NSF Ponders New And Improved Internet 153
diorcc wrote to mention a Wired article about a NSF Project that could completely rebuild the Internet as we know it. From the article: "The National Science Foundation is backing a major initiative that could lead to a completely new internet architecture, with built-in security measures and support for ubiquitous sensors and wireless communications devices, among other things. The Global Environment for Networking Investigations, or GENI, will include a research grant program to fund new architectures and an experimental facility, which has not yet been planned in detail."
Idea! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Idea! (Score:2, Funny)
I kid, I kid....
Re:Idea! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Idea! (Score:3, Funny)
Misleading.. (Score:5, Informative)
To rebuild the internet is insane. To slowly change the direction we are building it is more likely.
Re:Misleading.. (Score:5, Informative)
I agree. It's about standards that companies should follow. Those that fail to follow the standards will lose relevance and compatability.
And yes, the article title was misleading. They won't be rebuilding the Internet any time soon.
Re:Misleading.. (Score:3, Funny)
For some reason all I could think of after that was the phrase 'Internet Explorer and CSS Support'... (That said, I still mainly agree with the idea).
Re:Misleading.. (Score:1)
Agreed. This looks like a good idea in theory, but it's going to be quite difficult to implement. Kinda reminds me of IPv6. It has lots of advantages over the old IPv4 protocol, but hardly anybody uses it.
Re:Misleading.. (Score:1)
Even the change of the protocol to improve security is in theory a means for job security. The current Internet protocol allows for a decentralized administration. Any protocol changes to centralize any administration would obviously be for job security. Anotherwords, a rebuild for security suggects a change to support a commercial model or a government model of the Internet instead of it's choatic "free as in free beer" model it has now. That is questionable as in wh
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Mod Parent Redundant (Score:2, Insightful)
NII2 (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:NII2 (Score:2)
I suppose one could argue that the money given to the university often is tax payers public money... but saying that everybody should then have automatic access to it that is kind of stretching it.
Re:NII2 (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't know why expecting public money to return products of its investment is "stretching it". We're buying R&D, we should get the R&D. Except where secrecy is important to, say, national security (tiny percentage of research), or the results would be premature to release, of course we should get access to what we bought. Why not?
If an org wants to keep its research products private, it should use only private money. Perhaps there's a case to be made for proportional return on proportional investment (eg. publishing 80% of I2), but that's surely balanced by 1> the critical enabling support of the public money; 2> the vast public research predecessors on which all this new research depends; and 3> the essential role of publishing research results anyway, to science, culture and business. Otherwise, siphoning off all the oxygen produced will leave the system stagnant, and the private systems will wilt and die also.
Re:NII2 (Score:5, Insightful)
The return to the public is in research and education (which is what universities do). Where else would you expect it? Serving inane comments on Slashdot quicker? Supporting the latest dot.com fad? When the industry is ready to embrace new standards (hint, this is not a rational or controllable process) they will come to the mass-market. Not before.
I'm afraid your free market ideology is blinding you to the benefits of public research and public funding. The 'all power to the poeple' line is very seductive, but research takes time, and the best research is not calibrated, and is not predictable. It does not obey the laws of the market and will never do so.
(foreigners are welcome to ride for free, as usual
What a tired old canard. Where did the tags your writing is surrounded with come from? (hint, not the USA).
Re:NII2 (Score:4, Insightful)
Then there's your ducktalk about HTML tags. I didn't say the US invented everything. But we did invent the Internet. And until an American invented the IMG tag, the Web wasn't useable by most people. So take a hint, and show some gratitude, instead of your jealous spite. We're not cranking out this tech for your thanks, but you could at least show some dignity when you accept our gifts.
Re:NII2 (Score:2)
The return on their R&D research money comes in research progress and teaching (not necessarily directly linked to that funding). I'm sure they do 'productize' it as well sometimes, however the tangible products and commercial spin offs are just part of the benefit of this research, not the whole thing as you imply. Not everythi
Re:Hail to the great Doc Ruby (Score:2)
As for the rest of the "high horse": in the midst of argument with others also trying to falsely claim foreign invention of the Internet, I faced some clown trying to claim foreign invention of the Web browser, too. Mosaic was invented by Americans at UIUC, the NCSA (government) facility. Where the IMG t
Re:NII2 (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:NII2 (Score:1)
That said there are some that wanted a more experimental network to do mo
Re:NII2 (Score:2)
NLR, and NGI, too, are also demonstrating more high-speed networks. But the next generation isn't just spee
Re:NII2 (Score:2, Informative)
With regard to applications, when we were first hooked up to I2 we we
Re:NII2 (Score:2)
What a stinking heap of pseudolibertarian effluent (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:What a stinking heap of pseudolibertarian efflu (Score:2, Redundant)
So what? I'm not talking about any of that. I'm talking about Internet2, the s
Re:What a stinking heap of pseudolibertarian efflu (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:What a stinking heap of pseudolibertarian efflu (Score:2)
I defy you to find anything like the Fox News pap in my posts. Unless you're going by your own Pravda, which tells you that somehow America didn't invent the Internet. All you've got is the stereotypical jealous response to any leader, whether a European disease or otherwise, that denies our achievements by finding fault with our pride in them. I could go on about the cultural
Re:What a stinking heap of pseudolibertarian efflu (Score:2)
I'm talking about Internet2, the subject of this discussion. Just like the Internet, I expect my taxes and government to support research to produce Internet2, and to share it with the world. But instead, my taxes and government are subsidizing corporate testbeds for Cisco and Nortel, as a weak protest in another response correctly identified.
