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Keeping track of Internet latency is a classic measurement problem. Open measurement platforms like RIPE Atlas are a great solution, but they also face challenges: preventing network overload that may result from uncontrolled active measurements, and maintaining the involved devices, which are typically contributed by volunteers and non-profit organizations, and tend to lag behind the state of the art in terms of features and performance. We explore gaming footage as a new source of real-time, publicly available, passive latency measurements, which have the potential to complement open measurement platforms. We show that it is feasible to mine this source of information by presenting Tero, a system that continuously downloads gaming footage from the Twitch streaming platform, extracts latency measurements from it, and converts them to latency distributions per geographical location.
Giovanni De Cesare, Paolo Perona
Tom Ian Battin, Hannes Markus Peter, Susheel Bhanu Busi, Grégoire Marie Octave Edouard Michoud, Leïla Ezzat, Massimo Bourquin, Andrew Lean Robison, Tyler Joe Kohler, Stylianos Fodelianakis