The National Science Foundation wants
to build an experimental research network known as the Global Environment
for Network Innovations, or GENI, and is funding several projects at universities
and elsewhere through Future Internet Network Design, or FIND.
Rutgers, Stanford, Princeton, Carnegie
Mellon and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology are among the universities
pursuing individual projects. Other government agencies, including the
Defense Department, have also been exploring the concept.
The European Union has also backed
research on such initiatives, through a program known as Future Internet
Research and Experimentation, or FIRE. Government officials and researchers
met last month in Zurich to discuss early findings and goals.
A new network could run parallel with
the current Internet and eventually replace it, or perhaps aspects of the
research could go into a major overhaul of the existing architecture.
Why???
Cozy world of researchers in the 1970s
and 1980s doesn't necessarily mesh with the realities and needs of the
commercial Internet.
"The network is now mission critical
for too many people, when in the (early days) it was just experimental,".
The Internet's early architects built
the system on the principle of trust. Researchers largely knew one another,
so they kept the shared network open and flexible — qualities that proved
key to its rapid growth.
But spammers and hackers arrived as
the network expanded and could roam freely because the Internet doesn't
have built-in mechanisms for knowing with certainty who sent what.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18095186/
Thanks & Regards,
Farooque Shaheen,
Tel. 080-26678388 Ext. 4105
VOIP- 40366
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