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Databases, Information Systems, and Peer-to-Peer Computing

Second International Workshop, DBISP2P 2004, Toronto, Canada, August 29-30, 2004, Revised Selected Papers

  • Conference proceedings
  • © 2005

Overview

Part of the book series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS, volume 3367)

Included in the following conference series:

Conference proceedings info: DBISP2P 2004.

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Table of contents (15 papers)

  1. Keynote Address

  2. Similarity Search in P2P Networks

  3. Adaptive P2P Networks

  4. Information Sharing and Optimization

Other volumes

  1. Databases, Information Systems, and Peer-to-Peer Computing

Keywords

About this book

Peer-to-peer (P2P) computing promises to o?er exciting new possibilities in d- tributed information processing and database technologies. The realization of this promise lies fundamentally in the availability of enhanced services such as structured ways for classifying and registering shared information, veri?cation and certi?cation of information, content-distributed schemes and quality of c- tent, security features, information discovery and accessibility, interoperation and composition of active information services, and ?nally market-based me- anisms to allow cooperative and non-cooperative information exchanges. The P2P paradigm lends itself to constructing large-scale complex, adaptive, - tonomous and heterogeneous database and information systems, endowed with clearly speci?ed and di?erential capabilities to negotiate, bargain, coordinate, and self-organize the information exchanges in large-scale networks. This vision will have a radical impact on the structure of complex organizations (business, scienti?c, or otherwise) and on the emergence and the formation of social c- munities, and on how the information is organized and processed. The P2P information paradigm naturally encompasses static and wireless connectivity, and static and mobile architectures. Wireless connectivity c- bined with the increasingly small and powerful mobile devices and sensors pose new challenges to as well as opportunities for the database community. Inf- mation becomes ubiquitous, highly distributed and accessible anywhere and at any time over highly dynamic, unstable networks with very severe constraints on the information management and processing capabilities.

Editors and Affiliations

  • School of Computing, National University of Singapore, Singapore

    Wee Siong Ng

  • National University of Singapore, Singapore

    Beng-Chin Ooi

  • Depts. Of Information and Decision Sciences and Computer Science, The University of Illinois at Chicago,  

    Aris M. Ouksel

  • Dept. of Electronics, Computer Science and Systems, University of Bologna, Bologna (BO), Italy

    Claudio Sartori

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