Kaune, Sebastian and Tyson, Gareth and Liebau, Nicolas and Steinmetz, Ralf (2008) Towards A Lightweight Incentive Scheme for Peer-to-Peer Systems. Working Paper. Technische Universität Darmstadt.
Abstract
Peer-to-peer (p2p) systems rely on the contributions of peers to operate. In order to not only depend on the altruism of individual peers, a number of incentive systems have been proposed. However many of them are complex and suffer from high overhead. In this work we propose BioTrust, a lightweight incentive scheme. In contrast to other approaches, it does not require reputation histories and can operate with minimal overhead in terms of bandwidth, infrastructure, memory and computation. BioTrust is based on observations of cooperation as observed in biological systems, which show that individuals try to ally themselves with others that can best increase their own standing. Such observations are prevalent in evolutionary systems where individuals must weigh off their own individual needs against the need for cooperation to survive. Using these models, BioTrust has been developed to extract and modify some of the most useful properties of biological systems to work effectively in a p2p environment. It is shown through simulation that this scheme encourages honest peers, which leads to a close to optimal behavior in the system context as well as for single peers.