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FI4D 2016 : IEEE CCNC Workshop on Future Internet Architecture (FI4D) | |||||||||||||||
Link: https://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~al773/ccnc_fi4d.html | |||||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||||
Information Centric Networking (ICN) has emerged as a promising paradigm for shaping the Future Internet (FI) architectures. ICN moves from the host-centric to the information-centric networking in order to decouple the delivery of contents from their original locations. With that, the opportunity arises to fetch contents and services from virtually everywhere, including pushing the information closer to the end user. The latter aspect allows for optimizing bandwidth utilization and improving the service availability, especially in challenged network environments. Particular ICN aspects that facilitate such optimization are, among others, the support for in-networking caching, the naming of content while only creating temporary relationships between those providing and those asking for content, the potential to utilize multipath communication and supporting native multicast delivery (due to the spatial and temporary decoupling of publishers and receivers).
In most developing regions, residential Internet access is considerably less affordable due to the experienced income levels. People living in rural communities of these regions either suffer from lacking of Internet access or poor Internet connectivity. This has led to limited opportunity for rural communities to connect to the world and has significantly caused a digital divide. The advantages offered by ICN along with wireless access and distribution technologies (TV White Spaces, satellite communications or Wi-Fi based long distance networks) introduce potential to improve the Internet connectivity in developing regions aiming at minimizing the cost of Internet deployment and potentially allowing commodity hardware to be an alternative. Furthermore, the recent arising of localized communication approaches, e.g., community networks and do-it-yourself networking (DIY) also bring benefits on providing a low cost solution for network deployment. With the efficient content delivery in ICN and practical low cost solutions, these capabilities will leverage affordable broadband Internet for the developing regions. The topics of interest include, but are not limited to: * ICN architecture design and evaluation * Facilitation of IP-based services of ICN deployments * Use of wireless access technologies for development such as TV White Spaces, satellite communications or Wi-Fi based long distance networks * Caching solutions, particularly for edge network caching * Named based routing * Privacy, security and trust for Future Internet architectures * Localized communication networks * Applications and services for developing regions * Future Internet economics and business models * Deployment and trial experiences of ICN systems |
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