AN INTERPRETIVE DESCRIPTION OF AN ONLINE PEER-TO-PEER COMMUNICATION FORUM FOR ATRIAL FIBRILLATION

2014 ◽  
Vol 30 (10) ◽  
pp. S367
Author(s):  
K. Redman ◽  
S. Thorne ◽  
S. Lauck ◽  
T. Taverner
Author(s):  
Xianghan Zheng ◽  
Vladimir Oleshchuk

Today, Peer-to-Peer SIP based communication systems have attracted much attention from both the academia and industry. The decentralized nature of P2P might provide the distributed peer-to-peer communication system without help of the traditional SIP server. However, the decentralization features come to the cost of the reduced manageability and create new concerns. Until now, the main focus of research was on the availability of the network and systems, while few attempts are put on protecting privacy. In this chapter, we investigate on P2PSIP security issues and introduce two enhancement solutions: central based security and distributed trust security, both of which have their own advantages and disadvantages. After that, we study appropriate combination of these two approaches to get optimized protection. Our design is independent of the DHT (Distributed Hash Table) overlay technology. We take the Chord overlay as the example, and then, analyze the system in several aspects: security & privacy, number-of the hops, message flows, etc.


Author(s):  
Fabian Stäber ◽  
Gerald Kunzmann ◽  
Jörg P. Müller

Decentralized peer-to-peer systems fit well as the underlying infrastructure for IP-telephony, as they provide the scalability for a large number of participants, and are able to handle the limited storage and bandwidth capabilities on the clients. We studied a commercial peer-to-peer-based decentralized communication platform supporting video communication, voice communication, instant messaging, et cetera. One of the requirements of the communication platform is the implementation of a user directory, allowing users to search for other participants. In this chapter, we present the Extended Prefix Hash Tree algorithm that enables the implementation of a user directory on top of the peer-to-peer communication platform in a fully decentralized way. We evaluate the performance of the algorithm with a real-world phone book. The results can be transferred to other scenarios where support for range queries is needed in combination with the decentralization, self-organization, and resilience of an underlying peer-to-peer infrastructure.


2021 ◽  
Vol 87 ◽  
pp. 102983
Author(s):  
Stelliana Goutzamanis ◽  
Joseph S Doyle ◽  
Danielle Horyniak ◽  
Peter Higgs ◽  
Margaret Hellard

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