Introducing: Media Network

Media Foundation
4 min readApr 5, 2021
A new architecture for a highly-scalable, decentralized and censorship-resistant content delivery network.

CDN History

Content delivery has seen dramatic growth over the last decade, with large publishers typically distributing the load among geographically dispersed edge-servers to improve end-user performance. A massive increase in demand for these services has fostered many centralized content delivery networks or CDNs, as we know them today.

CDNs have been around since the 90's. They have grown in size and added several features, but the underlying mechanism has remained essentially the same. CDN vendors operate hundreds of physical servers (edges) across the world that cache content and direct traffic to the nearest physical server.

A typical CDN solution.

These centrally-organized networks have proven effective in handling this task. However, to sign up and use the service, CDN vendors require content publishers to over-provision the needed bandwidth in order to handle peak demand and establish expensive and complex long-term business relationships. They also require and store personal information like full names, addresses, and payment methods, thus compromising privacy and limiting freedom of expression.

The violation or encroachment of privacy discourages one of the activities that give life to the Internet: content creation. Ultimately, we see acts of censorship as something pretty “normal,” making de-platforming an everyday topic on mainstream media.

The technology available today can be used to eventually replace these hundreds of large-scale and centrally controlled servers with thousands of individually controlled edges, like dedicated servers, VPS, or even personal computers.

State of the Market

Today, most active developments and networks try to obfuscate the base problem with different workarounds that only degrade the service and don’t offer a real advantage. Even if some of these projects are decentralized at their core, they still face heavy centralization at the edge when consuming the protocol.

Platforms using centralized CDN solutions at the edge.

So far, “blockchain decentralized CDNs” solutions do not allow third parties to use their services. No tangible solution is offered to media platforms, developers, or content publishers with massive audiences. Indeed, some of them have ongoing partnerships with huge corporations validating their network and running nodes, ultimately going against their censorship-resistant narrative.

So how does it work?

Media Network creates a distributed bandwidth market, enabling anyone to hire resources from the network and dynamically come and go as the demand for last-mile data delivery shifts. The protocol allows anyone with spare bandwidth resources to organically serve content without introducing any trust assumptions or pre-authentication requirements.

Participants earn MEDIA Network Tokens for their bandwidth contributions, a fixed supply, and a deflationary SPL token minted on the Solana Blockchain. Apart from being a medium for incentive alignments, MEDIA is a governance token that serves to vote on the protocol’s direction and carry out its development without central control.

The economic model is an elegant design, where part of the fees charged to those who want to use the CDN service is rewarded to network participants in exchange for bandwidth resources. The remaining portion of the fees is used to buyback-and-burn MEDIA, giving everyone an incentive to hold the token. Every participant is required to stake MEDIA before joining the network.

Media Network helps decentralize the “last-mile” content delivery for end-users.

This distributed economy is based on its demand for peer-to-peer CDN infrastructure, privacy, and censorship-resistant features. The income generated isn’t printed tokens but rather actual money paid by those who want to use the CDN service to scale and power any application or website. An alpha version of this censorship-resistant CDN service will be available for MEDIA holders a day after our IDO / IEO. Stay tuned to our social channels for more information about this event!

Benefits of the protocol

  • Community governed
  • Censorship-resistant
  • Anonymous and blockchain-based, without personal data or centralized accounts.
  • Anyone can run a Media Edge node, help scale the network and earn MEDIA.

Service Providers / Content Publishers

  • CDN Service (scale any existing infrastructure without limits)
  • No contracts, KYC or long-term business commitments.
  • Reduce costs by up to 99% using Media PeerPool
  • Set up your infrastructure with Media Server or any other similar software and broadcast / share your content without limits

End-Users

  • Earn MEDIA by sharing your unused bandwidth resources, helping the network scale

Together, we are building the next generation community-powered CDN.

Join us on this adventure!

About Media Network

Media Network is a protocol that foregoes traditional centralized CDN approaches and opts for a self-governed, community-powered alternative. We’ve created a decentralized bandwidth market that enables anyone to hire or provide resources from the network as the demand for last-mile content delivery fluctuates.

Try Media Network ✔️
Join our Discord 💬
Join our Telegram 📨
Follow us on Twitter 🐦
Check out our Tech Docs 📖
Vote and Discuss Media DAO 🗳️
Contact us at hello@media.foundation 📧

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Media Foundation

Building Media Network, a blockchain-agnostic CDN Marketplace.