Overview of ISOC
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Transcript Overview of ISOC
Borka Jerman-Blažič
Chair, ISOC-SI
Jožef Stefan Institute
Slovenia
and Internet is still distributed, end to end
network, and open
Its nature is still neutral
It was built on the assumption of co-operating
agents where mutual trust was the rule and where
the receiver was willing to receive whatever the
sender is sending. However Internet is changing ….
◦ increasing amounts of spam, phishing, botnets,
malware, virus etc
◦ the lack of trust leads to considerable
opportunity and transaction costs
◦ Unwanted traffic in the form of spam etc is a
direct consequence of the very low additional
costs for sending packets of data
User needs are dynamic
Users want zero service configuration,
personalisation roaming
Users are today more interested in accessing an
information source rather than connecting to a
device
Users seek to have content authentication
New levels of service guarantees are expected and
needed by:
◦ the increasing number of users, connected devices and
information objects leads to new levels of complexity,
◦ There are new demands for naming and addressing of
information objects – the Internet of Things
◦ There are new requirements for network configuration
agility as well.
9000
WEB/Email, FTP
Terabytes/month
8000
P2P
7000
Gaming
6000
Video Communications
VoIP
5000
Internet Video to PC
4000
Internet Video to TV
3000
Intra-European Internet traffic
grew 85 % in 2006 and 71 % in
2007
2000
1000
Annual Internet traffic growth
rates (mid-2007) ~70%
0
2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
Source: Cisco- Global IP Traffic Forecast and Methodology, 2006-2011
Source: http://www.wired.com/techbiz/it/magazine/16-03/ff_free_webmail
Nazca Indians of Peru
(ca 400 BC - 800 AD,
The Lines were first spotted
when commercial airlines
began flying across the
Peruvian desert in the 1920's
Internet of Services, Service Web
3D Internet
Trust
Large number of FP7 R&D projects
Over 300 Million Euros in EU investment
Need to ensure coherence of action
Need to avoid fragmentation of efforts
Need to create the best conditions
for success
Security
Need to ensure continued funding
Networks of the Future
Sources: 3GPP, 3GPP2, Qualcomm, WiMAX Forum
http://www.alexandria.unisg.ch/EXPORT/DL/38496.pdf
http://www.itu.int/osg/spu/publications/internetofthings/
Second Life
Internet of Things
www.future-internet.eu
Create a pan European community of scientific &
technical experts to investigate important areas for the
Future Networked Society, study the fundamental Internet
architecture and design principles such as to produce a
structuring and cohesive vision of the future network
society.
Create of a European Dialog to ensure evolutionary
investigations for deployament e design principles within
the 2020-2025 timeframe for the Future Networked
Society.
Identify the areas of investigation and research that are
crucial for the transformation of the Internet towards the
Future Networked Society.
A Think Tank event series that foster the dialogue
among leading experts from EU, U.S, Japan in the
FI area
Capture the dialogue of the community in forms of
◦ EIFFEL whitepapers
Discussion papers
◦ EIFFEL manifestos
Visions and recommendations
◦ EIFFEL forum
Online forum for debate in an international community
on the Fipedia: www.fipedia.org join us in building the future!!
FP7 FIRE
FIA
NoEs (e.g., EuroNF)
ETPs, NEM, NESSI,
eMobility
National initiatives,
e.g,
◦ GLAB
◦ SHOK
International activities
Organizations
◦
◦
◦
◦
◦
FIND
GENI
Japan
AsiaFI
KOREN
◦ ISOC/ISOCECC
◦ IETF/IRTF
◦ IAB
◦ ETNO
We need to preserve the User Centric Internet
Focus should go in the Future Internet design
on openess, transparency, edge-based
intelligence
Future Internet is the mobile Internet
Future Internet should be affordable:
unconstrained access for reasonable cost
Future Internet should have sustainable
structure
Future Internet should stay the largest source
of information and content
Future Internet Research is needed
◦ There are some recognized problems, e.g.,
Resilience, failure tracking and management
Availability and robustness to attack
Information security scalability
Resource accountability
Network-application coordination
Scaling to more extreme dynamics
Style matters
◦ The proper interplay of all interests, i.e., that of
researchers, corporations, community groupings, ISOC and
governments, is crucial for success.
To conclude:
“The Internet’s open, neutral architecture has proven to
be an enormous engine for market innovation,
economic growth, social discourse, and the free flow of
ideas. The remarkable success of the Internet can be
traced to a few simple network principles – end-to-end
design, layered archiecture, and open standards –
which together give consumers choice and control over
online activities”
Vint Cerf, the father of Internet