1,789 research outputs found
A theoretical and computational basis for CATNETS
The main content of this report is the identification and definition of market mechanisms for Application Layer Networks (ALNs). On basis of the structured Market Engineering process, the work comprises the identification of requirements which adequate market mechanisms for ALNs have to fulfill. Subsequently, two mechanisms for each, the centralized and the decentralized case are described in this document. These build the theoretical foundation for the work within the following two years of the CATNETS project. --Grid Computing
Integration of Blockchain and Auction Models: A Survey, Some Applications, and Challenges
In recent years, blockchain has gained widespread attention as an emerging
technology for decentralization, transparency, and immutability in advancing
online activities over public networks. As an essential market process,
auctions have been well studied and applied in many business fields due to
their efficiency and contributions to fair trade. Complementary features
between blockchain and auction models trigger a great potential for research
and innovation. On the one hand, the decentralized nature of blockchain can
provide a trustworthy, secure, and cost-effective mechanism to manage the
auction process; on the other hand, auction models can be utilized to design
incentive and consensus protocols in blockchain architectures. These
opportunities have attracted enormous research and innovation activities in
both academia and industry; however, there is a lack of an in-depth review of
existing solutions and achievements. In this paper, we conduct a comprehensive
state-of-the-art survey of these two research topics. We review the existing
solutions for integrating blockchain and auction models, with some
application-oriented taxonomies generated. Additionally, we highlight some open
research challenges and future directions towards integrated blockchain-auction
models
Trustworthy Federated Learning: A Survey
Federated Learning (FL) has emerged as a significant advancement in the field
of Artificial Intelligence (AI), enabling collaborative model training across
distributed devices while maintaining data privacy. As the importance of FL
increases, addressing trustworthiness issues in its various aspects becomes
crucial. In this survey, we provide an extensive overview of the current state
of Trustworthy FL, exploring existing solutions and well-defined pillars
relevant to Trustworthy . Despite the growth in literature on trustworthy
centralized Machine Learning (ML)/Deep Learning (DL), further efforts are
necessary to identify trustworthiness pillars and evaluation metrics specific
to FL models, as well as to develop solutions for computing trustworthiness
levels. We propose a taxonomy that encompasses three main pillars:
Interpretability, Fairness, and Security & Privacy. Each pillar represents a
dimension of trust, further broken down into different notions. Our survey
covers trustworthiness challenges at every level in FL settings. We present a
comprehensive architecture of Trustworthy FL, addressing the fundamental
principles underlying the concept, and offer an in-depth analysis of trust
assessment mechanisms. In conclusion, we identify key research challenges
related to every aspect of Trustworthy FL and suggest future research
directions. This comprehensive survey serves as a valuable resource for
researchers and practitioners working on the development and implementation of
Trustworthy FL systems, contributing to a more secure and reliable AI
landscape.Comment: 45 Pages, 8 Figures, 9 Table
Theoretical and Computational Basis for Economical Ressource Allocation in Application Layer Networks - Annual Report Year 1
This paper identifies and defines suitable market mechanisms for Application Layer Networks (ALNs). On basis of the structured Market Engineering process, the work comprises the identification of requirements which adequate market mechanisms for ALNs have to fulfill. Subsequently, two mechanisms for each, the centralized and the decentralized case are described in this document. --Grid Computing
Proof-of-Concept Application - Annual Report Year 2
This document first gives an introduction to Application Layer Networks and subsequently presents the catallactic resource allocation model and its integration into the middleware architecture of the developed prototype. Furthermore use cases for employed service models in such scenarios are presented as general application scenarios as well as two very detailed cases: Query services and Data Mining services. This work concludes by describing the middleware implementation and evaluation as well as future work in this area. --Grid Computing
- …