sascha's picture

Here's a new paper that's out in the most recent issue of IEEE's Internet Computing. We required a Creative Commons co-license (attribution, non-commercial, share-alike) with IEEE in order to publish our work, so you can download the paper for free (or buy yourself a subscription if you'd rather).

The (un)Economic Internet?

kc claffy, Sascha D. Meinrath
Cooperative Association for Internet Data Analysis - CAIDA

San Diego Supercomputer Center,
University of California, San Diego

Scott O. Bradner
Harvard University

The Internet Economics track will address how economic and policy issues relate to the emergence of the Internet as critical infrastructure. Here, the authors provide a historical overview of internetworking, identifying key transitions that have contributed to the Internet's development and penetration. Its core architecture wasn't designed to serve as critical communications infrastructure for society, but developed far beyond the expectations of the original funding agencies, architects, developers, and early users. The incongruence between the Internet's underlying architecture and current use and expectations, however, means we can no longer study Internet technology in isolation from the political and economic context in which it is deployed.

Read the full paper: PDF

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