Peer-to-Peer: Harnessing the Power of Disruptive Technologies-Andy Oram
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The term "peer-to-peer" has come to be applied to networks that expect end users to contribute their own files, computing time, or other resources to some shared project. Even more interesting than the systems' technical underpinnings are their socially disruptive potential: in various ways they return content, choice, and control to ordinary users.
While this book is mostly about the technical promise of peer-to-peer, we also talk about its exciting social promise. Communities have been forming on the Internet for a long time, but they have been limited by the flat interactive qualities of email and Network newsgroups. People can exchange recommendations and ideas over these media, but have great difficulty commenting on each other's postings, structuring information, performing searches, or creating summaries. If tools provided ways to organize information intelligently, and if each person could serve up his or her own data and retrieve others' data, the possibilities for collaboration would take off. Peer-to-peer technologies along with metadata could enhance almost any group of people who share an interest--technical, cultural, political, medical, you name it.
This book presents the goals that drive the developers of the best-known peer-to-peer systems, the problems they've faced, and the technical solutions they've found. Learn here the essentials of peer-to-peer from leaders of the field:
- Nelson Minar and Marc Hedlund of Clay Shirky of acceleratorgroup, on where peer-to-peer is likely to be headed
- Tim O'Reilly of Dan Bricklin, cocreator of Visicalc, on harvesting information from end-users
- David Anderson of SETI@home, on how SETI@Home created the world's largest computer
- Jeremie Miller of Jabber, on the Internet as a collection of conversations
- Gene Kan of Gnutella and GoneSilent.com, on lessons from Gnutella for peer-to-peer technologies
- Adam Langley of Freenet, on Freenet's present and upcoming architecture
- Alan Brown of Red Rover, on a deliberately low-tech content distribution system
- Marc Waldman, Lorrie Cranor, and Avi Rubin of AT&T Labs, on the Publius project and trust in distributed systems
- Roger Dingledine, Michael J. Freedman, andDavid Molnar of Free Haven, on resource allocation and accountability in distributed systems
- Rael Dornfest of Theodore Hong of Freenet, on performance
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Richard Lethin of Reputation Technologies, on how reputation can be built on
Author: Oram, Andy
Publisher: O'Reilly Media
Illustration: n
Language: ENG
Title: Peer-to-Peer: Harnessing the Power of Disruptive Technologies
Pages: 00450 (Encrypted EPUB) / 00450 (Encrypted PDF)
On Sale: 2015-09-30
SKU-13/ISBN: 9780596001100
Lib Category: Local area networks (Computer networks)
Lib Category: Disruptive technologies
Category: Computers : Social Aspects - Human-Computer Interaction
Category: Computers : Networking - General
Category: Computers : Networking - Local Area Networks (LANs)