Friend-to-friend

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A friend-to-friend (or F2F) computer network is a type of peer-to-peer network in which users only make direct connections with people they know. Passwords or digital signatures can be used for authentication.

Many F2F networks support indirect anonymous or pseudonymous communication between users who do not know or trust one another. For example, a node in a friend-to-friend overlay can automatically forward a file (or a request for a file) anonymously between two friends, without telling either of them the other's name or IP address. These friends can in turn forward the same file (or request) to their own friends, and so on.

Unlike other kinds of private P2P, users in a friend-to-friend network cannot find out who else is participating beyond their own circle of friends, so F2F networks can grow in size without compromising their users' anonymity. Turtle, WASTE, GNUnet, Freenet and OneSwarm are examples of software that can be used to build F2F networks, though of these only Turtle is configured for friend-to-friend operation by default.

Dan Bricklin coined the term "friend-to-friend network" in 2000.[1]

Contents

[edit] Potential applications of F2F

  • Online reputations could be constructed and verified using an anonymous F2F overlay: each document on the network would be automatically given a new trust rating by each node forwarding it, for example by multiplying the old trust rating by the reputation of the provider. If a document appeared to be incorrect, the recipient could manually decrease the local reputation of the friend who provided it, decrease the trust rating of the document, or even block the document from being exchanged again through their node. [2]

[edit] Software

[edit] F2F software with support for anonymous forwarding

  • Freenet (Open Source, Windows/GNU+Linux/Mac OS X, from version 0.7 optionally F2F with the "opennet" option disabled)
  • GNUnet (Open Source, GNU+Linux/Windows/Mac OS X, optionally F2F with the "F2F topology" option enabled)
  • Retroshare (Open Source, Win/Lin/Mac, Friend management based on PGP)
  • OneSwarm (Open Source, Win/Lin/Mac, backwards compatible with BitTorrent)
  • Turtle F2F (Open Source, Linux only)
  • Alliancep2p (torrent based)

[edit] F2F software with support for pseudonymous forwarding

  • anoNet (pseudonymous, based on standard VPN software)
  • WASTE (Open Source, Win/Linux/Mac, optionally F2F with the "ping packets" option disabled)

[edit] F2F software without support for forwarding

  • LimeWire (Open Source, Win/Linux/Mac, from version 5.0)
  • Tudzu (Freeware, Win/Linux)

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Friend-to-Friend Networks Dan Bricklin, August 11 2000
  2. ^ Bouillon: A wiki-wiki social web V Grishchenko - Computer Science–Theory and Applications, 2007 - Springer

[edit] External links

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