Can We Save the Public Internet?

IF 2.2 4区 计算机科学 Q3 COMPUTER SCIENCE, INFORMATION SYSTEMS ACM Sigcomm Computer Communication Review Pub Date : 2024-02-20 DOI:10.1145/3649171.3649175
Marjory Blumenthal, Ramesh Govindan, Ethan Katz-Bassett, Arvind Krishnamurthy, James McCauley, Nick Merrill, Tejas Narechania, Aurojit Panda, Scott Shenker
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Abstract

The goal of this short document is to explain why recent developments in the Internet's infrastructure are problematic. As context, we note that the Internet was originally designed to provide a simple universal service - global end-to-end packet delivery - on which a wide variety of end-user applications could be built. The early Internet supported this packet-delivery service via an interconnected collection of commercial Internet Service Providers (ISPs) that we will refer to collectively as the "public Internet." The Internet has fulfilled its packet-delivery mission far beyond all expectations and is now the dominant global communications infrastructure. By providing a level playing field on which new applications could be deployed, the Internet has enabled a degree of innovation that no one could have foreseen. To improve performance for some common applications, "enhancements" such as caching (as in content-delivery networks) have been gradually added to the Internet. The resulting performance improvements are so significant that such enhancements are now effectively necessary to meet current content delivery demands. Despite these tangible benefits, this document argues that the way these enhancements are currently deployed seriously undermines the sustainability of the public Internet and could lead to an Internet infrastructure that reaches fewer people and is largely concentrated among only a few large-scale providers. We wrote this document because we fear that these developments are now decidedly tipping the Internet's playing field towards those who can deploy these enhancements at massive scale, which in turn will limit the degree to which the future Internet can support unfettered innovation. This document begins by explaining our concerns but goes on to articulate how this unfortunate fate can be avoided. To provide more depth for those who seek it, we provide a separate addendum with further detail.

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我们能拯救公共互联网吗?
本短文旨在解释互联网基础设施的最新发展为什么会出现问题。作为背景,我们注意到互联网最初的设计目的是提供一种简单的通用服务--全球端到端数据包传送--在此基础上可以建立各种各样的终端用户应用程序。早期的互联网通过商业互联网服务提供商(ISP)的互联集合来支持这种数据包传送服务,我们将其统称为 "公共互联网"。互联网完成了其数据包传送使命,远远超出了人们的预期,现已成为全球最主要的通信基础设施。通过提供一个可以部署新应用的公平竞争环境,互联网实现了前所未有的创新。为了提高一些常见应用的性能,互联网逐步增加了缓存(如内容交付网络)等 "增强功能"。由此带来的性能改进如此显著,以至于现在要满足当前的内容交付需求,实际上必须要有这种增强功能。尽管有这些实实在在的好处,但本文件认为,目前部署这些增强功能的方式严重破坏了公共互联网的可持续性,可能导致互联网基础设施覆盖的人群越来越少,而且主要集中在少数几个大型提供商手中。我们之所以撰写这份文件,是因为我们担心这些发展正在使互联网的竞争环境向那些能够大规模部署这些增强功能的公司倾斜,而这反过来又会限制未来互联网支持自由创新的程度。本文件首先解释了我们的担忧,然后阐述了如何避免这种不幸的命运。为了向有兴趣的读者提供更深入的信息,我们提供了一份单独的增编,其中包含更多细节。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
ACM Sigcomm Computer Communication Review
ACM Sigcomm Computer Communication Review 工程技术-计算机:信息系统
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
3.60%
发文量
20
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Computer Communication Review (CCR) is an online publication of the ACM Special Interest Group on Data Communication (SIGCOMM) and publishes articles on topics within the SIG''s field of interest. Technical papers accepted to CCR typically report on practical advances or the practical applications of theoretical advances. CCR serves as a forum for interesting and novel ideas at an early stage in their development. The focus is on timely dissemination of new ideas that may help trigger additional investigations. While the innovation and timeliness are the major criteria for its acceptance, technical robustness and readability will also be considered in the review process. We particularly encourage papers with early evaluation or feasibility studies.
期刊最新文献
The I/O Driven Server: From SmartNICs to Data Movement Controllers On Integrating eBPF into Pluginized Protocols Can We Save the Public Internet? The October 2023 Issue Recent Trends on Privacy-Preserving Technologies under Standardization at the IETF
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