Pastry: Scalable, Decentralized Object Location, and Routing for Large-Scale Peer-to-Peer Systems
Middleware '01 Proceedings of the IFIP/ACM International Conference on Distributed Systems Platforms Heidelberg
Proceedings of the first workshop on Online social networks
What is Twitter, a social network or a news media?
Proceedings of the 19th international conference on World wide web
Cuckoo: towards decentralized, socio-aware online microblogging services and data measurements
Proceedings of the 2nd ACM International Workshop on Hot Topics in Planet-scale Measurement
Birds of a FETHR: open, decentralized micropublishing
IPTPS'09 Proceedings of the 8th international conference on Peer-to-peer systems
Storage-enabled access points for improved mobile performance: an evaluation study
WWIC'11 Proceedings of the 9th IFIP TC 6 international conference on Wired/wireless internet communications
Privacy-aware and scalable content dissemination in distributed social networks
ISWC'11 Proceedings of the 10th international conference on The semantic web - Volume Part II
Scaling microblogging services with divergent traffic demands
Middleware'11 Proceedings of the 12th ACM/IFIP/USENIX international conference on Middleware
Scaling microblogging services with divergent traffic demands
Proceedings of the 12th International Middleware Conference
Retrieval of trending keywords in a peer-to-peer micro-blogging OSN
Proceedings of the 22nd ACM international conference on Conference on information & knowledge management
Hi-index | 0.00 |
Online microblogging services, as exemplified by Twitter, have become immensely popular during the latest years. However, current microblogging systems severely suffer from performance bottlenecks and malicious attacks due to the centralized architecture. As a result, centralized microblogging systems may threaten the scalability, reliability as well as availability of the offered services, not to mention the high operational and maintenance cost. This demo presents a decentralized, socio-aware microblogging system named Cuckoo. The key aspects of Cuckoo's design is to take advantage of the inherent social relations while leveraging peer-to-peer (P2P) techniques in order to provide scalable, reliable microblogging services. The demo will show these aspects of Cuckoo and provide insights on the performance gain that decentralization and socio-awareness can bring for microblogging systems.