TY - GEN
T1 - Group management in P2P networks
AU - Elser, Benedikt
AU - Groh, Georg
AU - Fuhrmann, Thomas
PY - 2010
Y1 - 2010
N2 - Groups are both, a social phenomenon inherent to the human nature and a widely used structure in distributed systems. Recently, the Web 2.0 trend has begun to unite both aspects. Social networks provide their users with simple means to create, modify, join, and leave groups dynamically. Popular applications such as chat rooms and multi-player online games require social group structures. The same holds true for many e-science applications. But despite their growing importance, the structure of social groups has not yet been studied with respect to peer-to-peer or cloud computing systems. In this paper, we analyze the requirement structure that the different types of social groups induce in distributed systems. In particular, we focus on fully decentralized peer-to-peer systems. First, we formalize the requirements using results from field studies in social networks. Then we classify the various group management models by considering their differences in group creation and management. We also discuss scalability, maintainability, security issues and privacy guarantees of the different group models.
AB - Groups are both, a social phenomenon inherent to the human nature and a widely used structure in distributed systems. Recently, the Web 2.0 trend has begun to unite both aspects. Social networks provide their users with simple means to create, modify, join, and leave groups dynamically. Popular applications such as chat rooms and multi-player online games require social group structures. The same holds true for many e-science applications. But despite their growing importance, the structure of social groups has not yet been studied with respect to peer-to-peer or cloud computing systems. In this paper, we analyze the requirement structure that the different types of social groups induce in distributed systems. In particular, we focus on fully decentralized peer-to-peer systems. First, we formalize the requirements using results from field studies in social networks. Then we classify the various group management models by considering their differences in group creation and management. We also discuss scalability, maintainability, security issues and privacy guarantees of the different group models.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=77958456228&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/ICCCN.2010.5560024
DO - 10.1109/ICCCN.2010.5560024
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:77958456228
SN - 9781424471164
T3 - Proceedings - International Conference on Computer Communications and Networks, ICCCN
BT - 2010 Proceedings of 19th International Conference on Computer Communications and Networks, ICCCN 2010
T2 - 2010 19th International Conference on Computer Communications and Networks, ICCCN 2010
Y2 - 2 August 2010 through 5 August 2010
ER -