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author | Karissa McKelvey <karissa@users.noreply.github.com> | 2016-05-23 13:25:26 -0700 |
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committer | Karissa McKelvey <karissa@users.noreply.github.com> | 2016-05-23 13:25:26 -0700 |
commit | c2f993f1ddcf11a607ddfed4cb01676a16fd6263 (patch) | |
tree | df9884ee46f81f985580c379deb459d008e56547 /dat-paper.md | |
parent | b91d4d18bebd74c99ef1d112d912d5823efed1a9 (diff) | |
parent | cb8fc2ed0a7cc12966447044922d1fd0684f9f71 (diff) | |
download | dat-docs-c2f993f1ddcf11a607ddfed4cb01676a16fd6263.tar.gz dat-docs-c2f993f1ddcf11a607ddfed4cb01676a16fd6263.zip |
Merge pull request #5 from juliangruber/patch-1
typo
Diffstat (limited to 'dat-paper.md')
-rw-r--r-- | dat-paper.md | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/dat-paper.md b/dat-paper.md index 99a08ef..b4598dd 100644 --- a/dat-paper.md +++ b/dat-paper.md @@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ Dat is a swarm based version control system designed for sharing large datasets # 1. Introduction -There are countless ways to share share datasets over the Internet today. The simplest and most widely used approach, sharing files over HTTP, is subject to dead links when files are moved or deleted, as HTTP has no concept of history or versioning built in. E-mailing datasets as attachments is also widely used, and has the concept of history built in, but many email providers limit the maximum attachment size which makes it impractical for many datasets. +There are countless ways to share datasets over the Internet today. The simplest and most widely used approach, sharing files over HTTP, is subject to dead links when files are moved or deleted, as HTTP has no concept of history or versioning built in. E-mailing datasets as attachments is also widely used, and has the concept of history built in, but many email providers limit the maximum attachment size which makes it impractical for many datasets. Cloud storage services like S3 ensure availability of data, but as they have a centralized hub-and-spoke networking model tend to be limited by their bandwidth, meaning popular files can be come very expensive to share. Services like Dropbox and Google Drive provide version control and synchronization on top of cloud storage services which fixes many issues with broken links but rely on proprietary code and infrastructure requiring users to store their data on cloud infrastructure which has implications on cost, transfer speeds, and user privacy. |