Abstract:
An architecture for a multimedia peer-to-peer home network allows the automated definition of peer groups, or zones, by using group labels, where each peer is capable of automatically identifying whether other peers are members of the same group, or of another group, and where each peer may freely cooperate with other peers of the same group, e.g. exchange information or share resources like storage capacity. Using this architecture, it is e.g. possible that a user who is accessing a node within a peer group has also access to any other node of the peer group, without being requested for authentication. Another characteristic is that other peer groups can be defined which have access rights to network resources and services. Advantageously, the invention simplifies network creation and operation by not requiring the user to have special networking knowledge.

Description:
FIELD OF THE INVENTION 
   This invention relates to a method for creating a network from technical devices, e.g. digital electronic consumer devices but also computers. 
   BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
   In computer technology it is well known to build up a network of connected devices for exchanging data and sharing hardware resources. The separate devices are commonly called nodes. At the time being, nodes are usually computers, but can be other technical devices, and their interconnections are mainly electrically, optically or wireless radio connections. Networks can be classified as being based on either client-server or peer-to-peer (P2P) architectures. In P2P based networks a node is also referred to as a peer. While in client-server architectures each node is defined to be either client or server, there is no such differentiation in P2P networks. Instead, peers include both, server and client functionalities. P2P technology enables each node to be capable of providing services or resources to any other node in the network, or use services or resources provided by any other node in the network. 
   P2P networks are usually not restricted to any special applications or underlying network topologies, but can be understood as a set of nodes, or peers, which rely on certain sets of specific protocols. It is characteristic for a P2P network that the peers communicate directly with other peers, so that no central network organization is required. Most P2P networks support that peers can be connected to the network or disconnected from the network at any time. 
   The mentioned P2P protocols are required for basic network organization, such as e.g. discovery of other connected peers, offering own services or resources to other peers (advertising), understanding other peers&#39; advertising messages, or allocating connection capacity for establishing certain connections to other peers. Also, there are protocols that enable a group of peers to cooperate, and thus form a peer-group. Such peer-groups are usually used for providing a common set of services within the peer group. Nevertheless, the purpose of a peer-group is not generally defined. A peer belonging to a peer-group normally has access to, and can be accessed from, all other connected peers of the same group. Additionally, each peer may be a member of further peer-groups. For adding or removing peers to or from a peer group, the user is always required to perform certain administrative activities. 
   Generally only authorized users have access to the peers, or to the peers&#39; contents, or to released parts of the peers&#39; contents, where authorization of the user is achieved by a user-specific key, either physical or virtual secret key, e.g. password. 
   Since peers must be regarded as individuals, it is necessary that each peer can be unambiguously addressed by using an identifier. Usually a peer is addressed by using a unique label, e.g. a so called Universal Unique Identifier (UUID). 
   When peers form a peer-group, the peer-group as such usually gets a dedicated label, e.g. UUID, which can be used for identifying the members of the group. The described peer-to-peer networks and mechanisms are in a detailed manner published e.g. in WO 02/057917 A2. 
   SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
   A problem to be solved by the invention is to reduce the required amount of technical administration when establishing communication between nodes, with all of said nodes being under control of the same owner, like e.g. in home networks. This problem is solved by the method disclosed in claim  1 . An apparatus that utilizes this method is disclosed in claim  12 . 
   According to the invention, connected peers automatically form a P2P group. Peers belonging to the same P2P group can communicate with each other, and access each other&#39;s content or services. Peers from other peer groups can access only if said groups are known to each other. Administrational effort for the user is also reduced by not requiring user authentication for accessing any connected peer, or content associated with such peer. As a consequence of using the invention, a user can have his devices connected to a network without having any special networking knowledge. 
   Advantageous additional embodiments of the invention are disclosed in the dependent claims, the following description and the figures. 

