Vote Delegation and Misbehavior

02/17/2021
by   Hans Gersbach, et al.
0

We study vote delegation with "well-behaving" and "misbehaving" agents and compare it with conventional voting. Typical examples for vote delegation are validation or governance tasks on blockchains. There is a majority of well-behaving agents, but they may abstain or delegate their vote to other agents since voting is costly. Misbehaving agents always vote. We compare conventional voting allowing for abstention with vote delegation. Preferences of voters are private information and a positive outcome is achieved if well-behaving agents win. We illustrate that vote delegation leads to quite different outcomes than conventional voting with abstention. In particular, we obtain three insights: First, if the number of misbehaving voters, denoted by f , is high, both voting methods fail to deliver a positive outcome. Second, if f takes an intermediate value, conventional voting delivers a positive outcome, while vote delegation fails with probability one. Third, if f is low, delegation delivers a positive outcome with higher probability than conventional voting. Finally, our results characterize worst-case outcomes that can happen in a liquid democracy.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
12/07/2017

Fair mixing: the case of dichotomous preferences

Agents vote to choose a fair mixture of public outcomes; each agent like...
research
10/05/2021

Tradeoffs in Hierarchical Voting Systems

Condorcet's jury theorem states that the correct outcome is reached in d...
research
11/11/2016

Understanding the 2016 US Presidential Election using ecological inference and distribution regression with census microdata

We combine fine-grained spatially referenced census data with the vote o...
research
01/30/2018

Surprise in Elections

Elections involving a very large voter population often lead to outcomes...
research
02/17/2021

Vote Delegation with Uncertain Number of Voters

We examine vote delegation when delegators do not know the preferences o...
research
06/24/2020

Optimizing Voting Order on Sequential Juries: A Median Voter Theorem

We consider an odd-sized "jury", which votes sequentially between two st...
research
04/16/2012

When majority voting fails: Comparing quality assurance methods for noisy human computation environment

Quality assurance remains a key topic in human computation research. Pri...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset