Exploring the Intersection of Technology and Policy in the Future Internet Architecture Effort

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karen Sollins ◽  
William Lehr
IEEE Network ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 31 (3) ◽  
pp. 22-28 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hongbin Luo ◽  
Yakun Xu ◽  
Wanjun Xie ◽  
Zhe Chen ◽  
Jiawei Li ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
pp. 016224392097408
Author(s):  
Britt Paris

The Internet was conceptualized as a technology that would be capable of bringing about a better future, but recent literature in science and technology studies and adjacent fields provides numerous examples of how this pervasive sociotechnical system has been shaped and used to dystopic ends. This article examines different future imaginaries present in Future Internet Architecture (FIA) projects funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) from 2006 to 2016, whose goal was to incorporate social values while building new protocols to replace Transmission Control Protocol and Internet Protocol to transfer and route information across the ever-expanding Internet. I examine the findings from two of the NSF’s FIA projects—Mobility First (MF) and eXpressive Internet Architecture—to understand the projects’ trajectories and values directives through their funding cycle and their projections into the future. I discuss how project documentation and participant articulations fall into the following three distinct themes about past experience and speculation: understanding the public, negotiating resources, and carrying project values into the future. I conclude that if the future Internet is to promote positive sociotechnical relationships, its architects must recognize that complex social and political decisions pervade each step of technical work and do more to honor this fact.


2017 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 27 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiruo Liu ◽  
Meiyuan Zhao ◽  
Sugang Li ◽  
Feixiong Zhang ◽  
Wade Trappe

2021 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 126-149
Author(s):  
Britt S Paris

This article engages the politics of technology as it examines how a discourse of time is framed by engineers and project principals in the course of the development of three future internet architecture projects: named data networking, eXpressive Internet Architecture, and Mobility First. This framing reveals categories of a discourse of time that include articulations of efficiency, speed, time as a technical resource, and notions of the future manifest in each project. The discursive categories fit into a time constructs model that exposes how these projects were built with regard to concepts of speed and how different notions of time are expressed as a design ideology intertwined with other ideologies. This time constructs framework represents a tool that can be used to expose the social and political values of technological development that are often hidden or are difficult to communicate in cross-disciplinary contexts.


Author(s):  
Maudlyn I. Victor- Ikoh ◽  
Ledisi G. Kabari

The original internet design principle was guided by the end-to-end principle in the early 1980s and formed the foundation for the existing internet architectural model. The priorities of the original internet designers do not match the needs of today actual users; rise in new players, demanding applications, erosion of trust and rights and responsibilities is pushing the internet to a new dimension. This paper presents the goals and principles behind the design of the original internet architecture, the resulting issues and limitations of the existing network architecture and the approaches that is driving the future internet architecture.


Author(s):  
Dimitri Papadimitriou ◽  
Theodore Zahariadis ◽  
Pedro Martinez-Julia ◽  
Ioanna Papafili ◽  
Vito Morreale ◽  
...  

1991 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Clark ◽  
L. Chapin ◽  
V. Cerf ◽  
R. Braden ◽  
R. Hobby

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