[46863] in North American Network Operators' Group
Re: references on non-central authority network protocols
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Eric Gauthier)
Sat Apr 13 12:04:09 2002
Date: Sat, 13 Apr 2002 12:03:40 -0400
From: Eric Gauthier <eric@roxanne.org>
To: Patrick Thomas <root@utility.clubscholarship.com>
Cc: nanog@merit.edu
Message-ID: <20020413120340.A9690@roxanne.org>
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In-Reply-To: <20020412201658.S77505-100000@utility.clubscholarship.com>; from root@utility.clubscholarship.com on Fri, Apr 12, 2002 at 08:18:18PM -0700
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> I am looking for any and all research (and perhaps your comments),
> references, etc. regarding replacements for the TCP/IP protocol that do
> not require centralized authority structures (central authority to assign
> network numbers).
> Any links, comments, etc., appreciated.
Well,
I don't think this is exactly what you were looking for, but the guys
at JPL (NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab), along with Vince Cerf, are working
on ways to extend the Internet throughout the solar system in an
attempt to link space craft and (should it happen) human settlements
in space to our little digital world. Lets face it, if you're going
to be stuck in a tin can the size of a VW Bug for 18 months, eating
only "rations" and not showering, you're gonna want access to the planets
largest collection of Porn... um.. I mean... all of the deeply insiteful
and intellectually enriching content found on the Internet...
I THINK this is their site:
http://www.ipnsig.org/
The one sentence background, as I understand it, is that they feel
you can't run TCP/IP over interplanetary distances because the long
latencies wouldn't jive well with the SYN/ACK nature of TCP.
Eric :)