   
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     Exemplary embodiments of the invention are described with reference to the accompanying drawings, which show in 
       FIG. 1  an exemplary peer-to-peer network forming an Owner Zone, including an owner&#39;s home and other property; 
       FIG. 2  how two Owner Zones are merged into one new Owner Zone; 
       FIG. 3  an exemplary peer-to-peer network forming an Owner Zone, which comprises contents with restricted access; 
       FIG. 4  an Owner Zone and exemplarily two related Trusted Zones, where the relationship of trust is bi-directional; 
       FIG. 5  an Owner Zone and exemplarily a related Trusted Zone, where the relationship of trust is unidirectional; 
       FIG. 6  two Owner Zones, being Trusted Zones to a third Owner Zone, and thus becoming Trusted Zones to each other. 
   

   DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS 
   A person&#39;s home is a private place, not open to the public. The home is locked to prevent unwelcome persons from entering, but naturally welcome persons, such as family members, may always enter, and other welcome persons, such as guests, may enter at certain times. This corresponds to a relation of trust between the owner, or owner group, and the mentioned other persons. As a consequence, said trusted other persons usually have access to some, or most, or all, equipment within the owners home, including technical devices and media, e.g. radio, books, CDs. Nevertheless, there are always some things which may only be accessed by their respective owner, or by certain groups of persons such as family. Further, it is common to lend certain property, such as a book or a music CD, to trusted persons. 
   The invention maps the described personal relationship to a technical system, namely a multimedia home network, including electronic storage devices, such as e.g. CDs or DVDs, and to the connection between multimedia home networks belonging to different households. The invention employs the concept of P2P networking, and therefore refers to the respective technical devices as peers. 
   Connecting the technical devices of a household to a P2P network provides more user convenience, e.g. allows the owner to control devices remotely, or to share contents or services between different devices. For privacy reasons the P2P network comprises only peers belonging to the same household, or owner. Since the peers may be located outside the household, e.g. in the owners car, garden, or may be portable, the terminus “Owner Zone” is used to describe the group of devices, or peers, which is under control of the same owner, or group of owners, e.g. family.  FIG. 1  shows an exemplary Owner Zone, which includes the peers being under control of the same owner. The peers N 1 , . . . , N 7  within the owners home H_ 1  are connected to a local P2P network P2P_ 1 , the owners mobile peers N 1 , N 2  are connected to the same P2P network, and other peers N 6 , N 7  within another building H_ 2  belonging to the same owner are connected to another local P2P network P2P_ 2 , and said two networks P2P_ 1 , P2P_ 2  are connected to each other. 
   According to the invention the peers with physical access to the owner&#39;s home network automatically become members of the Owner Zone, using known P2P mechanisms such as peer discovery, peer resolving, advertising and others. There is no connection allowed to any other peer outside the Owner Zone, unless any of the mechanisms described below is used. 
   Further the invention comprises that connections between peers can have one of a specified number of states, e.g. internal or external. The state of a connection can be assigned to said connection by using any means, e.g. plug coding or software control. 
   According to the invention, the Owner Zone is identified with a unique label, e.g. a Universal Unique Identifier (UUID). Additionally, the peers may be identified with unique labels, e.g. UUID, so that the peers belonging to an Owner Zone are uniquely identified with a tuple of labels, namely their respective unique node label and the Owner Zone&#39;s unique label. These labels are referred to in the following as Node_UUID and Zone_UUID, respectively. Only one group related label, or Zone_UUID, is assigned to a peer. A peer within an Owner Zone can identify all other peers within the same Owner Zone by comparing their Zone_UUID to its own Zone_UUID and finding that the Zone_UUIDs are identical. In  FIG. 1  each node N 1 , . . . , N 7  has a corresponding node label N_ID 1 , . . . , N_ID 7  and a group label Z_ID. 
   Different Owner Zones may communicate with each other, or access each others content or services, when following the rules defined below. 
