Abstract

Machine learning techniques have attracted considerable attention for wireless networks because of their impressive performance in complicated scenarios and usefulness in various applications. However, training with and sharing raw data obtained locally from each wireless node does not guarantee privacy and requires a large communication overhead. To mitigate such issues, federated learning (FL), in which sharing parameters for model updates are shared instead of raw data, has been developed. FL has also been studied using blockchain techniques to efficiently perform learning in distributed wireless systems without having to deploy a centralized server. Although blockchain-based decentralized federated learning (BDFL) is a promising technique for various wireless sensor networks, malicious attacks can still occur, which result in performance degradation or malfunction. In this study, we analyze the impact of a jamming threats from malicious miners to BDFL in wireless networks. In a wireless BDFL system, it is possible for malicious miners with jamming capability to interfere with the collection of model parameters by normal miners, thus preventing the victim miner from generating a global model. By disrupting normal miners participating in BDFL systems, malicious miners with jamming capability can more easily add malicious data to the mainstream. Through various simulations, we evaluated the success probability performance of malicious block insertion and the participation rate of normal miners in a wireless BDFL system.

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