DocumentCode
34777
Title
SORT: A Self-ORganizing Trust Model for Peer-to-Peer Systems
Author
Can, Ahmet Burak ; Bhargava, Bharat
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Eng., Hacettepe Univ., Ankara, Turkey
Volume
10
Issue
1
fYear
2013
fDate
Jan.-Feb. 2013
Firstpage
14
Lastpage
27
Abstract
Open nature of peer-to-peer systems exposes them to malicious activity. Building trust relationships among peers can mitigate attacks of malicious peers. This paper presents distributed algorithms that enable a peer to reason about trustworthiness of other peers based on past interactions and recommendations. Peers create their own trust network in their proximity by using local information available and do not try to learn global trust information. Two contexts of trust, service, and recommendation contexts, are defined to measure trustworthiness in providing services and giving recommendations. Interactions and recommendations are evaluated based on importance, recentness, and peer satisfaction parameters. Additionally, recommender´s trustworthiness and confidence about a recommendation are considered while evaluating recommendations. Simulation experiments on a file sharing application show that the proposed model can mitigate attacks on 16 different malicious behavior models. In the experiments, good peers were able to form trust relationships in their proximity and isolate malicious peers.
Keywords
peer-to-peer computing; recommender systems; trusted computing; SORT; distributed algorithms; file sharing application; global trust information; malicious activity; malicious peers; peer-to-peer systems; recommendation contexts; self-organizing trust model; trust relationships; Buildings; Computational modeling; Context; Fading; History; Measurement; Peer to peer computing; Peer-to-peer systems; reputation; security; trust management;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Dependable and Secure Computing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1545-5971
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TDSC.2012.74
Filename
6280552
Link To Document