   An Owner Zone may contain an informative section, e.g. data set, providing information regarding the structure and/or contents of the Owner Zone. This informative section is referred to in the following as Zone_Info_Data. Analogously, a peer within an Owner Zone may contain an informative section, e.g. data set, providing information regarding the structure and/or contents of the peer, which informative section is referred to in the following as Node_Info_Data. Within the Owner Zone, the mentioned informative sections are marked with unique labels, e.g. Zone_Info_UUID and Node_Info_UUID, respectively. The mentioned Zone_Info_Data may be updated automatically and may contain information like e.g. Zone_UUID, optional Zone_Name, optional Zone_Service_List or other information mentioned below. 
   Said optional Zone_Name may be a readable name under which the Owner Zone is addressed by other Owner Zones, thus partly being an alias for the Zone_UUID, but unlike a Zone_UUID not necessarily being unique. In case of a first Owner Zone addressing a second Owner Zone, and said second Owner Zone having a non-unique Zone_Name, it will be necessary for said first Owner Zone to specify said second Owner Zone uniquely, e.g. by internally mapping said second Owner Zones Zone_Name to said second Owner Zones Zone_UUID. 
   Said optional Zone_Service_List may define which services the Owner Zone offers to other Owner Zones, if said other Owner Zones are permitted to access. The Zone_Service_List may also define in a detailed manner which service shall be accessible for which of said other Owner Zones, including the optional definition of an access timeframe. 
   The mentioned group label, e.g. Zone_UUID, can be created when an owner decides to create an Owner Zone, and it can be discarded when the owner decides to discard the respective Owner Zone. Especially, when a first peer is connected to a second peer, thus building a new Owner Zone, and the peers detect that there is no Zone_UUID defined yet for the new zone, then both peers negotiate a new Zone_UUID without user interaction. Otherwise, when a first peer is connected to a second peer, and said first peer has no Zone_UUID defined yet, but said second peer already belongs to an Owner Zone and therefore has a Zone_UUID defined, then the Zone_UUID of the resulting P2P network may remain unchanged, so that said Zone_UUID can be transmitted from said second peer to said first peer. In another embodiment of the invention a new Zone_UUID may be negotiated for said resulting P2P network. The owner may decide individually, e.g. according to technical reasons, whether the Zone_UUID shall be changed or not when adding or removing peers. When a single peer is removed from a peer group, then said peer groups Zone_UUID must be detached from said peer. 
   If an Owner Zone being accessible from another Owner Zone gets a new Zone_UUID, it may be advantageous to store the old Zone_UUID, or old Zone_UUIDs, so that said other Owner Zone can be informed about the change, or messages from said other Owner Zone using said old Zone_UUID are not rejected. The old Zone_UUID can e.g. be stored in the Zone_Info_Data section of the resulting Owner Zone. 
   Advantageously, the described labelling concept for an Owner Zone can be used to easily merge two or more Owner Zones, as shown in  FIG. 2 . When two Owner Zones shall be merged, the first Owner Zone OZ_ 20  being labelled with a Zone_UUID Z_ID A , and the second Owner Zone OZ_ 21  being labelled with a Zone_UUID Z_ID B , then an exemplary method is to negotiate a new zone label, e.g. Zone_UUID AB , which may be different from Zone_UUID A  and Zone_UUID B , and then assign said new zone label to all peers N 22 , N 23  belonging to said first Owner Zone OZ_ 20  or said second Owner Zone OZ_ 21 . 
   When two Owner Zones, here being referred to as Sources, are merged into a new Owner Zone, then new Zone_Info_Data can be generated in order to describe the structure and/or contents of the new Owner Zone. Especially, the new Zone_Info_Data may contain information about both said Source Owner Zones, e.g. their respective Zone_UUIDs, Zone_Names and others, and thus making it possible to track on Owner Zone modifications. 
   Since the described method of merging two Owner Zones can be applied to any two Owner Zones, at least one of the previously described steps is performed, or approved, by the respective owners of said first and second Owner Zones. 
   Further, the described method of merging can be recursively applied when more than two Owner Zones shall be merged. In the case of merging more than two Owner Zones, the resulting Zone_Info_Data may contain information about several, or all, merged Source Owner Zones. 
