Jerry Daniels wrote:

> On Aug 17, 2016, 5:12 PM -0500, Richard Gaskin wrote:
>>
>> What is the business benefit for this application to go P2P rather
>> than client-server?
>
> Richard, cost savings, security, privacy. Costs are drastically
> reduced without hosting and its (hidden) labor/maintenance. Just
> think about the long record of exploitation of hosted SQL data.
> Not in the models were discussing here.

I like the idea* of P2P for some applications, but with the explosion of cloud services the client-server model seems to have merit as well.

On the one hand, there are the risks of managing (hopefully redundant) server farms. On the other hand there are the risks of having every client also be a server, but without a team of professionals hardening and monitoring it.

All systems are hackable. Ideally prevention, monitoring, and recovery are budgeted for in the business plan with any architecture.

I believe there's a role for both client-server and P2P, and federated models as well. Each has its own benefits and tradeoffs; like programming languages, there'll always be more because use cases where they can add value only grow and diversify.

Back to blockchains, from my reading it's becoming clear that the distributed trust is a compelling feature, along with the increased speed with which transaction ledgers can be conveyed faithfully. Like the early days of railroads, networks outside of Bitcoin employ different standards, each with its own kinks to work out but worth the effort. Over time it seems likely they'll impact global quality of life as significantly as the invention of compound interest.

Lots to learn....


> Richard, Mike...sorry for my butting in here. Feel free to ignore my
> interruption.

Au contraire, mon ami.  Always good to have you around.



* I've been paranoid for years, and enjoying Mr. Robot has only made that worse. :) For the last several years I've run my main laptop and workstation with no open ports (easy to do with Ubuntu since it ships that way; took some work to harden my Mac). This has meant that as eagerly as I used to visit openp2p.com and read the other things, these days P2P is an interesting set of ideas but not something I focus on; all collaboration systems here use only outbound connections.

--
 Richard Gaskin
 Fourth World Systems
 Software Design and Development for the Desktop, Mobile, and the Web
 ____________________________________________________________________
 ambassa...@fourthworld.com                http://www.FourthWorld.com

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