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The Sybil Attack

by: John R. Douceur

edited by: Peter Druschel, Frans Kaashoek, Antony Rowstron

In Peer-to-Peer Systems, Vol. 2429 (2002), pp. 251-260, doi:10.1007/3-540-45748-8_24  Key: citeulike:1904709

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Abstract

Large-scale peer-to-peer systems face security threats from faulty or hostile remote computing elements. To resist these threats, many such systems employ redundancy. However, if a single faulty entity can present multiple identities, it can control a substantial fraction of the system, thereby undermining this redundancy. One approach to preventing these “Sybil attacks” is to have a trusted agency certify identities. This paper shows that, without a logically centralized authority, Sybil attacks are always possible except under extreme and unrealistic assumptions of resource parity and coordination among entities.


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