CAIDA Visiting Scholars and Local Talks Calendar
| June 2006 |
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| July 2006 |
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| August 2006 |
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| September 2006 |
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| October 2006 |
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| November 2006 |
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| December 2006 |
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[Back to Calendar View]
[Back to Calendar View]
- 8/15/2006 -
Talk - Melanie Rieback
Melanie Rieback from Vrije University presenting talk
"RFID Guardian: A Personal Platform for RFID Privacy Management,"
San Diego Supercomputer Center Room 408 at 2pm
This talk will present the design and implementation of the RFID Guardian,
the first-ever unified platform for RFID security and privacy administration.
Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) tags are remotely-powered data carriers,
that are often touted as "computers of the future", that bring intelligence to
our homes and offices, optimize our supply chains, and keep a watchful eye on
our pets, livestock, and kids. The RFID Guardian resembles an "RFID firewall",
enabling individuals to monitor and control access to their RFID tags by
combining a standard-issue RFID reader with unique RFID tag emulation capabilities.
Our system provides a platform for coordinated usage of RFID security mechanisms,
offering fine-grained control over RFID-based auditing, key management, access control,
and authentication capabilities. We have prototyped the RFID Guardian using
off-the-shelf components; compatible with the ISO 15693/14443 (13.56 MHz) RFID
standards, it performs RFID tag emulation and selective RFID tag jamming.
The presentation will conclude with a live demonstration of the RFID Guardian.
- 8/27/2006 -
Nevil Brownlee - Arrives at CAIDA
Nevil Brownlee Arrives at CAIDA
[Back to Calendar View]
[Back to Calendar View]
- 10/25/2006 -
Talk - Arvind Krishnamurthy
Arvind Krishnamurthy presents talk "Towards an Information Plane for Internet Services" at the UCSD CSE building room 4109 at 12:00 p.m.
The Internet by design is opaque to its applications, providing best effort
packet delivery with little or no information about the likely performance
or reliability characteristics of different paths. While this is a
reasonable design for simple client-server applications, many emerging
large-scale distributed services depend on richer information about the
state of the network. The Internet also can benefit from more information
about itself, e.g., ISPs can monitor the global state of the Internet for
reachability and root cause analysis, routing instability, and onset of DDoS
attacks. To address such needs, we develop an Information Plane (iPlane)
that continuously performs measurements to generate and maintain an
annotated map of the Internet with a rich set of link and router attributes.
iPlane then uses structural information such as the router-level topology
and autonomous system topology to predict paths and their properties between
arbitrary nodes in the Internet. We present preliminary results that
demonstrate the feasibility of building the Information Plane and its
utility in optimizing representative overlay services in use today.
- 10/30/2006 -
Talk - Allen Downey
Allen Downey presents talk "Changepoint detection in network measurements" at the San Diego Supercomputer Center Auditorium on Monday, October 30, 2006 at 11:00 a.m.
Time-series measurements of network performance are often
characterized by periods of statistical stationarity punctuated by
abrupt changes. Identifying these changepoints is useful for
understanding and predicting network behavior.
I will present a novel Bayesian framework for estimating the
probability of a changepoint in a time series, and demonstrate its use
on several example problems. I will also show how the framework can
be applied to "online" changepoint detection, and compare it to GLR, a
standard technique for this problem.
This talk will include a general introduction to changepoint problems
and Bayesian statistics. This project is work in progress; I will
present some of the problems I am currently dealing with, and I would
be interested in talking to the audience about possible applications
of these techniques.
[Back to Calendar View]
- 11/9/2006 -
Talk - Bill St. Arnaud
"Building the next generation Internet architecture in Canada"
at San Diego Supercomputer Center Auditorium at 10:00 a.m.
Around the world there are several initiatives to develop the next
generation canonical Internet network architecture. These initiatives
are being driven by at least four significant developments, first:
the concern that the current Internet is ossifying and that it is
increasingly difficult to deploy new architectures, secondly: the
trend towards a two tiered Internet where the owners of the network
control access by third partners, thirdly: the trend for more users
to own, control and manage their own network resources and fourthly:
the demand by big science and large enterprises to have dedicated
network resources for the data flows generated by their high-end
applications. One approach to address all these issues is being
developed in Canada by CANARIE where a key assumption is that there
is no longer need for a canonical network architecture.
Instead, the User Controlled LightPath (UCLP) software developed
by CANARIE and its partners allows users to define their own packet
or switched based network architecture including topology, routing,
virtual routers, switches, virtual machines and protocols based on
the concept of many separate, concurrent and independently managed
Articulated Private Networks (APN) operating on top of one or more
network substrates across different ownership domains. APNs can
be considered as a next generation Virtual Private Network where a
user can create a complex network multi-domain topology by binding
together layer 1 through 3 network links, computers, time slices
and virtual or real routing and/or switching nodes. This capability
of UCLP is realized by representing all such network element, devices
and links as web services, and by using web services workflow as
the tool to allow the user to bind together their various web
services to create a long lived APN instantiation. With web services
workflow the user also has the ability to offer all, or portions
of their APN as a web service (or set of services) in its own right
to other downstream users.
Bio:
Bill St. Arnaud is Senior Director Advanced Networks for CANARIE
Inc., Canada's Advanced Internet Development Organization. At CANARIE
Bill St. Arnaud has been responsible for the coordination and
implementation of Canada's next generation optical Internet initiative
called CA*net 4. Bill St. Arnaud is a member of various committees
and boards including ISOC Board of Trustees, the NomComm committee
for ICANN, the UKlight Steering Committee, the GLORIAD policy
committee, the GLIF policy committee amongst others. Bill St.
Arnaud is a frequent guest speaker at numerous conferences on the
Internet and optical networking. He is a graduate of Carleton
University School of Engineering.
- 11/9/2006 -
Talk - Rene L. Cruz
"Sharing with your neighbors: the case for cooperation in
broadband access networks" at the San Diego Supercomputer Center Auditorium on
Thursday, November 9, 2006 at 11:15 am. For questions regarding this talk, please send a message to info@caida.org
The advent of low cost wireless communication technology has driven
the explosion of user owned and managed wireless data networks,
specifically WiFi local area networks. Ironically, though the
Internet itself was originally driven by a culture of cooperation
and open-ness, managers (users) of WiFi networks are increasingly
motivated to "close" their networks to prevent unauthorized use of
their networks. In this talk, I nevertheless argue that there is a
large possible upside for cooperation in broadband access networks,
and that a high speed communication link that directly connects
homes in a neighborhood has considerable value. This creates a
unique and compelling application for ad-hoc mesh networks.
I will describe a technology originally developed at UCSD which
exploits the inherent burstiness of Internet access traffic. A high
speed local area network in a neighborhood is established in order
to facilitate the dynamic pooling and sharing of the aggregate
access bandwidth available. This can result in a much larger available
peak bandwidth to each individual user in the neighborhood, as well
as increased reliability, in a cost effective manner.
This technology has been further developed at Mushroom Networks,
Inc., and I will discuss a series of related products that are
planned for release in the near future. I will describe how these
products relate to existing and planned municipal WiFi networks,
as well as planned trial deployments in the San Diego area. I hope
to identify possible areas of future collaboration with members of
the audience.
Bio:
Rene L. Cruz received the Ph.D. and B.S. degrees in Electrical
Engineering from the University of Illinois, Urbana, and the M.S.
Degree from MIT. He is currently on leave from UCSD, where he is a
Professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering.
He founded Mushroom Networks, Inc. in 2004, where he holds the
position of Chief Science Officer. He is a Fellow of the IEEE.
[Back to Calendar View]
[Back to Calendar View]
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