Byzantine fault

A Byzantine fault is a condition of a system, particularly a distributed computing system, where a fault occurs such that different symptoms are presented to different observers, including imperfect information on whether a system component has failed. The term takes its name from an allegory, the "Byzantine generals problem", developed to describe a situation in which, to avoid catastrophic failure of a system, the system's actors must agree on a strategy, but some of these actors are unreliable in a way which causes other (good) actors to disagree on the strategy and they may be unaware of the disagreement.

Source: Wikipedia — Byzantine fault (CC BY-SA 4.0)

Byzantine fault

A Byzantine fault is a condition of a system, particularly a distributed computing system, where a fault occurs such that different symptoms are presented to different observers, including imperfect information on whether a system component has failed. The term takes its name from an allegory, the "Byzantine generals problem", developed to describe a situation in which, to avoid catastrophic failure of a system, the system's actors must agree on a strategy, but some of these actors are unreliable in a way which causes other (good) actors to disagree on the strategy and they may be unaware of the disagreement.

Source: Wikipedia "Byzantine fault" · CC BY-SA 4.0

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