DocumentCode
2118011
Title
The buck stops here: trust management in multi-agent systems with accountability
Author
Khan, Bilal ; Kleiner, Dardo D. ; Talmage, David
Author_Institution
Naval Res. Lab., Center for Comput. Sci., Washington, DC, USA
fYear
2004
fDate
30-31 Aug. 2004
Firstpage
46
Lastpage
54
Abstract
Much of security in multi-agent systems is based on models where each agent declares limits on what other agents are permitted to receive. Traditional systems are engineered to operate without violating their agents´ cumulative declared constraints (V. Swarup and J. T. Fbrega, 1999 and J. Vitek and C. J., 1999). In contrast, here, we consider a trust model that is suited for use by ensembles of closely coupled agents operating in a system supporting agent accountability using audit trails for information flows. In such systems, an agent does not require enforcement of absolute limits on what other agents receive, but instead seeks assurance that its personal liabilities never exceeded its declared risk tolerance. In short, each agent expects the system to behave in a manner which respects its declared accountability constraints - quantitative limits on what the agent agrees to be held accountable for sending. This paper outlines a suite of protocols with which a multi-agent system can fulfill the cumulative accountability (K. Aberer and Z. Despotovic, 2001) constraints of its constituent agents, and avoid subjecting any individual agent to greater liability than its declared risk tolerance. The protocols are shown to be efficient in a dynamic network setting, and are analyzed under a comprehensive set of failure models including link delay, link failure, and limited corruption in the control and data processing logic of agents.
Keywords
multi-agent systems; security of data; accountability constraints; agent accountability; audit trails; data processing logic; failure models; information flow; link delay; link failure; multiagent system; protocols; risk tolerance; trust management; trust model; Data processing; Data security; Dynamic programming; Failure analysis; Laboratories; Multiagent systems; Power system modeling; Process control; Protocols; Systems engineering and theory;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Multi-Agent Security and Survivability, 2004 IEEE First Symposium on
Print_ISBN
0-7803-8799-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/MASSUR.2004.1368417
Filename
1368417
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