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Fifth IEEE International Conference on Peer-to-Peer Computing (P2P'05)
Quantifying Agent Strategies under Reputation
Konstanz, Germany
August 31-September 02
ISBN: 0-7695-2376-5
Sergio Marti, Stanford University
Hector Garcia-Molina, Stanford University
Our research proposes a simple buyer/seller game that captures the incentives dictating the interaction between peers in resource trading peer-to-peer networks. We prove that for simple reputation-based buyer strategies, a seller?s decision whether to cheat or not is dependent only on the length of its transaction history, not on the particular actions committed. Given a finite number of transactions, a peer can compute a utility optimal sequence of cooperations and defections. With the limited information provided by many reputation systems, a peer has incentive to defect on a large fraction of its transactions. If temporal information is used, equilibrium is reached when peers predominantly cooperate.
Citation:
Sergio Marti, Hector Garcia-Molina, "Quantifying Agent Strategies under Reputation," p2p, pp.97-105, Fifth IEEE International Conference on Peer-to-Peer Computing (P2P'05), 2005
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