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Symbiotic Networks: Towards a New Level of Cooperation Between Wireless Networks

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Abstract

In the future, many wireless networks, serving diverse applications, will co-exist in the same environment. Today, wireless networks are mostly optimized in a rather opportunistic and/or selfish way: optimizations methods only use a local view of the network and environment, as they try to achieve the best performance within its own network. The optimizations are very often limited to a single layer and cooperation between networks is only happening through the use of gateways. In this paper, we suggest an alternative paradigm for supporting cooperation between otherwise independent networks, called ‘symbiotic networking’. This new paradigm can take many forms, such as sharing of network resources, sharing of nodes for communal routing purposes and sharing of (networking) services. Instead of optimizing network parameters within the individual networks, symbiotic networking solutions operate across network boundaries. Parameters are optimized between the networks and communal protocols are developed, leading to a more global optimization of the scarce network resources. In this paper, we describe several scenarios which can profit from symbiotic networking and illustrate a strategy for supporting networking protocols which can operate across network boundaries. Ultimately, through the disappearance of network boundaries and the introduction of cross-layer/cross-node/cross-network cooperation, symbiotic networks takes the notion of cooperation to a new level, paving the way for a true network symbiosis.

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Correspondence to Eli De Poorter.

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De Poorter, E., Latré, B., Moerman, I. et al. Symbiotic Networks: Towards a New Level of Cooperation Between Wireless Networks. Wireless Pers Commun 45, 479–495 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11277-008-9490-5

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