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Special Issue: Recent Advances in Peer‐to‐Peer Systems and Security
Author(s) -
Zhao Ben Y.
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
concurrency and computation: practice and experience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.309
H-Index - 67
eISSN - 1532-0634
pISSN - 1532-0626
DOI - 10.1002/cpe.1239
Subject(s) - computer science , incentive , peer to peer , context (archaeology) , dissemination , file sharing , technical peer review , protocol (science) , peer review , world wide web , data science , computer security , telecommunications , political science , the internet , medicine , paleontology , alternative medicine , pathology , law , economics , biology , microeconomics
Peer-to-peer systems have revolutionized the way we store [1,2], disseminate [3,4] and share [5,6] content. In recent years, researchers have examined numerous aspects of these innovative architectures and proposed numerous protocols and applications. While peer-to-peer research has impacted a number of areas, including theory, networking, databases and distributed systems, recent work has focused more on the issues of practical, deployable systems, measurements, and issues of security and privacy in peer-to-peer applications. This issue brings together recent work on several projects focused on building robust, practical peer-to-peer systems. The work described has also been presented at the 5th international workshop on peer-to-peer systems (IPTPS 2006), an annual forum for researchers and practitioners of large distributed systems, held in Santa Barbara, California, and attended by more than 80 participants. The goal of the workshop was to examine peer-to-peer technologies, applications and systems, and to identify key research issues and challenges that lie ahead. In the context of this workshop, peerto-peer systems were characterized as being decentralized, self-organizing distributed systems, in which all or most communication is symmetric.

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