varying Channels
KW - Information Theoretic Secrecy
KW - Myopic Jamming
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84969790750
U2 - 10.1109/ISIT.2015.7282638
DO - 10.1109/ISIT.2015.7282638
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:84969790750
T3 - IEEE International Symposium on Information Theory - Proceedings
SP - 1164
EP - 1168
BT - Proceedings - 2015 IEEE International Symposium on Information Theory, ISIT 2015
PB - Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.
T2 - IEEE International Symposium on Information Theory, ISIT 2015
Y2 - 14 June 2015 through 19 June 2015
ER -