English

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Etymology

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mis- +‎ relay

Verb

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misrelay (third-person singular simple present misrelays, present participle misrelaying, simple past and past participle misrelayed)

  1. To relay incorrectly; to garble while transferring.
    • 1999, Health Law: Adaptable to Courses Utilizing Furrow, Johnson, Jost and Schwartz's Casebook on Health Law, page 87:
      The nurse apparently misrelayed the message, telling her to go to her doctor in Dallas.
    • 2011, Imogen De La Bere, The Welcoming Committee:
      He had misrelayed Mercy's number, but he had given Crawford all the information he needed to make his fortune serious.
    • 2020, Sho Konishi, Anarchist Modernity, page 182:
      In this translational disjuncture lay not the kind of unintended misrelaying of information that occurs in the children's game of “telephone,” but, rather, motive and method.

Noun

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misrelay (plural misrelays)

  1. (computing) The modification or dropping of routing packets, causing a disruption of communication between nodes in a network.
    • 2010, Vinu V Das, R. Vijayakumar, Narayan C. Debnath, Information Processing and Management, page 430:
      In [6], [7], the author proposed a simple mechanism to detect the link withholding and misrelay launched by MPR nodes based on overhearing of traffic generated by one-hop neighbors.
    • 2012, MS Ali, PM Jawandhiya, “Security aware routing protocols for mobile ad hoc networks”, in Kamaljit I. Lakhtaria, editor, Technological Advancements and Applications in Mobile Ad-Hoc Networks: Research Trends:
      In colluding misrelay attacks, multiple attackers work in collusion to modify or drop routing packets to disrupt routing operation in a MANET.
    • 2018, Khaleel Ahmad, Nur Izura Udzir, Ganesh Chandra Deka, Opportunistic Networks, page 206:
      A study by Kannhavong et al. (2007) shows the impact of a colluding misrelay attack on a mobile node network using OLSR as the routing algorithm.