Abstract
By design, the Internet core is dumb, and the edge is smart. This design decision has enabled the Internet’s wildcat growth, since without complexity the core can grow at the speed of demand. On the downside, the decision to put all smartness at the edge means we’re at the mercy of scale when it comes to the quality of the Internet’s aggregate traffic load. Not all device and software builders have the skills and the quality assurance budgets that something the size of the Internet deserves. Furthermore, the resiliency of the Internet means that a device or program that gets something importantly wrong about Internet communication stands a pretty good chance of working "well enough" in spite of this.
- Bufferbloat; http://www.bufferbloat.net/.Google Scholar
- Vixie, P. 2002. Securing the edge; http://archive.icann.org/en/committees/security/sac004.txt.Google Scholar
- Defense.net; http://defense.net/.Google Scholar
- Vixie, P., Schryver, V. 2012. Response rate limiting in the Domain Name System; http://www.redbarn.org/dns/ratelimits.Google Scholar
Index Terms
- Rate-limiting State: The edge of the Internet is an unruly place
Comments