False-name-proofness with Bid Withdrawal
Publication
, Journal Article
Guo, M; Conitzer, V
August 31, 2012
We study a more powerful variant of false-name manipulation in Internet auctions: an agent can submit multiple false-name bids, but then, once the allocation and payments have been decided, withdraw some of her false-name identities (have some of her false-name identities refuse to pay). While these withdrawn identities will not obtain the items they won, their initial presence may have been beneficial to the agent's other identities. We define a mechanism to be false-name-proof with withdrawal (FNPW) if the aforementioned manipulation is never beneficial. FNPW is a stronger condition than false-name-proofness (FNP).
Duke Scholars
Publication Date
August 31, 2012
Citation
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ICMJE
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Guo, M., & Conitzer, V. (2012). False-name-proofness with Bid Withdrawal.
Guo, Mingyu, and Vincent Conitzer. “False-name-proofness with Bid Withdrawal,” August 31, 2012.
Guo M, Conitzer V. False-name-proofness with Bid Withdrawal. 2012 Aug 31;
Guo, Mingyu, and Vincent Conitzer. False-name-proofness with Bid Withdrawal. Aug. 2012.
Guo M, Conitzer V. False-name-proofness with Bid Withdrawal. 2012 Aug 31;
Publication Date
August 31, 2012