(1 + ε)-approximate sparse recovery
Eric Price, David P. Woodruff
FOCS 2011
We propose a framework and methodology for quantifying the effect of denial of service (DoS) attacks on a distributed system. We present a systematic study of the resistance of gossip-based multicast protocols to DoS attacks. We show that even distributed and randomized gossip-based protocols, which eliminate single points of failure, do not necessarily eliminate vulnerabilities to DoS attacks. We propose Drum - a simple gossip-based multicast protocol that eliminates such vulnerabilities. Drum was implemented in Java and tested on a large cluster. We show, using closed-form mathematical analysis, simulations, and empirical tests, that Drum survives severe DoS attacks. © 2006 IEEE.
Eric Price, David P. Woodruff
FOCS 2011
Kafai Lai, Alan E. Rosenbluth, et al.
SPIE Advanced Lithography 2007
Khaled A.S. Abdel-Ghaffar
IEEE Trans. Inf. Theory
M.J. Slattery, Joan L. Mitchell
IBM J. Res. Dev