US govt researches next-generation Internet

The US government department that created the Internet is working on a new network that will be able to configure itself, intelligently cache and route data, and allow for fast and reliable sharing of data, all while maintaining military-grade security.

Government, corporate and academic researchers are all working on the project, called Knowledge Based Networking, that is under development by the Department of Defense Research Projects Agency (Darpa).

Academic concepts such as artificial intelligence and Tim Berners-Lee’s “Semantic Web”, combined with technologies such as the Mobile Ad-hoc Network (MANET), cognitive radio, and peer-to-peer networking, would provide the nuts and bolts of such a network. Although the project is intended for soldiers in the field, the resulting advances could trickle down to end users. “Military networks are going to converge as closely as we can to civil technologies,” says Preston Marshall, the program manager of Darpa’s Advanced Technology Office.

Marshall says that current technology is “dominated by wireless access, not really wireless networking.” Instead of using access points to connect wireless devices to a wired network, a Knowledge Based Network would be a decentralized MANET.

“The thing that’s fundamentally different in a wireless environment is that the links are fairly unreliable… nodes join and leave the network more or less randomly,” says David Passmore, research director for the Burton Group. MANETs would be able to route traffic through this ever-changing set of peers to a networked device or the Internet.

Such networks would have no single point of failure whereas current wireless networks can be can be shut down by removing the access point. Passmore imagines that MANETs might even be formed by computers in moving vehicles but adds that “the routing protocols we have with IP are wholly inadequate to that kind of a situation”. More experimentation needs to be done before MANET technology can be standardised and mass-produced, he says, but the Knowledge Based Networking initiative might provide incentive for military contractors to work on the technology.



  1. Fabrizio Marana says:

    Seems like they need Bram Cohen on their payroll…

    🙂

    Fabrizio Marana

  2. Mike Voice says:

    Academic concepts such as artificial intelligence and Tim Berners-Lee’s “Semantic Web”, combined with technologies such as the Mobile Ad-hoc Network (MANET), cognitive radio, and peer-to-peer networking, would provide the nuts and bolts of such a network.

    “The thing that’s fundamentally different in a wireless environment is that the links are fairly unreliable… nodes join and leave the network more or less randomly,” says David Passmore, research director for the Burton Group. MANETs would be able to route traffic through this ever-changing set of peers to a networked device or the Internet.

    “Secure” Skype?

    Anytime you connect to the “MANET”, some of your processing power and bandwidth is allocated to routing traffic for others? Even a PDA-type device?

    Reminds me of a comment by a Mac-user, when Skype became available for Macs, complaining that the installer placed the Skype application in the “startup items” folder – so Skype would be started automatically anytime he turned his computer on.

    He bitched about the arrogance of Skype for doing that, and bragged about how he only had the program running when he was actually making or expecting a call… 😉

  3. James Hill says:

    …all while maintaining military-grade security.

    That made me laugh.

  4. Mike Voice says:

    3 That made me laugh

    Same here.

    If “miltary-grade” is so great, why this comment:

    “Military networks are going to converge as closely as we can to civil technologies,”

  5. Improbus says:

    The great sage Scotty once said, “Aye sir, the more they overtech the plumbing, the easier it is to stop up the drain.”

  6. William says:

    Skynet anyone? It’s a learning machine.

  7. ECA says:

    Get some open source Networking going…

  8. Floyd says:

    1. The Internet was originally designed (by DARPA) to route around Net damage, so that’s not a new idea. It’s “military grade” already, it’s just not secure.

    2. Aside: Whatever happened to IPv6? That was the latest attempt to improve the Internet by increasing the address space to a much larger number. Yeah, I know about the needed router upgrades…

    3. DARPA needs to remember that the best way to keep data secure is to keep it completely off the Internet. DoD’s security rules mandate it (or used to).

  9. ECA says:

    You do NOT give access to the Net, of Important machines…
    99% of the time, there is NO NEED for it to happen. And if it IS NEEDED, use DIRECT DIALUP Access.
    Which STILL dont mean that Payroll needs to be on the INTERNET…


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