Interactive Error Correcting Codes Over Binary Erasure Channels Resilient to >12 Adversarial Corruption
Abstract
An error correcting code (ECC) allows a sender to send a message to a receiver such that even if a constant fraction of the communicated bits are corrupted, the receiver can still learn the message correctly. Due to their importance and fundamental nature, ECCs have been extensively studied, one of the main goals being to maximize the fraction of errors that the ECC is resilient to. For adversarial erasure errors (over a binary channel) the maximal error resilience of an ECC is 12 of the communicated bits. In this work, we break this 12 barrier by introducing the notion of an interactive error correcting code (iECC) and constructing an iECC that is resilient to adversarial erasure of 35 of the total communicated bits. We emphasize that the adversary can corrupt both the sending party and the receiving party, and that both parties' rounds contribute to the adversary's budget. We also prove an impossibility (upper) bound of 23 on the maximal resilience of any binary iECC to adversarial erasures. In the bit flip setting, we prove an impossibility bound of 27.
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