Internet Outages: Reliablity and Security. Heidemann, J. Invited talk at University of Oregon Cybersecurity Day, April, 2018.
Internet Outages: Reliablity and Security [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
The Internet is central to our lives, but we know astoundingly little about it. Even though many businesses and individuals depend on it, how reliable is the Internet? Do policies and practices make it better in some places than others? Since 2006, we have been studying the public face of the Internet to answer these questions. We take regular censuses, probing the entire IPv4 Internet address space. For more than two years we have been observing Internet reliability through active probing with Trinocular outage detection, revealing the effects of the Internet due to natural disasters like Hurricanes from Sandy to Harvey and Maria, configuration errors that sometimes affect millions of customers, and political events where governments have intervened in Internet operation. This talk will describe how it is possible to observe Internet outages today and what they are beginning to say about the Internet and about the physical world.
@Misc{Heidemann18e,
	author = 	"John Heidemann",
	title = 	"Internet Outages: Reliablity and Security",
	howpublished = "Invited talk at University of Oregon Cybersecurity Day",
	month = 	apr,
	year = 	2018,
	sortdate = 	"2018-04-23", 
	project = "ant, lacanic, retrofuturebridge, duoi",
	jsubject = "routing",
	jlocation = 	"johnh: pafile",
	keywords = 	"internet outages, outage detection, invited talks",
	url =		"https://ant.isi.edu/%7ejohnh/PAPERS/Heidemann18e.html",
	pdfurl =	"https://ant.isi.edu/%7ejohnh/PAPERS/Heidemann18e.pdf",
	myorganization =	"USC/Information Sciences Institute",
	copyrightholder = "authors",
	abstract = "
The Internet is central to our lives, but we know astoundingly little about it.
Even though many businesses and individuals depend on it,
how reliable is the Internet?  Do policies and practices make it better
in some places than others?
Since 2006, we have been studying the public face of the Internet to
answer these questions.  We take regular censuses, probing the entire
IPv4 Internet address space.  For more than two years we have been
observing Internet reliability through active probing with Trinocular
outage detection, revealing the effects of the Internet due to natural
disasters like Hurricanes from Sandy to Harvey and Maria,
configuration errors that sometimes affect millions of customers, and
political events where governments have intervened in Internet
operation.  This talk will describe how it is possible to observe
Internet outages today and what they are beginning to say about the
Internet and about the physical world.
",
}

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