Communication Separations for Truthful Auctions: Breaking the Two-Player Barrier

Abstract

We study the communication complexity of truthful combinatorial auctions, and in particular the case where valuations are either subadditive or single-minded, which we denote with SubAddSingleM. We show that for three bidders with valuations in SubAddSingleM, any deterministic truthful mechanism that achieves at least a 0.366-approximation requires (m) communication. In contrast, a natural extension of [Fei09] yields a non-truthful poly(m)-communication protocol that achieves a 12-approximation, demonstrating a gap between the power of truthful mechanisms and non-truthful protocols for this problem. Our approach follows the taxation complexity framework laid out in [Dob16b], but applies this framework in a setting not encompassed by the techniques used in past work. In particular, the only successful prior application of this framework uses a reduction to simultaneous protocols which only applies for two bidders [AKSW20], whereas our three-player lower bounds are stronger than what can possibly arise from a two-player construction (since a trivial truthful auction guarantees a 12-approximation for two players).

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