Publication | Closed Access
Blockchain-Based P2P Content Delivery With Monetary Incentivization and Fairness Guarantee
25
Citations
24
References
2022
Year
P2p DownloadingEngineeringInformation SecurityReliable P2p DeliveryContent DistributionBusinessData PrivacyPeer-to-peer DatabaseFairness GuaranteeContent Delivery NetworkAd-hoc P2p SettingMarket DesignPeer NetworksTrusted P2pBlockchainMechanism DesignData SecurityBlockchain Protocol
Peer-to-peer (P2P) content delivery is up-and-coming to provide benefits comprising cost-saving and scalable peak-demand handling compared with centralized content delivery networks (CDNs), and also complementary to the popular decentralized storage networks such as Filecoin. However, reliable P2P delivery demands proper enforcement of delivery fairness, i.e., the deliverers should be rewarded in line with their in-time delivery. Unfortunately, most existing studies on delivery fairness are on the basis of non-cooperative game-theoretic assumptions that are arguably unrealistic in the ad-hoc P2P setting. We propose an expressive yet still minimalist security requirement for desired fair P2P content delivery, and give two efficient blockchain-enabled and monetary-incentivized solutions <inline-formula><tex-math notation="LaTeX">${\mathsf {FairDownload}}$</tex-math></inline-formula> and <inline-formula><tex-math notation="LaTeX">${\mathsf {FairStream}}$</tex-math></inline-formula> for P2P downloading and P2P streaming scenarios, respectively. Our designs not only ensure delivery fairness where deliverers are paid (nearly) proportional to their in-time delivery, but also guarantee exchange fairness where content consumers and content providers are also fairly treated. The fairness of each party can be assured even when other two parties collude to arbitrarily misbehave. Our protocols provide a general design of fetching content chunk from any specific position so the delivery can be resumed in the presence of unexpected interruption. Further, our systems are efficient in the sense of achieving asymptotically optimal on-chain costs and optimal delivery communication. We implement the prototype and deploy on the Ethereum Ropsten network. Extensive experiments in both LAN and WAN settings are conducted to evaluate the on-chain costs as well as the efficiency of downloading and streaming. Experimental results show the practicality and efficiency of our protocols.
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