It's too bad your own posts don't contain facts to back up your random walks through rant-space. We see Internet 2 just fine here, in UC Berkeley. I do realise NY
Re:What a stinking heap of pseudolibertarian efflu (Score:2)
Re:What a stinking heap of pseudolibertarian efflu (Score:2)
Hey, you know, Doc, those grants are awarded by competition, fair and square. If you don't like the fact that I out-competed Americans for ca$h, then why don't you submit a proposal and show a sketpical world what New York can do? Just one achievment on the scale of BSD Unix or the Linux kernel would be nice... instead of,
Re:What a stinking heap of pseudolibertarian efflu (Score:2)
However your college prepared you to win CS grants at Berkeley, you did not invent either Unix or Linux. The people at Berkeley who did create BSD were funded in no small part by New York City, where our achievements in other fields
Re:What a stinking heap of pseudolibertarian efflu (Score:2)
BTW, you may not think you're a "Bushevi
Re:What a stinking heap of pseudolibertarian efflu (Score:2)
Re:What a stinking heap of pseudolibertarian efflu (Score:2)
Re:Ok guys, time for a little comic releif (Score:2)
I wish only that you'd posted nonymously, so I could look for your wit in the moons to come
Re:NII2 (Score:1)
Someone whose stuff we stole, added a widget to so we could claim it as "ours" and bitch about them getting the widget back for "free"?
KFG
Re:NII2 (Score:2)
What the hell are you talking about?
Re:NII2 (Score:1)
Science and technology has always been an undertaking as wide as the known world. Everyone starts with a "free ride."
KFG
Re:NII2 (Score:2)
Re:NII2 (Score:2)
Re:NII2 (Score:2)
Uhm, someone we haven't regime changed yet?
Re:NII2 (Score:2)
Your comment, however, is typical of foreigners. You act like American contributions to global technology are something to which you're automatically entitled, like some kind of natural phenomenon. Then you turn aro
Re:NII2 (Score:2)
you know, when you talk about "American largesse", it is particularly obvious that you have never actually made it out of the mailroom. it's a cliche, but true: the most pompous nationalists like you really are compensating for major inadequacy.
the internet isn't yours. it isn't even remotely yours. it doesn't even like you
Re:NII2 (Score:2)
Re:NII2 (Score:2)
Re:NII2 (Score:2)
Re:NII2 (Score:2)
I think that you should take my suggestion to educate yourself, and perhaps your first noble step in this direction will be to know the meaning of the word "dupe".
Re:NII2 (Score:2)
Re:NII2 (Score:2)
I think you just did.
Re:NII2 (Score:2)
Re:NII2 (Score:2)
Re:NII2 (Score:2)
For the benefit of those that sadly believes what you wrote, here are some choise citations from Robin Cook's 'Ethical' Foreign Policy [zmag.org] :
Re:NII2 (Score:2)
I'm not proud that we had to go that far. I oppose war exactly because it turns all sides into killers, a massive failure of humanity. But people have to make their decisions, even no-win decisions, on the bes
Re:NII2 (Score:2)
I really was hoping to stay out of this discussion, since it's clear from your earlier posts that you are certain that your arrogant opinions cannot be false and you refuse to listen to anybody who says otherwise. Anyway, your last comment really pushed me over the edge. So I'll take the bait and respond, but my conscience does not allow me to remain silent in the face of such wrong-headed nonsense.
Re:NII2 (Score:2)
It's not new... (Score:1)
Good News / Bad News (Score:3, Funny)
They're rebuilding the internet to make it more secure, eliminate spam, virus, spoofing and so on.
Bad News:
Initiative will use Microsoft programming techniques as its foundation.
:-) :-)
{just joking}
I am POSITIVE it will work (Score:2)
oh.. gotta go deposit my check to get back out of the red.
Sensors? Intelligence? This could lead to... (Score:3, Insightful)
Human, may I surf your mind?
