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Japanese Researchers Aim to Replace the Internet
Posted by
CmdrTaco
on Mon Aug 20, 2007 07:29 AM
from the optimized-for-giant-robot-transfer dept.
from the optimized-for-giant-robot-transfer dept.
Gary writes "Japanese communications minister Yoshihide Suga said Friday that Japan will start research and development on technology for a new generation of network that would replace the Internet, eyeing bringing the technology into commercial use in 2020. The envisaged network is expected to ensure faster and more reliable data transmission, and have more resilience against computer virus attacks and breakdowns."
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ElvaWSJ writes "Several networking pioneers are dissatisfied with the Internet's underpinnings, and some are offering remedies to ease the strain that bandwidth-hungry services put on technology networks. Along with other projects here in the US and around the world, numerous companies and organizations are looking to rewrite the underpinnings of the internet. This piece looks at new concerns from old hands at networking, with comments from folks like Larry Roberts and Len Bosack. 'Mr. Roberts's concern over the Internet's infrastructure stretches back years. Even while at ARPAnet, he says he was unsure how long the technology could work, especially since the system didn't ensure that information packets would arrive at their destination. His fears crystallized in the late 1990s when he saw companies begin to use the Internet to make phone calls and consumers begin to dabble in online video.'"
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Japanese Researchers Aim to Replace the Internet
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Doesn't this already exist? (Score:4, Insightful)
(http://stylus-toolbox.sf.net/ | Last Journal: Tuesday May 15, @11:50AM)
Re:Doesn't this already exist? (Score:5, Funny)
Wait, bad example...
Re:Doesn't this already exist? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Doesn't this already exist? (Score:4, Informative)
(http://www.nymar.demon.co.uk/)
You're going to have to explain that one a little, I'm afraid. "Lock in" doesn't just mean "used by a lot of people". The term, "vendor lock in" to use the full term, is where a single company controls a protocol and abuses that control to force price hikes, unnecessary upgrades and arbitrary restrictions upon its customers.
But I don't think TCP/IP (the protocol that underlies the Internet) is owned by anyone as such, so it's not like we're going to get forced to pay more for a protocol "upgrade". Nor could some hypothetical owner force us all to use any such upgrade - so there's no fear there.
As for arbitrary restrictions, the Internet already lets you run any protocol you can devise over TCP/IP without the need for permission or approval. That may change if the anti-net-neutrality crowd start a program of aggressive traffic shaping, but that's hardly likely to be improved by a new proprietary Internet; more likely we'll see DRM on every hop, and no new usages permitted without a five year committee process.
So, to summarise: please explain how can we have any meaningful lock in on the internet, and (assuming this to be possible), please also explain how this would be bad.
Re:Doesn't this already exist? (Score:5, Interesting)
(http://kill-9.hobbiton.org/)
i think the parent post is referring vendor lock-in, specifically provider lock in.
if you have no real choice in who provides your internet access you have take what they give you or choose to live without internet access. with all of the shenanigans (filtering, capping, throttling, etc.) that american telcos and cablecos have threatened to pull (or are actively pulling) thanks to the lack of competition in the residential broadband market, perhaps a non-american competitor to the internet as most americans know it is just what the doctor ordered.
with that said, if they really wanted to impress me they would make such a network accessible from the US.
Re:Doesn't this already exist? (Score:5, Interesting)
The idea of splitting everything into layers is so that any one system could be changed without having to totally rewrite everything else - if you want to replace your dial-up modem with a wi-fi card, all you have to do is replace the drivers. If your ISP wants to replace their router network with an ATM network that's easily done without affecting you. If someone came along with a better router management protocol, that's easily done.
The original Internet did have redundancy and resistance against breakdown built in. Unfortunately, many network companies found it cheaper simply to route separate logical networks along one connection, rather than have multiple and completely separate connections. Thus, we end up with a hard-wired minimum spanning tree network, that fails as soon as one link goes down.
Let them go ahead with this idea, but by the time they complete their literature survey, they will probably find out there is very little that they need to change.
Re:Doesn't this already exist? (Score:5, Informative)
Noting actually uses the OSI model it's just an abstraction to help people understand how networking works. The Internet uses the TCP/IP http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TCP/IP_model [wikipedia.org] model of Application, Transport, Network, and Data link layers.
PS: The internet has redundancy as a mesh of networks even if many of those networks have single point's of failure. On second as you speak with such conviction on subjects you know little about you might belong on
Re:Doesn't this already exist? (Score:5, Informative)
However, most NSF-funded networking projects use the I2 as their testbed, but they're not necessarily a part of the I2. For example, GENI - the US effort to redesign internet protocols from the ground up - will run in parallel with I2. GENI is the US counterpart to this Japanese effort (although it's hard to tell from the light-on-details article).
