21,684 research outputs found
A Taxonomy of Self-configuring Service Discovery Systems
We analyze the fundamental concepts and issues in service
discovery. This analysis places service discovery in the context of distributed
systems by describing service discovery as a third generation
naming system. We also describe the essential architectures and the
functionalities in service discovery. We then proceed to show how service
discovery fits into a system, by characterizing operational aspects.
Subsequently, we describe how existing state of the art performs service
discovery, in relation to the operational aspects and functionalities, and
identify areas for improvement
Let Your CyberAlter Ego Share Information and Manage Spam
Almost all of us have multiple cyberspace identities, and these {\em
cyber}alter egos are networked together to form a vast cyberspace social
network. This network is distinct from the world-wide-web (WWW), which is being
queried and mined to the tune of billions of dollars everyday, and until
recently, has gone largely unexplored. Empirically, the cyberspace social
networks have been found to possess many of the same complex features that
characterize its real counterparts, including scale-free degree distributions,
low diameter, and extensive connectivity. We show that these topological
features make the latent networks particularly suitable for explorations and
management via local-only messaging protocols. {\em Cyber}alter egos can
communicate via their direct links (i.e., using only their own address books)
and set up a highly decentralized and scalable message passing network that can
allow large-scale sharing of information and data. As one particular example of
such collaborative systems, we provide a design of a spam filtering system, and
our large-scale simulations show that the system achieves a spam detection rate
close to 100%, while the false positive rate is kept around zero. This system
has several advantages over other recent proposals (i) It uses an already
existing network, created by the same social dynamics that govern our daily
lives, and no dedicated peer-to-peer (P2P) systems or centralized server-based
systems need be constructed; (ii) It utilizes a percolation search algorithm
that makes the query-generated traffic scalable; (iii) The network has a built
in trust system (just as in social networks) that can be used to thwart
malicious attacks; iv) It can be implemented right now as a plugin to popular
email programs, such as MS Outlook, Eudora, and Sendmail.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figure
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