Needs a Killer App (Score:3, Funny)
Napster? (Score:2)
If it had a version of napster running on it that the RIAA couldn't disrupt or bust people for using
What problem do the major North American record labels have with the Napster Music Store [napster.com]?
GENI are Evil (Score:4, Funny)
Hell I didnt even know they had a internet.
Re:GENI are Evil (Score:2)
Of course they did. How else would they have gotten their experience at writing ship flying computer viruses?
Re:GENI are Evil (Score:2)
It's steam powered and the backbone links are made from pidgeons.
GEnei (Score:2)
Strategic Incrementalism (Score:3, Interesting)
While there are intrinsically very ugly problems in client and server software right now, it seems that "Little Science" is displaced by "Big Science" (viz, NSF) in addressing incremental substantive improvements in security and availability for the Internet masses.
So, for example, as valuable as a *waving hands* non IP infrastructure blah blah might well be... there could be greater good achieved with work on secure computing environments, strong authentication, one time pad encryption methods and etc.
As a very dear friend of mine was fond of saying "if you want security, pull up your own shorts".
So, while big honkin backbone and new architectures are and will be very important, some think time at the "big level" regarding applications architecture and services would, likely, produce faster returns and shorter implementation times.
WTF are you talking about. (Score:1)
If it's not broken, don't fix it. (Score:2)
Re:If it's not broken, don't fix it. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:If it's not broken, don't fix it. (Score:1)
Re:If it's not broken, don't fix it. (Score:2)
Re:If it's not broken, don't fix it. (Score:2)
IPv6? (Score:3, Insightful)
In other words... IPv6?
Trusted Network Connect (Score:5, Interesting)
It could use IPv6, but "built-in security measures" makes me think of Trusted Network Connect. Imagine if you needed a Trusted Platform Module plus an approved, unmodified operating system plus an approved, unmodified dialer program that verifies the "integrity" of your machine just to get an IP address. Some analysts claim that most major cable and DSL ISPs are likely to require TNC by 2015 [slashdot.org].
Re:Trusted Network Connect (Score:5, Insightful)
(I also hear that there's a movement for a sarcasm tax per-double-quote in the house committee, so I'm tryin' to use 'em while they're free!)
This all being said, the concept of a mesh network and the work of the guys at DefCon WiFi Shoot-out might be very, very valuable sooner rather than later. Man, wouldn't that be fantastic? A geek-run national wifi mesh... It's be just like 1990s Internet again, until the FCC started raids...
Re:Trusted Network Connect (Score:2)
That's not to say it isn't much easier to change supernodes when all the links are wireless. Also, the solution of more efficient routing protocols s
New and Improved (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:New and Improved (Score:2)
Question? (Score:2)
Finally! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Finally! (Score:1)
this is easy to do... (Score:4, Insightful)
Considering we can break anything we make, no matter what is done, it comes down to this.
giving access to personal and private information to other humans...
May as well just start installing gps tracking and personal data recording chips in all humans...
Then it really won't matter what internet or other future tech we make use of.
Of course included is a punishment system of shock therapy and AI second guessing what you do to stop you from doing anything on the list of things not to do..... A list created by a few faulty humans of course....
The point is, there is nothing we can build that we cannot break.
Making this whole "better internet" just a carrot to get the donkey to move...... in circles.
Re:this is easy to do... (Score:1)
privacy and accountability and vary protections for individuals based on "difference and local values"
"Difference and local values" is code for enabling the Saudi Government to block DanicaRacing.com.
It's also code for enabling Bush to track and harass people who read Islamic web sites, and enabling Clinton (the current one) to make sure that "parents" have absolute power to mould their "children." Bush and Clinton (and Hatch and Kennedy and
In related news... (Score:4, Funny)
NSF? (Score:2, Funny)
All I'm seeing here is NSF Ponders and I'm not even sure what a Ponder is and what wouldn't be safe for it.
These safety bulletins are getting severely lacking here on Slashdot these days.
Re:NSF? (Score:2)
Battle Network (Score:1)
Did anyone else... (Score:1)
Bastij terrorists [wikipedia.org]
Re:Did anyone else... (Score:1)
I was half-expecting to see a blurb about the Denton boys, Ambrosia, and something about some project called Helios.
Wait....
Reinvent the internet.....Helios.....
Oh shit!
