Open Access
Incentives Build Robustness in Bit-Torrent
B. Cohen
- 01 Jan 2003
TL;DR: The BitTorrent file distribution system uses tit-fortat as a method of seeking pareto efficiency, which achieves a higher level of robustness and resource utilization than any currently known cooperative technique.
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Abstract: The BitTorrent file distribution system uses tit-fortat as a method of seeking pareto efficiency. It achieves a higher level of robustness and resource utilization than any currently known cooperative technique. We explain what BitTorrent does, and how economic methods are used to achieve that goal. 1 What BitTorrent Does When a file is made available using HTTP, all upload cost is placed on the hosting machine. With BitTorrent, when multiple people are downloading the same file at the same time, they upload pieces of the file to each other. This redistributes the cost of upload to downloaders, (where it is often not even metered), thus making hosting a file with a potentially unlimited number of downloaders affordable. Researchers have attempted to find practical techniqes to do this before[3]. It has not been previously deployed on a large scale because the logistical and robustness problems are quite difficult. Simply figuring out which peers have what parts of the file and where they should be sent is difficult to do without incurring a huge overhead. In addition, real deployments experience very high churn rates. Peers rarely connect for more than a few hours, and frequently for only a few minutes [4]. Finally, there is a general problem of fairness [1]. The total download rate across all downloaders must, of mathematical necessity, be equal to the total upload rate. The strategy for allocating upload which seems most likely to make peers happy with their download rates is to make each peer’s download rate be proportional to their upload rate. In practice it’s very difficult to keep peer download rates from sometimes dropping to zero by chance, much less make upload and download rates be correlated. We will explain how BitTorrent solves all of these problems well. 1.1 BitTorrent Interface BitTorrent’s interface is almost the simplest possible. Users launch it by clicking on a hyperlink to the file they wish to download, and are given a standard “Save As” dialog, followed by a download progress dialog which is mostly notable for having an upload rate in addition to a download rate. This extreme ease of use has contributed greatly to BitTorrent’s adoption, and may even be more important than, although it certainly complements, the performance and cost redistribution features which are described in this paper.
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Citations
DisCaRia—Distributed Case-Based Reasoning System for Fault Management
Ha Manh Tran,Jürgen Schönwälder +1 more
TL;DR: This work introduces DisCaRia, a distributed case-based reasoning system that assists system administrators and network operators in resolving faults, and provides an evaluation of a prototype implementation of the system.
15
Imitation-Based Social Spectrum Sharing
Xu Chen,Jianwei Huang +1 more
TL;DR: Numerical results show that the imitative spectrum access mechanism can achieve efficient spectrum utilization and meanwhile provide good fairness across primary users and no beneficial imitation can be further carried out on the time average.
15
MMC04-1: An Incentive Mechanism for Peer-to-Peer Networks with Live Streaming
Daniel A. G. Manzato,Nelson L. S. da Fonseca +1 more
- 01 Nov 2006
TL;DR: In this paper, an incentive mechanism is introduced to address the selfish behavior of non-cooperative peers in peer-to-peer networks with live streaming, and the short time peers stay connected to the system, causing disruptions of the delivery of time-constrained content.
15
•Dissertation
Cyber piracy: can file sharing be regulated without impeding the digital revolution?
Michael Robert Filby
- 01 Feb 2013
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore regulatory mechanisms of managing the file sharing in the online environment without impeding key aspects of digital innovation, utilizing a modified version of Lessig's modalities of regulation to demonstrate significant asymmetries in various regulatory approaches.
15
LiveBT: Providing Video-on-Demand Streaming Service over BitTorrent Systems
Jianming Lv,Xueqi Cheng,Qing Jiang,Jing Ye,Tieying Zhang,Iming Lin,Lei Wang +6 more
- 03 Dec 2007
TL;DR: LiveBT is presented, a new protocol which supports video-on- demand streaming service and is totally compatible to the current BitTorrent protocol, and enables users to play hot movies shared in the BT systems smoothly just after 2-3 minutes of buffering time.
15
References
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Petar Maymounkov,David Mazières +1 more
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe a peer-to-peer distributed hash table with provable consistency and performance in a fault-prone environment, which routes queries and locates nodes using a novel XOR-based metric topology.
Free riding on Gnutella
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SplitStream: High-Bandwidth Content Distribution in Cooperative Environments
Miguel Castro,Peter Druschel,Anne-Marie Kermarrec,Animesh Nandi,Antony Rowstron,Atul Singh +5 more
- 21 Feb 2003
TL;DR: SplitStream is a high-bandwidth content distribution system based on application-level multicast that distributes the forwarding load among all the participants, and is able to accommodate participating nodes with different bandwidth capacities.
•Book
Linked: The New Science of Networks
Albert-László Barabási
- 14 May 2002
TL;DR: An ink jet comprises an elastic tubular member characterized by piezoelectric properties that is terminated in an orifice adapted to pass droplets of ink when the chamber formed within the tubular members is reduced in size.