Are you an EPFL student looking for a semester project?
Work with us on data science and visualisation projects, and deploy your project as an app on top of Graph Search.
Self-organized networks such as mobile ad-hoc, Internet-based peer-to-peer, wireless mesh and Fourth Generation (4G) Wireless networks depend on cooperation of nodes. Reputation systems help nodes decide with whom to cooperate and which nodes to avoid. They have been studied and applied almost separately in diverse disciplines such as economics, computer science and social science, resulting in effort duplication and inconsistent terminology. In this paper, we aim at bringing together these efforts by outlining features and fundamental questions common to reputation systems in general. We derive methodologies to address these questions and lessons for both reputation system design and research from our own experiences and evaluations by simulation and analytical modelling. We argue for using deviation tests, discounting, only passing on of first-hand information, secondary response, and stressing the importance of identity.
Christina Fragouli, László Czap, Iris Safaka
Jean-Pierre Hubaux, Murtuza Jadliwala, Julien Freudiger, Valtteri Niemi