A new paper, Olson’s Paradox Revisited: An Empirical Analysis of File-Sharing Behaviour in P2P Communities, finds a positive correlation between the size of a BitTorrent file-sharing community and the amount of content shared, despite a reduced individual propensity to share in larger groups, and deduces from this that file-sharing communities provide a pure (non-rival) public good. Forcing users to upload results in a smaller catalogue; but private networks provide both more and better content, as do networks aimed at specialised communities.
George Danezis and I produced a theoretical model of this five years ago in The Economics of Censorship Resistance. It’s nice to see that the data, now collected, bear us out
today is very dificult find any good program to download files. the server change often.
Bye.