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by teekert
3523 days ago
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Well apart from battery, If I was an ISP, I´d like it if a Youtube movie would flow from one persons mobile to the hotspot of the train said person is sitting on and on towards another person on the train. This scenario would require significantly less bandwidth overall. Same goes for neighbors accessing the same information. And this can be extrapolated to many situations. The IPFS powered internet would perhaps lead to more uploads but it would scale significantly better and will be cheaper to maintain. Hence cost can also go down for end users/consumers. |
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... and that's pretty much the deal killer for this on mobile, even ignoring everything else.
> If I was an ISP, I´d like it if a Youtube movie
... except you are not allowed to download videos from YouTube or most (if not all) the popular video content services.
> a Youtube movie would flow from one persons mobile to the hotspot of the train said person is sitting on and on towards another person on the train.
This would only work as long as person A is running IPFS, connected to the hotspot and has any cached content somebody else is concurrently interested in. The hotspot is very unlikely to run IPFS and to have any storage, so cache hit ratios would not only be low they would be dependent on person A's transit schedule.
> This scenario would require significantly less bandwidth overall.
No, the same amount of bandwidth would be consumed, but perhaps over a cheaper radio bearer.
> The IPFS powered internet would perhaps lead to more uploads but it would scale significantly better and will be cheaper to maintain.
Somehow I doubt that. Total costs would most likely go up, but they would perhaps be more spread out.
> Hence cost can also go down for end users/consumers.
Consumers don't spend anything for accessing content on the Internet, so I really doubt there are any cost savings to be had.