DocumentCode :
657391
Title :
Can Peer-to-Peer live streaming systems coexist with free riders?
Author :
e Oliveira, Joao F. A. ; Cunha, Italo ; Miguel, Eliseu C. ; Rocha, Marcus V. M. ; Vieira, Alex B. ; Campos, Sergio V. A.
Author_Institution :
Univ. Fed. de Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte, Brazil
fYear :
2013
fDate :
9-11 Sept. 2013
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
5
Abstract :
Peer-to-Peer live streaming systems help content providers and distributors drastically reduce bandwidth costs by sharing costs among peers. Researchers have dedicated significant effort developing techniques to discourage or exclude uncooperative peers from peer-to-peer systems. However, users are often unable to cooperate, e.g., users using a mobile device with limited, costly bandwidth. We study the impact of uncooperative peers on video discontinuity and latency using PlanetLab. We find that simple mechanisms, like forwarding video data requests to cooperative peers instead of wasting effort sending requests to uncooperative peers, allows peer-to-peer live streaming to serve 50% of uncooperative peers without performance degradation. We argue that denying service to uncooperative peers may not be the best long-term approach; our findings suggest that peer-to-peer live streaming can support uncooperative peers.
Keywords :
peer-to-peer computing; video streaming; PlanetLab; bandwidth cost reduction; content distributors; content providers; cooperative peers; cost sharing; mobile device; oblivious free riders; peer-to-peer live streaming systems; uncooperative peers; video data request forwarding; video discontinuity; video latency; Bandwidth; Conferences; Degradation; Peer-to-peer computing; Radiation detectors; Servers; Streaming media;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Peer-to-Peer Computing (P2P), 2013 IEEE Thirteenth International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Trento
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/P2P.2013.6688712
Filename :
6688712
Link To Document :
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