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SIGECOM
2009
ACM

On random sampling auctions for digital goods

14 years 7 months ago
On random sampling auctions for digital goods
In the context of auctions for digital goods, an interesting Random Sampling Optimal Price auction (RSOP) has been proposed by Goldberg, Hartline and Wright; this leads to a truthful mechanism. Since random sampling is a popular approach for auctions that aims to maximize the seller’s revenue, this method has been analyzed further by Feige, Flaxman, Hartline and Kleinberg, who have shown that it is 15-competitive in the worst case – which is substantially better than the previously proved bounds but still far from the conjectured competitive ratio of 4. In this paper, we prove that RSOP is indeed 4-competitive for a large class of instances in which there are at least 6 people receiving the item at the optimal uniform price. We also show that it is 4.68 competitive for the small class of remaining instances thus leaving a negligible gap between the lower and upper bound. We employ a mix of probabilistic techniques and dynamic programming to compute these bounds.
Saeed Alaei, Azarakhsh Malekian, Aravind Srinivasa
Added 28 May 2010
Updated 28 May 2010
Type Conference
Year 2009
Where SIGECOM
Authors Saeed Alaei, Azarakhsh Malekian, Aravind Srinivasan
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