On Thu, Oct 30, 2003 at 11:07:45AM +0000, Ian Clarke wrote:
> Is it fair that when 3 nodes might have sent me a vast number of 
> requests, thus overloading my node, that a 4th node which has never 
> asked anything of my node before is refused?  Probably not, but how can 
> this be addressed?
> 
> The obvious option is to bias QRs towards nodes in proportion to the 
> degree to which they are responsible for the QR being sent.  Now 
> clearly, this is an imperfect solution as it relies on negative trust, 
> and there really can't be any reliable negative trust on the Internet. 
> Having said this, while this mechanism might not be impossible to 
> circumvent, it could be enough to encourage developers of high-traffic 
> applications such as Frost to make their users try to be better Freenet 
> citizens.

I'm not sure it would. It might be more likely to encourage their users
to run several Freenet nodes - even with Fred's bloat, RAM prices
continue to fall, and Fred will not always be as bloated as it is now
(in RAM/CPU usage), if I have anything to do with it.

However, another possibility: have some positive trust, not by WoT, but
by a much simpler mechanism of favouring requests from nodes in the
routing table when we are overloaded... or from nodes who are not only
in the RT but have been answering requests well for some time.
> 
> Thoughts?
> 
> Ian.

-- 
Matthew J Toseland - [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Freenet Project Official Codemonkey - http://freenetproject.org/
ICTHUS - Nothing is impossible. Our Boss says so.

Attachment: signature.asc
Description: Digital signature

_______________________________________________
Devl mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://dodo.freenetproject.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/devl

Reply via email to