   Advantageously, the described mechanism for merging enables the user to merge all his Owner Zones, which may be in various locations, into one Owner Zone. Therefore an Owner Zone is not limited to the user&#39;s home, as shown in  FIG. 1 . 
   Likewise, the described labelling concept for an Owner Zone can be used to easily split one Owner Zone into two or more Owner Zones. When an Owner Zone, being labelled as e.g. Zone_UUID A , shall be split, then an exemplary method is to calculate a new label, e.g. Zone_UUID B , and then assign said new label to all peers being intended to belong to the new Owner Zone, thus discarding the old zone label for said peers. Likewise, the remaining peers, being labelled as Zone_UUID A , can be assigned a new zone label, e.g. Zone_UUID c , if the old label Zone_UUID A  may not be used any more. 
   When an Owner Zone, here being referred to as Source, is split into two Owner Zones, here being referred to as Targets, the owner of the Source Owner Zone will have to specify for the associated peers, contents and services one of said Target Owner Zones. New Zone_Info_Data can be generated for both said Target Owner Zones, describing their respective structure and/or contents, and especially including information about said Source Owner Zone, e.g. its Zone_UUID. 
   Furthermore, within an Owner Zone there is no need for explicit user identification, since every user with access to any connected peer is implicitly authorized to access the whole P2P network. The individual user is anonymous. In other words, authentication is related to the peer, not to the user. From the owner&#39;s point of view, this reflects a relation of trust existing among all persons within the owner&#39;s home, e.g. family. This does not exclude the possibility of assigning a lock mechanism, e.g. password, to certain content or a certain service, and thus limiting the number of users having access to said content or service. In such a case knowledge of a user-independent key, e.g. password, is required to access said protected content or service, so that user authentication is not needed.  FIG. 3  shows a group of users  30 ,  31 ,  32  having access to a number of peers, which are connected via a P2P network P2P. For some peers N 34  all said users have free access, while for other peers N 35 , N 36  access is limited to those users who have, or know, the respective key. A single user  32  has sole access to content or service N 35 , while other content or service N 36  can be accessed by more than one user  30 ,  31 . 
   With the described method for content locking, it is likely that a super-user function is required, since it may happen that a key gets lost. A super-user function can use arbitrary methods, e.g. include the right to delete contents, and thus can solve the situation of contents being locked and the key being lost. 
   As mentioned above, communication between different Owner Zones is allowed when the following method is used. A first owner of a first Owner Zone can express a relation of trust towards a second owners Owner Zone, and thus give peers of said second Owner Zone access to certain content of said first Owner Zone. When a relation of trust is expressed from a first Owner Zone towards another, second Owner Zone, then said second Owner Zone is referred to as a “Trusted Zone” relative to said first Owner Zone. This relation of trust can be expressed towards any number of other Owner Zones. This may be implemented such that an Owner Zone contains a list of other Owner Zones which are regarded as Trusted Zones, where said other Owner Zones are represented e.g. by their respective unique labels. Said list of Trusted Zones may be part of the previously mentioned Zone_Info_Data. For each of said Trusted Zones it can be defined which peers within the Owner Zone may be accessed, or which contents or services within the Owner Zone may be accessed. 
     FIG. 4  shows an exemplary Owner Zone OZ_ 40 , consisting of peers  42 ,  44  being labelled Z_ID 0 , and two related Trusted Zones OZ_ 41 , OZ_ 42 , with the belonging peers N 41 , N 43  and N 45  being labelled Z_ID 1  and Z_ID 2 , respectively. Peers within said Owner Zone OZ_ 40  may connect to peers within said Trusted Zones OZ_ 41 , OZ_ 42  and access content or services from nodes N 41 , N 45 . Vice versa, peers from said Trusted Zones OZ_ 41 , OZ_ 42  can connect to peers N 42 , N 44  within said Owner Zone OZ_ 40  and access content or services. Certain content or service on a peer N 43  within one Trusted Zone OZ_ 41  is locked as described before, and the key is not known in said Owner Zone OZ_ 40 , so that the peers from the Owner Zone OZ_ 40  may not access said content or service. Further, certain content or service on a node N 44  within the Owner Zone OZ_ 40  is locked as described before, and the key is known in a Trusted Zone OZ_ 41 , so that peers from said Trusted Zone may access said content or service. 