Re:Doesn't this already exist? (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://sourcery.blogspot.com/ | Last Journal: Monday March 27 2006, @12:54AM)
Furthermore, we've been about to implement IPv6 for years now.
Even furthermore, their ultra-secure shiny modern internetwork will still have to connect to the kludgy 1980's rustbucket the rest of us use on our Windows-based computers, which means it will be pwned in a few minutes just like the original.
It's the Silver Bullet Syndrome. They think they'll invent a secure network, when all they'll be doing is achieving a bit of obsecurity.
Re:Doesn't this already exist? (Score:5, Funny)
(http://66.249.93.104/ | Last Journal: Monday November 20 2006, @09:27AM)
Re:Doesn't this already exist? (Score:5, Informative)
Internet 2.0 - New infrastructure for the net.
Web 2.0 - My web site is shit, filled with AJAX and contains no content.
Re:Doesn't this already exist? (Score:4, Funny)
(http://philwelch.net/)
Like what, starting a naval war with the United States?
Yes, but Ask Slashdot: how much will it cost? (Score:1, Insightful)
Maybe I should submit an Ask Slashdot question. I also have a time machine. 2+2=?
Re:Yes, but Ask Slashdot: how much will it cost? (Score:5, Insightful)
Ok, I admit that networking isn't my strongest suit. But... am I missing something? What do you mean "the fact that the internet cannot cope with anything other than ascii"? The internet is just a protocol for routing information from point A to point B. That information is stored in bytes. By all means correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't think there is anything language-specific about those bytes.
Are you confusing "the internet" with "the web"? Web pages do assume (by default at least) an ascii encoding, I believe. But that's not something that needs to be solved by changing the internet, that's something you could fix just by modifying browsers. Which, surprise surprise, is something people have already done. Heck, for that matter, what's up with your original premise, that they want to "have things in a language that they can understand, using characters that appear on their keyboards"? Most Japanese web sites ARE in japanese... Most web browsers DO support unicode encoding...
Are you possibly just talking about the URLs themselves? They don't have unicode support I guess, although that's something that could [I think?] be handled just by supplying a unicode-enabled custom DNS?
Don't get me wrong, research is generally a good thing overall, and as you point out, who knows what useful things they'll come up with along the way. But most of your reasons for why reinventing the internet might be a good idea, ring hollow to me. That, and the tone of your post feels like you have a specific bone to pick with either one of the previous posters, or possibly just with america in general?
Personally, my main concern with a "new" internet is the climate in which it would be born. The current internet had the benefit of being created for non-comercial use in mind, and was deliberately designed with open access in mind. It's structure is deliberately set up in a fairly idealistic way. It has a crazy-low barrier for entry if you want to put something on it. I find it fairly unlikely that a "new" internet would be as open. Corporations in Japan (or America, for that matter) are unlikely to make that mistake again, and given the current environment (again, in both japan AND america) I find it exceedingly unlikely that any new creation on that scale wouldn't be at least partially beholden to corporate interests.
(And yes, I know, our current internet's high-ideal design is steadily eroding before the face of a never-ending series of attempted power grabs by various groups. But at least it's.... taking them longer? At least such attempts are bandaids on an unfriendly design, as opposed to having the whole thing designed to be friendly to corporate control from the get-go?)
Re:Yes, but Ask Slashdot: how much will it cost? (Score:4, Insightful)
hmm (Score:2, Insightful)
(http://www.intellipool.se/ | Last Journal: Wednesday January 31 2007, @03:49PM)
Japanese porn! (Score:2, Funny)
(http://www.agileagenda.com/)
Cluster? (Score:1)
Who's gonna pay for that? (Score:4, Insightful)
(Last Journal: Saturday July 09 2005, @02:16AM)
Re:Who's gonna pay for that? (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://timgray.blogspot.com/)
how much DRM are they gonna shovel onto this thing? The current Internet setup is near perfect because of it's flaws. It is why it took off like a bat out of hell. "fix it" like these researchers and corperations want it and it will be Cable TV. Bland and icky.
They want to shove so much DRM into the internet as well as have all your packets signed by your information, etc...
I have a suggestion for the researchers, give up now, it will be a failure. good god look at how long ipV6 has been around and it is still being ignored. I think I read my 100th article about how we are running out of IP addresses that was worded identically to the one I read in 1999.
New Japanese internet (Score:2, Funny)
I remember the last time (Score:2)
Sure, you all laugh at the Japanese (Score:5, Funny)
(http://circletimessquare.com/)
France probably laughed too, a big gutteral Gaulic laugh: "Silly Americains, think you can replace the Minitel? I fart in your general direction!"
