Internet Transport Economics

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This book presents Internet transport economics as a new approach to understanding the packet-switching paradigm of Internet infrastructure as a global transport system for data packets. It is a prescient view of the Internet’s evolution into a content-centric service platform where the quality of services (QoS) cannot be guaranteed due to the tens of thousands of autonomous systems that enact business decisions on peering, routing, and pricing in a way that determines aspects of the Internet ecosystem like network topology, latency and throughput of traffic flows, and performance of network applications. The trafficking issues created in this environment are a critical concern and barrier for user applications that require real-time responses, such as telesurgery and teleoperation of autonomous vehicles, and the book presents the Internet transport economics model as the solution.                While engineering and business are the prevailing lenses through which the Internet is viewed, the book builds its methodological framework around transport. Further delving into economics, it establishes how the Internet can be understood as providing transport services for data packets, whose demand and supply are driven by the QoS metrics of delay and loss, which can be regarded as congestion costs that result in equilibrium rates of traffic flows sent by content providers (CPs). The book goes on to present a stylized model of content provider-to-access provider (CP–AP) service as well as congestion equilibrium and rate equilibrium solution concepts under the Internet transport economics framework. These are used to analyze the problem domains of service differentiation, market structure, and data pricing. Finally, it discusses various potential future applications. This book will be of interest to graduate students and researchers in areas of computer networking and performance evaluation.

Author(s): Richard T. B. Ma
Series: Synthesis Lectures on Learning, Networks, and Algorithms
Publisher: Springer
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 124
City: Cham

Preface
Acknowledgments
Contents
About the Author
Part I Methodological Framework
1 Viewpoints to the Internet
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1.1 Engineering Perspectives
1.1.1 Packet Switching
1.1.2 Layered Architecture
1.1.3 Edge Versus Core
1.2 Business Perspectives
1.2.1 Connectivity-Oriented Transit Services
1.2.2 Performance-Oriented Peering Contracts
1.2.3 Business Tussles and Regulatory Policies
1.3 Transport Perspectives
1.3.1 Internet as a Transport System
1.3.2 Service and Performance
2 Economics Views of Internet Transport
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2.1 Principles of Economics
2.2 Supply of Internet Transport
2.3 Demand of Internet Transport
3 Equilibrium Characterization
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3.1 General Network Equilibrium
3.2 Linear Lossy Networks
3.3 Lossless Networks
3.4 Peering Dispute: A Case Study
4 Related Works and Future Directions
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4.1 Related Works
4.2 Future Directions
Part II Application Problems
5 Model and Equilibrium
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5.1 The CP-AP Model
5.2 Congestion Equilibrium
5.3 Rate Equilibrium
6 Service Differentiation
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6.1 Class-Based Services
6.2 Differentiation Mechanisms
6.2.1 Capacity Distribution
6.2.2 Paid Prioritization
7 Market Structure
7.1 Monopolistic Market
7.2 Oligopolistic Markets
7.2.1 Duopolistic Competition
7.2.2 Oligopolistic Competition
8 Data Pricing
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8.1 Subsidization Competition
8.1.1 Subsidization Model
8.1.2 Equilibrium Analyses
8.1.3 Regulatory Policy
8.2 Pricing with Dap Cap
8.2.1 Two-Part Pricing
8.2.2 Revenue and Welfare
9 Further Discussions
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9.1 Data Center Networks
9.2 Wireless Mobile Networks
9.3 Network Governance and Regulation