GENI, reinventing, and incremental change (Score:3, Informative)
First off, there are a number of major challenges facing the Internet. The ones that spring immediately to mind are security, management, and availability. To see some of these, compare the Internet to the (good parts of) the telephone network. 911 emergency phone service has roughly 99.99% availability; the Internet is an order of magnitude worse. You can't get a virus over the phone lines, and it's very difficult to create a botnet of 100,000 people to DDoS, say, a hospital's telephone system. Now, that ignores many of the good things about the Internet -- you can create and run fabulous applications that the network designers never envisioned, etc., at least, if you're not running behind a NAT. ;)
But wouldn't it be nice to have a network that had the best of all worlds? A network that cost 1/10th as much to manage as it does today? A network where your parents didn't call you up frequently and ask, "It says it couldn't find my DHCP server - what's wrong??" A network where you didn't resort to weird (but clever) hacks like traceroute to try to diagnose problems? Where Scott Richter couldn't create a spam-blasting army of drones? I use Vonage, and I had to dial 911 a few weeks ago to report a fire at the apartment across the street. During part of the conversation, I couldn't hear the operator well enough to understand the questions she was asking. It was a frightening and educational experience.
One of the most important parts of this program is that it's encouraging researchers to not feel constrained to fit into the current design, and is looking at ways to get that deployed in a way that it can gateway to or run on top of the current Internet. There's a big difference between this program and the Internet2, IPv6, etc. It's both higher risk and (hopefully!) higher reward. Internet2 was pretty much "Internet + faster links + some focused researchy bits"; it got co-oped early on because it provided lots of bandwidth to big science, and was too entrenched to try radical new things that (gasp!) might break. GENI is research + interfaces to allow early adopters -- like, say, slashdotters -- to make use of its services. The idea of creating an infrastructure that can safely be used simultaneously for testing out new research prototypes at all levels and running production versions of those services that succeed is a powerful notion that will give GENI a big edge over prior attempts.
It's an exciting proposal, and a scary one. If it gets funded, it could be either the biggest success in networking since the Web, or the biggest flop.
(Disclosure- I'm a networking professor at Carnegie Mellon. This is my field, I've been involved in some of the GENI discussions, and I intend to submit funding proposals to it. I think it'll be one of the best things in years to help academic networking research have a big impact on the real world.)
Re:GENI, reinventing, and incremental change (Score:1)
If you know, I'd be interested in your comments on why the Internet is so much less reliable than the phone network. What's up with that? Is
Re:GENI, reinventing, and incremental change (Score:2)
Why is the Internet less reliable? I think it's a combination of things. First, as you suggested, it's young, and is constantly undergoing massive change. The telephone network had years of relative stasis in which to stabalize. The Internet is still experiencing huge growth in capacity and capabilities, as the network and the connected devices grow by leaps and bounds (c.f., Moore's Law. :).
The second thing is that the Internet is a general -purpose network. People do
Re:GENI, reinventing, and incremental change (Score:2)
One could argue - and many have - that the current Internet does not give you enough of either. Security in the Internet context applies also to the security of the user from eavesdropping or interruption.
Also - please distinguish between government funded projects and research - GENI is research, pure and simple. Right now, there's no blueprint for what the results of this will look like, no deployment plan for rolling out a new, improved Internet.
This is more useless waste (Score:2, Interesting)
Second, what has made the present Internet great is not top down planning from standards committees and government agencies, but the interplay between them, users, content providers, carriers, corporations mak
more boondoggles (Score:1, Troll)
Why is it that some people think that just because they feel they have a good idea, that justifies stealing money from others, e.g., violating the property-rights of others?
re: more boondoggles (Score:2)
In any event, your flawed utilitarian arguments that we need a State to have lawfulness and peace, do not justify robbery and coercive force.
All that a State is is a group of gangsters that has widespread respect, that taxes, and that prevents any competitition in the administration of justice. It is a universal law of economics that when competitition is prevented, th
Re: more boondoggles (Score:2)
I don't have the "right" to my social status -- and that is completely irrelevant for my arguemnt; I do, however, have the right to my property. As for the need for roads, safe water, law, etc, all of this can be provided by the free market, and in fact has been provided in the past, before big businessmen -- doomed to failing in free-market attempts to cartelize the industries -- turned to government to accomplish the task.
Private roads were provided in Old Europe, known as turnpikes. On this topic, see
Re: more boondoggles (Score:2)
"Note that Old Europe was starkly divided on class lines, and life generally sucked for all but the top echelon of society."
Completely irrelevant.
"I don't know anything about Ancient Ireland, but did you notice that it isn't around anymore?"
An idiotic statement. No society has lasted from the dawn of mankind until present. Period. So this observation is meaningless. The US won't be around 1000 years from now either; Ancient Rome, Egypt, or Greece aren't around either. So what? 1000 years to the cr
JXTA (Score:2)
Plus the set of ideas behind the JXTA protocols are beautiful. (Everyone that I know who has absorbed the protocol specificati
Re:You guessed it (Score:3, Funny)
Jerry
http://www.cyvin.org/ [cyvin.org]