Replace it with what? (Score:5, Funny)
Japanese version? (Score:5, Funny)
(http://www.yvan256.net/)
silly (Score:1)
Also, what's wrong with gradual improvement? For the most part, the Internet works doesn't it? Why not just fix the loose nuts. I'll agree though that some kind of pay-per-email system would be better then the 100% free system we've got now... though black listing bad ISP's and webmail accounts is getting better, but it is still not perfect.
Costs (Score:3, Funny)
Lain (Score:2)
Good music though.
Nice response time! (Score:2)
(Last Journal: Monday February 13 2006, @07:11PM)
Just days after we heard Internet TV would crash it [slashdot.org] they're working on a fix. And they're working on an Internet, not just a security hole.
A new internet with DRM and government spying..... (Score:2)
Count me out.
Simple question(s) (Score:2)
(http://16888.net/)
------------- (If "no" for #1 above, it must be a Microsoft product!)
2. This kind of claim sounds like a marketing campaign, is this a marketing effort?
------------- (If "yes" for #2 above, it must be a Microsoft product!)
NSF is already doing this (Score:4, Informative)
(Last Journal: Sunday August 20 2006, @09:16PM)
"With support from the Directorate for Computer and Information Science and Engineering (CISE), researchers are working together to design a bold new research platform called GENI, the Global Environment for Network Innovations. As envisioned, GENI will allow researchers throughout the country to build and experiment with completely new and different designs and capabilities that will inform the creation of a 21st Century Internet."
Not likely to work (Score:5, Insightful)
So if you are going to replace it, you have to do it with something that works with the Internet. I am not going to sign on to a new network, no matter how good you say your technology is, if I can't access what's already out there. Of course a big part of what people want to do when creating a new standard is to cut off the problems that the old standard had, and thus it becomes incompatible and thus isn't workable.
I mean the problem with a new e-mail system isn't designing one that's resistant to spam. That's easy. The problem is designing one that is resistant to spam but not incompatible with existing, unsecure, e-mail. You aren't going to get people to switch otherwise. It doesn't do me any good to have a spam proof technology if all the people who need to contact me don't also use that.
Same deal with the Internet at large. I don't care how cool your new network is, if it doesn't provide me with access to everything on the Internet, and give everyone on the Internet access to servers I run, then it really isn't very useful to me.
Really, the Internet, for all its flaws, is here to stay for a long time I think. It's not that we couldn't do better, it's that we aren't willing to redo everything from the ground up and switch over. Same shit with plenty of other things. With modern technology, a HVDC power grid might be a better system than what we have. However that's not what we have, and we aren't going to replace what we do have entirely, so we keep adding to the existing system. The Internet is much harder given that you are talking about a network that spans the whole world (and that you actually can convert AC to DC and back).
It's a nice thought that "Hey, let's just tear down all this crap and rebuild it right, based on the better knowledge we have now," but it usually isn't at all practical in reality.
IP6 implemented by then? (Score:2)
Problem (Score:2)
(Last Journal: Wednesday November 07, @10:09AM)
Can they make it Godzilla-proof?
On a similar note... (Score:1)
Imagine a next generation internet designed by
Why can't japan just go send out a team to air condition hell instead and leave the internet alone?
Gore approval? (Score:1)
-S
Replace the Internet (Score:2)
(http://www.aesgi.com/)
-Hackus
What's in and out? (Score:2)
Seriously though
I remember when MicroSoft was going to do this (Score:2)
Better network speed aaaand, (Score:2)
(http://www.webgeekworld.com/ | Last Journal: Thursday April 27 2006, @07:47AM)
theres always this main motive behind 'new internet' crap.
Japan already has a much newer internet (Score:2)
(http://www.myballsarerank.com/)
It's just that an earthquake set them back over a few hundred years.
At least partially politically-inspired (Score:1)
Don't overlook the word "commercial" (Score:1)
The basic error is... (Score:1)
There's nothing wrong with the Internet. There's something wrong with some governments, corporations and, generally, systems, but changing the Internet won't change a bit of *that*.
When someone has new protocols, business models or whatever, fine. Show them, use them, and when they're good, they'll thrive. If not, not.
JISX (Score:1)
(http://www.cincomsma...logs/travis/blogView)
but... (Score:1)
Regrow the Monopoly (Score:1)
But how long until we can say (Score:1)
(http://rolando.do.sapo.pt/)
MEGAMAN! JACK IN!
2chan 2 (Score:1)
I predict it'll be like DoCoMo - ridiculously high speed and advanced, and pretty much only supported in Japan until eons later when it trickles out to the rest of us. Oh well, no RIAA, just lax Japanese censorship guidelines!
"I for one welcome our futuristic overlords."
The medium is NOT the message! (Score:1)
(http://www.filthynoises.com/)
Re:That's good and all, but... (Score:5, Funny)
(http://itsbeenconfirmed.com/ | Last Journal: Sunday May 04 2003, @02:33AM)