Institute for Program Structures and Data Organization (IPD), Chair Prof. Böhm

The Dangers of Poorly Connected Peers in Structured P2P Networks and a Solution Based on Incentives

  • Author:

    Björn-Oliver Hartmann, Klemens Böhm, Andranik Khachatryan and Stephan Schosser

  • Source:

    In: Proceedings of the IEEE/WIC/ACM International Conference on Web Intelligence, pages 500-508, November 2-5, Silicon Valley, USA, 2007.

  • Abstract

    This paper analyzes structured P2P systems where peers choose both their interaction mode, i.e., how they process incoming queries, and additional contacts in the network autonomously. Since additional contacts incur additional costs, a new kind of free riding behavior, namely having only few contacts, comes into the fray. We refer to it as deliberately poor connectedness (dpc). In this paper, we show that dpc is dominant in many situations. This leads to networks with a low degree of connectivity and a higher overall forwarding load than necessary. We then propose an incentive mechanism against dpc and demonstrate its effectiveness using a formal analysis and experiments.

    Download at ACM