   The described communication method between different Owner Zones may include that a number of predefined levels of trust exists within an Owner Zone, or globally, and the Owner Zone may have assigned for its Trusted Zones certain levels of trust. If said number of predefined levels of trust contains a hierarchy, then said Owner Zone may require for each of its contents or services a minimum level of trust. 
   Furthermore, it is possible that access between an Owner Zone and a related Trusted Zone is limited to a certain time frame if agreed upon between the owner of the Owner Zone and the owner of the Trusted Zone. 
   For establishing communication between an Owner Zone and a related Trusted Zone, it should not be necessary for the requesting zone to know more than the Zone_UUID of the requested zone, especially it is not necessary to know any Node_UUID, or content or service details about the requested zone. An exemplary method of establishing contact between Owner Zones is described in the following. 
   When a first peer belonging to a first Owner Zone receives a request for communication from a second peer belonging to a second Owner Zone, then the request contains the Zone_UUID of said second, requesting Owner Zone, and it may contain a specification of what is requested. The first, requested peer compares in a first step said Zone_UUID to its list of Trusted Zones, and thus detects if the requesting second peer belongs to any of these Trusted Zones. If this is the case, then the first, requested peer analyses in a second step the received request for details of what is requested, and if the requested content or service is available. If said details are not contained in the first request, said first peer may contact the second, requesting peer for these details. In a third step the first, requested peer may analyse if the second, requesting peer is permitted to access the requested contents or service, before in a fourth step either admitting or rejecting the requested access. Said admitting or rejecting the requested access is independent from the previously described lock mechanism, e.g. password, as long as the requesting, second peer can unlock said mechanism, as depicted in  FIG. 4  and described above. 
   The mentioned relation of trust between Owner Zones can be further specified as follows. 
   The mentioned relation of trust can be a unidirectional or bi-directional relation, meaning that if a first Owner Zone is a Trusted Zone relative to a second Owner Zone, then said second Owner Zone can, but needs not necessarily, be a Trusted Zone relative to said first Owner Zone. The exemplary relation between Trusted Zones shown in  FIG. 4  is a bi-directional relation. It may be implemented such that either of two Owner Zones OZ_ 40 , OZ_ 41  can detect if it is defined as Trusted Zone relative to the other Owner Zone, and suspend the relation of trust if this is not the case. 
   A unidirectional relation of trust is depicted in  FIG. 5 . A first Owner Zone OZ_ 50  is a Trusted Zone relative to a second Owner Zone OZ_ 51 , but said second Owner Zone OZ_ 51  is not a Trusted Zones relative to said first Owner Zone OZ_ 50 . Consequently, the peers N 54 , N 55  belonging to the second Owner Zone OZ_ 51  can access released content or services from the first Owner Zone OZ_ 50 , but peers N 52 , N 53  belonging to said first Owner Zone OZ_ 50  may not access content or services from the second Owner Zone OZ_ 51 . 
   The mentioned relation of trust can be valid explicitly for two specified Owner Zones, as in  FIGS. 4 and 5 , or may also include all other Owner Zones, which have a “Trusted Zone” relation to either, or both, of them.  FIG. 6  shows a first Owner Zone OZ_ 60  being a Trusted Zone to a second Owner Zone OZ_ 61  and to a third Owner Zone OZ_ 62 , where a relation of trust exists implicitly between the second Owner Zone OZ_ 61  and the third Owner Zone OZ_ 62 , although they were not explicitly defined to be Trusted Zones to each other. In this case peers from Owner Zones OZ_ 61  and OZ_ 62  can access each other.