Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
Abstract Introduction Problem statement Scope Computational Models Hardware & Software requirements Conclusion References
Abstract
This Project presents distributed algorithm that enable a peer to reason about trustworthiness of other peers based on past interactions and recommendation. Peers create their own trust network in their proximity. Trust, service and recommendation contexts are defined to measure trustworthiness. Recommenders trustworthiness and confidence are considered while evaluating recommendation.
Introduction
A central server is a preferred way to store and manage trust information, e.g., eBay. There is no central server in most P2P systems.
Introduction
A central server is a preferred way to store and manage trust information, e.g., eBay. Yet, P2P is the oldest architecture in the world of communications
Telephones are peer-to-peer
Usenet implementation of UUCP Routing in the Internet
Problem Statement
General overview
Definition Overlay networks Goals Classification of P2P systems
Scope
Case Studies Future research directions
Computer field shocks:
Napster, SETI@home, Freenet, Gnutella, Jabber,
Emergence of sporadically connected Internet nodes (laptops, handhelds, cell phones, appliances, )
IOK COE Comp. Engg. Dept.
Computational Model
Trust metrics
Service Trust Metric Reputation Metric Recommendation Trust Metric
Fading effect
Reputation Metric
Reputation Metric
Diagram
Software Configuration
Operating System Programming Language Database Tool > Windows XP > Java > SQL Server 2005 > Net bean
Conclusion
A recommendation contains the recommenders own experience, information from its acquaintances, and level of confidence in the recommendation. These parameters provided us a better assessment of trustworthiness. It can be adapted to various P2P applications, e.g., CPU sharing, storage networks, and P2P gaming. Defining application specific context of trust and related metrics can help to assess trustworthiness in various tasks.
References
a) Ahmet Burak Can, Bharat Bhargava,Sort:A self Organizing Trust Model for Peer-to-peer System,2013 b) K. Hoffman, D. Zage, and C. Nita-Rotaru, A Survey of Attack and Defense Techniques for Reputation Systems, ACM Computing Surveys, vol. 42, no. 1, pp. 1:1-1:31, 2009. c) P. Victor, C. Cornelis, M. De Cock, and P. Pinheiro da Silva, Gradual Trust and Distrust in ecommenderSystems,2009. d) R. Zhou, K. Hwang, and M. Cai, Gossiptrust for Fast Reputation Aggregation in Peer-to-Peer Networks, IEEE Trans. Knowledge and Data Eng., vol. 20, no. 9, pp. 12821295, Sept. 2008.