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Borka Jerman-Blažič Chair, ISOC-SI Jožef Stefan Institute Slovenia.

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Presentation on theme: "Borka Jerman-Blažič Chair, ISOC-SI Jožef Stefan Institute Slovenia."— Presentation transcript:

1 Borka Jerman-Blažič Chair, ISOC-SI Jožef Stefan Institute Slovenia

2

3  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

4 World Internet Stats

5  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.

6 Terabytes/month Source: Cisco- Global IP Traffic Forecast and Methodology, 2006-2011  Intra-European Internet traffic grew 85 % in 2006 and 71 % in 2007  Annual Internet traffic growth rates (mid-2007) ~70% 0 1000 2000 3000 4000 5000 6000 7000 8000 9000 2005200620072008200920102011 WEB/Email, FTP P2P Gaming Video Communications VoIP Internet Video to PC Internet Video to TV

7 Source: http://www.wired.com/techbiz/it/magazine/16-03/ff_free_webmail

8 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

9 Europe is active in driving the perspective of the Future Internet 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 Services, Service Web Networks of the Future 3D Internet Internet of Things Trust Security 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 Need to ensure continued funding

10 www.future-internet.eu

11  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.

12  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!!

13  FP7 FIRE  FIA  NoEs (e.g., EuroNF)  ETPs, NEM, NESSI, eMobility  National initiatives, e.g, ◦ GLAB ◦ SHOK  International activities ◦ FIND ◦ GENI ◦ Japan ◦ AsiaFI ◦ KOREN  Organizations ◦ ISOC/ISOC- ECC ◦ IETF/IRTF ◦ IAB ◦ ETNO

14  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

15  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.

16  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”


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