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3 - Measuring the global Internet

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 January 2010

Romualdo Pastor-Satorras
Affiliation:
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Barcelona
Alessandro Vespignani
Affiliation:
Université de Paris XI
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Summary

The characterization of how routers, computers, and physical links interconnect with each other in the global Internet is a very difficult task due to several key features of network development. A first one is the Internet's size and continued growth. The Internet is growing exponentially and its size has already increased by five orders of magnitude since its birth. In other words, the Internet is a large-scale object whose global properties cannot be inferred, in general, from local ones. A second difficulty is the intrinsic heterogeneity of the Internet, that is it is composed of networks engineered with large technical and administrative diversity. The different networking technologies are merged together by the TCP/IP architecture that, while providing connectivity, does not imply uniform behavior. Moreover, networks range from small local campuses to large transcontinental backbone providers. This difference in size is reflected in different administrative policies that make routing through the Internet a highly unpredictable and heterogeneous phenomenon. Also very important is the fact that the Internet is a self-organizing system, whose properties cannot be traced back to any blueprint or chart. It evolves and drastically changes over time according to evolutionary principles dictated by the interplay between cooperation (the network has to work efficiently) and competition (providers wish to earn money). This means that routers and links are added by competing entities according to local economic and technical constraints, leading to a very intricate physical structure that does not comply with any globally optimized plan.

Type
Chapter
Information
Evolution and Structure of the Internet
A Statistical Physics Approach
, pp. 19 - 35
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2004

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