[CII] welcome to the public CII
Avri Doria
avri at acm.org
Fri Nov 27 15:37:11 UTC 2009
Hi,
I had thought to lurk not to reply to the first welcome message. But having seen you all reply figured i better before someone decided that I was bot. I don't think I am, but if you all decided I was I might get confused, so figured I would put a non-bot stake in the ground. BTW, is this a new variant on the Turing Test?
In any case, on the substantive side of what this list may be about. I also, am not sure I know exactly what CII covers. There are the logical entities people point to, e.g. the names and addresses, and there are the physical resources that one points to, e.g. backbones and last meters.
In my research work, I work on networks for communications challenged areas and try to assume a network where none of the things that people normally assume are critical are available. Now this obviously involves communications gear and software of some sort, but i look to minimize what is necessary from the well known set of things. This is an extreme, but I think it corresponds to the original goal of the Internet - a network of networks that continues to work even if some part of it is missing. I.e I think the original concept of the Internet intended for there to be little if anything that was truly critical - i.e. without which the network would not work. the questions becomes if nothing is in itself critical, is there a set of things of which some must be there, but no individual member of the set is necessary. Or are thee things that are really critical in all places at all times.
In my avocation, I work with those who have elevated the one naming architecture and the bifurcated addressing structure into global imperatives, i.e. things without which the Internet would fail and hence could be designated as CII.
And in a part time contract, I work in a political environment where anything anyone wants to control is called CII.
I tend to exist somewhere among these points of view, trying to come up with technology that minimizes the need for any infrastructure that is critical in that it can't be worked around yet accepting that there are working assumptions that make something critical at some place in some time frame.
So, I look forward to this conversation, but am not sure I have a lot to offer other then my questions and existential angst about things.
a.
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