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The Price of Competitive Information Disclosure

Published: April 14, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2504.10459v1

By: Siddhartha Banerjee , Kamesh Munagala , Yiheng Shen and more

Potential Business Impact:

People hide info, making fair choices harder.

Business Areas:
Privacy Privacy and Security

In many decision-making scenarios, individuals strategically choose what information to disclose to optimize their own outcomes. It is unclear whether such strategic information disclosure can lead to good societal outcomes. To address this question, we consider a competitive Bayesian persuasion model in which multiple agents selectively disclose information about their qualities to a principal, who aims to choose the candidates with the highest qualities. Using the price-of-anarchy framework, we quantify the inefficiency of such strategic disclosure. We show that the price of anarchy is at most a constant when the agents have independent quality distributions, even if their utility functions are heterogeneous. This result provides the first theoretical guarantee on the limits of inefficiency in Bayesian persuasion with competitive information disclosure.

Country of Origin
🇺🇸 United States

Page Count
21 pages

Category
Computer Science:
CS and Game Theory