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PeerTube is an open-source video sharing platform built as a decentralized alternative to YouTube. With software like Mastodon and Friendica, PeerTube is part of a series of federated social media platforms built partly in response to growing concerns about centralized control and ownership of the incumbent ones. In this paper, we present the first characterization of PeerTube, including its underlying infrastructure and the content being shared on its network. Our findings reveal concerning trends toward centralization that echo patterns observed in other contexts, exacerbated by the limited degree of content replication. PeerTube instances are mostly located in North America and Western Europe, with about 70% hosted in Germany, the USA, and France, and over 50% hosted on the top 7 ***ASes. We also find that over 92% of videos are stored without any redundancy in spite of PeerTube's native support for video redundancy.more » « less
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We investigate network peering location choices, focusing on whether networks opt for distant peering sites even when nearby options are available. We conduct a network-wide cloud-based traceroute campaign using virtual machine instances from four major cloud providers to identify peering locations and calculate the “peering stretch”: the extra distance networks travel beyond the nearest data center to their actual peering points. Our results reveal a median peering stretch of 300 kilometers, with some networks traveling as much as 6,700 kilometers. We explore the characteristics of networks that prefer distant peering points and the potential motivations behind these choices, providing insights into digital sovereignty and cybersecurity implications.more » « less
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We present a longitudinal study of intercontinental long-haul links (LHL) - links with latencies significantly higher than that of all other links in a traceroute path. Our study is motivated by the recognition of these LHLs as a network-layer manifestation of transoceanic undersea cables. We present a methodology and associated processing system for identifying long-haul links in traceroute measurements, and report on our findings from. We apply this system to a large corpus of traceroute data and report on multiple aspects of long haul connectivity including country-level prevalence, routers as international gateways, preferred long-haul destinations, and the evolution of these characteristics over a 7 year period.more » « less
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We present a longitudinal study of intercontinental long-haul links (LHLs) - links with latencies significantly higher than that of all other links in a traceroute path. Our study is motivated by the recognition of these LHLs as a network-layer manifestation of critical transoceanic undersea cables. We present a methodology and associated processing system for identifying long-haul links in traceroute measurements. We apply this system to a large corpus of traceroute data and report on multiple aspects of long haul connectivity including country-level prevalence, routers as international gateways, preferred long-haul destinations, and the evolution of these characteristics over a 7 year period. We identify 85,620 layer-3 links (out of 2.7M links in a large traceroute dataset) that satisfy our definition for intercontinental long haul with many of them terminating in a relatively small number of nodes. An analysis of connected components shows a clearly dominant component with a relative size that remains stable despite a significant growth of the long-haul infrastructure.more » « less
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