Title :
TOSS: Traffic offloading by social network service-based opportunistic sharing in mobile social networks
Author :
Xiaofei Wang ; Min Chen ; Zhu Han ; Wu, Dapeng Oliver ; Kwon, Ted Taekyoung
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Comput. Sci. & Eng., Seoul Nat. Univ., Seoul, South Korea
fDate :
April 27 2014-May 2 2014
Abstract :
The ever increasing traffic demand becomes a serious concern of mobile network operators. To solve this traffic explosion problem, there have been many efforts to offload the traffic from cellular links to direct communications among users. In this paper, we propose the framework of Traffic Offloading assisted by Social network services (SNS) via opportunistic Sharing in mobile social networks, TOSS, to offload SNS-based cellular traffic by user-to-user sharing. First we select a subset of users who are to receive the same content as initial seeds depending on their content spreading impacts in online SNSs and their mobility patterns in offline mobile social networks (MSNs). Then users share the content via opportunistic local connectivity (e.g., Bluetooth, Wi-Fi Direct, Device-to-device in LTE) with each other. The observation of SNS user activities reveals that individual users have distinct access patterns, which allows TOSS to exploit the user-dependent access delay between the content generation time and each user´s access time for traffic offloading purposes. We model and analyze the traffic offloading and content spreading among users by taking into account various options in linking SNS and MSN trace data. The trace-driven evaluation demonstrates that TOSS can reduce up to 86.5% of the cellular traffic while satisfying the access delay requirements of all users.
Keywords :
Bluetooth; Long Term Evolution; cellular radio; mobile computing; mobility management (mobile radio); social networking (online); telecommunication traffic; wireless LAN; Bluetooth; LTE; SNS-based cellular traffic offloading; TOSS; Wi-Fi Direct; access patterns; cellular links; content generation time; content spreading impacts; device-to-device; direct communications; mobile network operators; mobility patterns; offline mobile social networks; online SNS; opportunistic local connectivity; social network service-based opportunistic sharing; trace-driven evaluation; traffic demand; traffic explosion problem; user subset selection; user-dependent access delay; user-to-user sharing; Computers; Delays; Educational institutions; Mobile communication; Mobile computing; Silicon; Social network services; Mobile Social Networks; Opportunistic Networks; Social Network Service; Traffic Offloading;
Conference_Titel :
INFOCOM, 2014 Proceedings IEEE
Conference_Location :
Toronto, ON
DOI :
10.1109/INFOCOM.2014.6848179