The Provenance Paradox in Multi-Agent LLM Routing: Delegation Contracts and Attested Identity in LDP
arXiv cs.AI / 3/20/2026
💬 OpinionIdeas & Deep AnalysisModels & Research
Key Points
- The study shows that when delegates inflate self-reported quality scores, quality-based routing yields a provenance paradox that performs worse than random routing.
- It extends the LLM Delegate Protocol (LDP) with delegation contracts that bound authority through explicit objectives, budgets, and failure policies.
- It introduces a claimed-vs-attested identity model to distinguish self-reported from verified quality, along with typed failure semantics enabling automated recovery.
- In experiments with 10 simulated delegates and real Claude models, self-claimed routing underperforms compared with random routing, while attested routing achieves near-optimal performance (d = 9.51, p < 0.001) and shows broad robustness across configurations with minimal validation overhead.
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