Title
Managing a peer-to-peer backup system: does imposed fairness socially outperform a revenue-driven monopoly?
Abstract
We study a peer-to-peer backup system, where users offer some of their storage space to provide service for the others. The economic model for such a system is different from the ones applicable to peer-to-peer file sharing systems, since the storage capacity is a private good here. We study two mechanisms aimed at incentivizing users to offer some of their capacity: a price-based scheme (here a revenue-driven monopoly) and a more classical symmetric scheme (imposing users to contribute to the service at least as much as use it). We compare the outcomes of such mechanisms to the socially optimal situation that could be attained if users were not selfish, and show that depending on user heterogeneity, a revenue maximizing monopoly can be a worse or a better (in terms of social welfare) way to manage the system than a symmetric scheme.
Year
DOI
Venue
2007
10.1007/978-3-540-74430-6_12
GECON
Keywords
Field
DocType
incentivizing user,revenue-driven monopoly,optimal situation,economic model,storage space,symmetric scheme,price-based scheme,peer-to-peer backup system,storage capacity,classical symmetric scheme,social welfare,file sharing
Revenue,Peer-to-peer,Economic model,Incentive,Computer science,Microeconomics,Monopoly,File sharing,Backup,Private good
Conference
Volume
ISSN
ISBN
4685
0302-9743
3-540-74428-2
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
4
0.48
9
Authors
2
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
László Toka1607.58
Patrick Maillé228243.33