DocumentCode :
172481
Title :
Sponsoring content: Motivation and pitfalls for content service providers
Author :
Liang Zhang ; Dan Wang
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput., Hong Kong Polytech. Univ., Hong Kong, China
fYear :
2014
fDate :
April 27 2014-May 2 2014
Firstpage :
577
Lastpage :
582
Abstract :
With the popularity of bandwidth-intensive mobile applications and mobile devices, the data traffic is increasing fast nowadays. This poses huge burden to the Internet service providers (ISPs) to support such wireless data traffic as they need to invest on developing advance networks, e.g., 4G, or expending the capacity of the current networks in a much faster pace. One way to keep up financing such investment is to transfer the costs to the end users. There are studies on new payment models, e.g., time-dependent pricing. An alternative way is sponsored content. More specifically, the content service providers (CSPs) can sponsor the end users for the traffic of viewing their content. As an example, Google, with India ISPs, is currently sponsoring Gmail, Google+, etc. for its end users. Nevertheless, much is unknown about the impact of such strategy on the CSPs of different scales, more specifically, whether richer CSPs may harvest more advantage on the competitive edge. In this paper, we first analyze the interplay among CSPs, a monopolistic ISP and end users. We conclude: 1) small CSPs and large (or rich) CSPs all may have part incentive to sponsor content for its end users when the monopolistic ISP cannot discriminate the charging price of CSPs; and 2) otherwise, none of them has the incentive to adopt this strategy. We then study the effect of competition from short-run (i.e., market shares are fixed) and long-run (i.e., market shares are dynamic) perspectives in the market with one small CSP and one large CSP. We show that the small CSP (or large CSP) may benefit more from the adoption of sponsored content for the short-run (or long-run) competition.
Keywords :
Internet; content management; mobile computing; pricing; telecommunication traffic; CSP; ISP; Internet service providers; bandwidth-intensive mobile applications; content service providers; content sponsoring; data traffic; market shares; mobile devices; time-dependent pricing; wireless data traffic; Biological system modeling; Conferences; Google; Mobile communication; Network neutrality; Pricing; Transportation;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Computer Communications Workshops (INFOCOM WKSHPS), 2014 IEEE Conference on
Conference_Location :
Toronto, ON
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/INFCOMW.2014.6849295
Filename :
6849295
Link To Document :
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