A Better Structured P2P Network
Shazzle's Improved Peer-to-Peer Network Structure
Traditional P2P file sharing networks are poorly structured. Typically, they connect an absurd number of people sharing an untold mass of content. There's no room for segmentation. No means of taking the things you have, placing them in a secure area, and sharing them with people you know. No mechanism for pulling down identifiable content from people you're familiar with; people who you allowed into an electronic room. Most existing P2P networks not only don't do this well, they don't do it at all.
Shazzle does it, and does it extremely well. Shazzle lets you engage with private or public communities. If security isn't much of a concern: that's fine. You can join a public community with a wide (wide here meaning “anyone”) range of access. If sharing files privately or a secured network is a concern, Shazzle allows you to construct invite only and password protected communities. This sort of pliable peer-to-peer infrastructure is what sets Shazzle apart from other, run-of-the-mill file sharing networks.



