Byzantine attack

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English[edit]

Noun[edit]

Byzantine attack (plural Byzantine attacks)

  1. (computer security) A type of attack involving multiple nodes collaborating to disrupt the network.
    • 2005, Jie Wu, Handbook on Theoretical and Algorithmic Aspects of Sensor, Ad Hoc Wireless, and Peer-to-Peer Networks, CRC Press, →ISBN, page 835:
      Finally, the Byzantine attack raises the problem of reaching a consensus among nodes when an unknown number of them maybe traitors.
    • 2010, Yang Xiao, Underwater Acoustic Sensor Networks, CRC Press, →ISBN, page 125:
      Four main Byzantine attacks include “Black Holes,” “Flood Rushing,” “Wormholes,” and “Overlay Network Wormholes” [10].