Staggercast: Demand-Side Management for ISPs
Gareth Tyson, Nishanth Sastry, Richard Mortier, Nick Feamster

TL;DR
This paper proposes demand-side management techniques for ISPs that influence user behavior through incentives, aiming to reduce congestion and improve resource utilization without extensive infrastructure upgrades.
Contribution
It introduces demand-side management inspired by energy networks, demonstrating feasibility through survey data and offering a novel approach to traffic engineering in ISPs.
Findings
Feasibility of demand-side management in current networks.
User incentives can influence consumption patterns.
Potential for shorter timescale resource management.
Abstract
The continuing expansion of Internet media consumption has increased traffic volumes, and hence congestion, on access links. In response, both mobile and wireline ISPs must either increase capacity or perform traffic engineering over existing resources. Unfortunately, provisioning timescales are long, the process is costly, and single-homing means operators cannot balance across the last mile. Inspired by energy and transport networks, we propose demand-side management of users to reduce the impact caused by consumption patterns out-pacing that of edge network provision. By directly affecting user behaviour through a range of incentives, our techniques enable resource management over shorter timescales than is possible in conventional networks. Using survey data from 100 participants we explore the feasibility of introducing the principles of demand-side management in today's networks.
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Taxonomy
TopicsCaching and Content Delivery · Peer-to-Peer Network Technologies · Green IT and Sustainability
