A knowledge plane for the internet
Proceedings of the 2003 conference on Applications, technologies, architectures, and protocols for computer communications
Improving Traffic Locality in BitTorrent via Biased Neighbor Selection
ICDCS '06 Proceedings of the 26th IEEE International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems
Can ISPS and P2P users cooperate for improved performance?
ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review
P4p: provider portal for applications
Proceedings of the ACM SIGCOMM 2008 conference on Data communication
Taming the torrent: a practical approach to reducing cross-isp traffic in peer-to-peer systems
Proceedings of the ACM SIGCOMM 2008 conference on Data communication
Contracts: practical contribution incentives for P2P live streaming
NSDI'10 Proceedings of the 7th USENIX conference on Networked systems design and implementation
LiveShift: Mesh-pull live and time-shifted P2P video streaming
LCN '11 Proceedings of the 2011 IEEE 36th Conference on Local Computer Networks
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The paradigm shift from centralized services into hundreds of thousands of decentralized services changes traffic directions and patterns in the Internet. In that light, overlay providers form logical communication topologies, which effect the underlying telcos' as well as Internet Service Providers' (ISP) traffic and network management. Thus, Economic Traffic Management (ETM) principles deal with incentives, decentralized traffic generation, and modern applications, such as integrated Video-on-Demand and live streaming approaches. Therefore, this work overviews the very recent work on ETM mechanisms, especially driven by the SmoothIT project, and on LiveShift, combining efficiently architectural and system demands for an incentive-driven application management. Furthermore, this section describes in examples, provides evidences, and concludes that ETM and LiveShift can pave an efficient path to modern application support of distributed overlay traffic management, which benefits telcos, ISPs, overlay providers, and end users, if all or parts of them see the right incentives to cooperate, behave well, or interact.