News: 2nd Workshop to be held at Harvard University June 4-5 2004.
1st Workshop on Economics of Peer-to-Peer Systems
http://www.sims.berkeley.edu/p2pecon/
From file-sharing to distributed computation, from application layer
overlays to mobile ad hoc networking, the ultimate success of a peer-to-peer
system rests on the twin pillars of scalable and robust system design and
alignment of economic interests among the participating peers. The Workshop
on Economics of Peer-to-Peer Systems will bring together for the first
time researchers and practitioners from multiple disciplines to discuss
the economic characteristics of P2P systems, application of economic theories
to P2P system design, and future directions and challenges in this area.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
- incentives and disincentives for cooperation
- distributed algorithmic mechanism design
- reputation and trust
- reliability, identity, and attack resistance
- network externalities and scale economies
- public goods and club formation
- accounting and settlement mechanisms
- payment and currency systems
- user behavior and system performance
- measurement studies
- leveraging heterogeneity without compromising anonymity
- economic impact to network providers
- interconnection of P2P networks
The program of the workshop will be a combination of invited talks,
paper presentations, and discussion. Workshop attendance will be limited
to ensure a productive environment. Each potential participant should submit
a position paper that expresses a novel or interesting problem, offers
a specific solution, reports on actual experience, or advances a research
agenda. Participants will be invited based on the originality, technical
merit and topical relevance of their submissions, as well as the likelihood
that the ideas expressed in their submissions will lead to insightful discussions
at the workshop. Accepted papers will be published on the workshop website.
Call
For Papers