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Interconnecting Eyeballs to Content: A Shapley Value Perspective on ISP Peering and Settlement Richard T.B. Ma Columbia University Dah-ming Chiu, John.

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Presentation on theme: "Interconnecting Eyeballs to Content: A Shapley Value Perspective on ISP Peering and Settlement Richard T.B. Ma Columbia University Dah-ming Chiu, John."— Presentation transcript:

1 Interconnecting Eyeballs to Content: A Shapley Value Perspective on ISP Peering and Settlement Richard T.B. Ma Columbia University Dah-ming Chiu, John C.S. Lui The Chinese University of Hong Kong Vishal Misra, Dan Rubenstein Columbia University

2 Outline Current ISP Settlement Problems Eyeball/Content ISP Model Profit Sharing Among ISPs Future work

3 What is an Internet Service Provider (ISP)? The Internet is composed of Autonomous Systems (ASes). An ISP is a business entity. –Comprise multiple ASes. –Provide Internet access. –Objective: maximize profits. ISP

4 Eyeball ISPs –Provide Internet access to customers: –Place Large investment on infrastructure. –E.g. AT&T, Verizon … Content ISPs –Provide contents via the Internet. –Serve customers like: Transit ISPs –Tier 1 ISPs: global connectivity of the Internet. –Provide transit services for other ISPs. –Cover a large geographic area. Different classes of players

5 Content ISP Transit ISP Eyeball ISP Information and money flows on the Internet Revenue from content providers Monthly service payment Transit service revenue

6 Problems of the current settlement model Transit Eyeball Content Providers

7 Service DifferentiationNetwork Neutrality Net Neutrality Debate: Whether or not to provider Service Differentiation? Network Balkanization: De-peering between ISPs Consequences of the current settlement model How to appropriately share profits amongst ISPs? Transit Eyeball Transit zero-dollar peering Content Providers

8 Contribution of this work Modeling of ISPs –How the revenues are generated? –How different kinds of ISPs interact with one another? Appropriate Profit Sharing Among ISPs –Efficiency –Fairness –Uniqueness

9 The Network Model: Eyeball Side Geographic Regions ( r ) Monthly Charge (  r ) Customer Size ( X r ) Eyeball ISP ( B j ) Eyeball-side revenue from a region r (  r X r )

10 Eyeball Side Demand Assumption Elastic intra-region demand –Switch among ISPs in a region. –New eyeballs may take customers from other eyeballs in the same region. –Customers move to other eyeballs when the original eyeball leaves the system. Inelastic inter-region demand –Cannot switch to ISPs in other regions. –Constant customer size in a region.

11 The Network Model: Content Side Content Items ( q ) Content ISP ( C i ) Per Customer Revenue (  q ) Content-side revenue (  q X r ) How to share profits amongst ISPs?

12 How to share profit? -- the baseline case One content and one eyeball ISP. One region, US, and one content, ♫. Egalitarian profit sharing:

13 How to share profit? -- multiple eyeballs Symmetry: two eyeballs get the same profit. Efficiency: summation of three ISPs’ profit equal v. Balanced Contribution:

14 How to share profit? -- multiple eyeballs The unique solution (Shapley value) that satisfies Efficiency Symmetry and Balanced Contribution: n eyeball ISPs.

15 Results and implications of profit sharing The more eyeballs, the more profit the content ISP gets. –Multiple eyeballs provide redundancy; –The only content has more leverage. The marginal profit of the content ISP: –If n=1, the content loses everything if the eyeball leaves. –The content loses only 1/n 2 of its original profit, because users move to other eyeball ISPs.

16 How to share profit? -- multiple contents m content ISPs. The unique solution (Shapley value) that satisfies Efficiency Symmetry and Balanced Contribution:

17 Results and implications of profit sharing The more contents, the more profit the eyeball ISP gets. –Multiple contents provide redundancy; –The only eyeball ISP has more leverage. The marginal profit of the eyeball ISP: –If m=1, the eyeball loses everything if the content leaves. –The eyeball loses only 1/m 2 of its original profit, because users get content from other content ISPs.

18 How to share profit? -- multiple eyeballs and contents The unique solution (Shapley value) that satisfies Efficiency Symmetry and Balanced Contribution:

19 How to share profit? -- multiple regions and items n eyeball ISPs and m content ISPs. Each eyeball covers a set of regions. Each content provides a set of items. Components of total profit –Eyeball-side revenue –Content-side revenue

20 How to share profit? -- multiple regions and items Additivity Property of the Shapley value –Distribute components of the total profit separately. Distribute eyeball-side revenue (  $ X $ and  ₤ X ₤ ) to: –Eyeballs that cover the region where the profit is generated from. –All content ISPs.

21 How to share profit? -- multiple regions and items Distribute content-side revenue (  ♫ X $,  ♫ X ₤,  ♣ X $ and  ♣ X ₤ ) to: –Eyeballs that cover the region where the profit is generated from. –Content ISPs that provide the item that generates the profit.

22 Summary Content/Eyeball ISP model –Customer demand –Revenue generation Closed-form Shapley value profit sharing solution –Efficiency, Symmetry and Balanced Contribution –Additivity, Strong Monotonicity, Dummy … –Incentives for optimal routing and interconnecting decision (CoNEXT 07)

23 Future Work and New Results Include Transit ISPs General Internet Topology Implications for Bilateral Agreements among ISPs


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