Pricing Multicast Network Services

Multicast has long been considered an attractive service for the Internet for the provision of multiparty applications. For over a decade now multicast has been a proposed IETF standard. Though there is a strong industry push towards deploying multicast, there has been little multicast deployment by...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Shrinivas, V Prasanna
Other Authors: Vijay Chandru, *
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Indian Institute of Science 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2005/270
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spelling ndltd-IISc-oai-etd.ncsi.iisc.ernet.in-2005-2702013-01-07T21:20:17ZPricing Multicast Network ServicesShrinivas, V PrasannaTelecommunicationMulticastingComputer NetworksInternet Service Provider - PricingMulticast Congestion ControlMulticast Resource AllocationATM NetworksPricing ModelsPricing ParadigmsBandwidth ApproachNetwork Bandwidth EconomyInternet PricingMulticastmax-minMulticast has long been considered an attractive service for the Internet for the provision of multiparty applications. For over a decade now multicast has been a proposed IETF standard. Though there is a strong industry push towards deploying multicast, there has been little multicast deployment by commercial Internet Service Providers (ISPs) and more importantly most end-users still lack multicast capabilities. Depending on the underlying network infrastructure, the ISP has several options of implementing his multicast capabilities. With significantly faster and more sophisticated protocols being designed and prototyped, it is expected that a whole new gamut of applications that are delay sensitive will come into being. However, the incentives to resolve the conflicting interests of the ISPs and the end-users have to be provided for successful implementation of these protocols. Thus we arrive at the following economic questions: What is the strategy that will enable the ISP recover his costs ? How can the end-user be made aware of the cost of his actions ? Naturally, the strategies of the ISP and the end-user depend on each other and form an economic game. The research problems addressed in this thesis are: A pricing model that is independent of the underlying transmission protocols is prefered. We have proposed such a pricing scheme for multicast independent of the underlying protocols, by introducing the concept of pricing points* These pricing points provide a range of prices that the users can expect during a particular time period and tune their usage accordingly. Our pricing scheme makes both the sender and receiver accountable. Our scheme also provides for catering to heterogeneous users and gives incentive for differential pricing. We explore a number of formulations of resource allocation problems arising in communication networks as optimization models. Optimization-based methods were only employed for unicast congestion control. We have extended this method for single rate multicast. We have also devised an optimization-based approach for multicast congestion control that finds an allocation rate to maximize the social welfare. Finally we also show that the session-splitting problem can also be cast as an optimization problem. The commonly used "max-min" fairness criteria suffers from serious limitations like discriminating sessions that traverse large number of links and poor network utilization. We provide an allocation scheme that reduces discrimination towards multicast sessions that traverse many links and also improves network utilization.Indian Institute of ScienceVijay Chandru, *2007-03-28T05:35:16Z2007-03-28T05:35:16Z2007-03-28T05:35:16Z2001-05Electronic Thesis and Dissertation9724401 bytesapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2005/270nullenI grant Indian Institute of Science the right to archive and to make available my thesis or dissertation in whole or in part in all forms of media, now hereafter known. I retain all proprietary rights, such as patent rights. I also retain the right to use in future works (such as articles or books) all or part of this thesis or dissertation.
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Telecommunication
Multicasting
Computer Networks
Internet Service Provider - Pricing
Multicast Congestion Control
Multicast Resource Allocation
ATM Networks
Pricing Models
Pricing Paradigms
Bandwidth Approach
Network Bandwidth Economy
Internet Pricing
Multicast
max-min
spellingShingle Telecommunication
Multicasting
Computer Networks
Internet Service Provider - Pricing
Multicast Congestion Control
Multicast Resource Allocation
ATM Networks
Pricing Models
Pricing Paradigms
Bandwidth Approach
Network Bandwidth Economy
Internet Pricing
Multicast
max-min
Shrinivas, V Prasanna
Pricing Multicast Network Services
description Multicast has long been considered an attractive service for the Internet for the provision of multiparty applications. For over a decade now multicast has been a proposed IETF standard. Though there is a strong industry push towards deploying multicast, there has been little multicast deployment by commercial Internet Service Providers (ISPs) and more importantly most end-users still lack multicast capabilities. Depending on the underlying network infrastructure, the ISP has several options of implementing his multicast capabilities. With significantly faster and more sophisticated protocols being designed and prototyped, it is expected that a whole new gamut of applications that are delay sensitive will come into being. However, the incentives to resolve the conflicting interests of the ISPs and the end-users have to be provided for successful implementation of these protocols. Thus we arrive at the following economic questions: What is the strategy that will enable the ISP recover his costs ? How can the end-user be made aware of the cost of his actions ? Naturally, the strategies of the ISP and the end-user depend on each other and form an economic game. The research problems addressed in this thesis are: A pricing model that is independent of the underlying transmission protocols is prefered. We have proposed such a pricing scheme for multicast independent of the underlying protocols, by introducing the concept of pricing points* These pricing points provide a range of prices that the users can expect during a particular time period and tune their usage accordingly. Our pricing scheme makes both the sender and receiver accountable. Our scheme also provides for catering to heterogeneous users and gives incentive for differential pricing. We explore a number of formulations of resource allocation problems arising in communication networks as optimization models. Optimization-based methods were only employed for unicast congestion control. We have extended this method for single rate multicast. We have also devised an optimization-based approach for multicast congestion control that finds an allocation rate to maximize the social welfare. Finally we also show that the session-splitting problem can also be cast as an optimization problem. The commonly used "max-min" fairness criteria suffers from serious limitations like discriminating sessions that traverse large number of links and poor network utilization. We provide an allocation scheme that reduces discrimination towards multicast sessions that traverse many links and also improves network utilization.
author2 Vijay Chandru, *
author_facet Vijay Chandru, *
Shrinivas, V Prasanna
author Shrinivas, V Prasanna
author_sort Shrinivas, V Prasanna
title Pricing Multicast Network Services
title_short Pricing Multicast Network Services
title_full Pricing Multicast Network Services
title_fullStr Pricing Multicast Network Services
title_full_unstemmed Pricing Multicast Network Services
title_sort pricing multicast network services
publisher Indian Institute of Science
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/2005/270
work_keys_str_mv AT shrinivasvprasanna pricingmulticastnetworkservices
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