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This document outlines the key discussions led by moderator Byung Choi, with input from various participants from esteemed universities and organizations, including Regent University, Syracuse University, CMU, and Boeing. Central to the conversation were fundamental questions surrounding the security of the Internet, the merits of clean slate versus transitional designs, and the complexities of accountability in online environments. Participants explored innovative approaches such as isolating environments for experimentation and creating a Special Interest Group (SIG) within KOCSEA to foster continued collaboration and discussion on these pressing issues.
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Networking/Security • Moderator: Byung Choi • Scriber: Bongjun Ko • Participants • Young Choi (Regent U.) • Joon Park (Syracuse U.) • Sangkil Cha (CMU) • Jongwon Kim (GIST) • Ilkyeun Ra (U of Colorado, Denver) • Juyeon Jo (UNLV) • Jungwoo Ryoo (PSU) • Injoing Rhee (NCSU) • Seung Jong Park (LSU) • Shin Young Lim (U of Pittsburg) • Jae Hoon Kim (Boeing) • Yongdae Kim (U of Minnesota) • Keecheon Kim (Konkuk Unvi.)
Networking/Security • Big question: • Is there something fundamental that can make the unsecure Internet secure? • Clean slate design vs transitional design? • What is the fundamental problem in the accountability of the Internet? • The coupling of location and address. • Is the virtualization "the" solution? or does it create even more problems? • How would you incrementally design the Internet? • Make all services p2p, or BT-like? • Leave IP -- deploy other protocols that complement IP for mobility, security, etc.? • Separate control plane and data plane. • Build isolated environments for large scale experiments of new ideas. • Concluding thoughts • Create SIG within KOCSEA to continue the discussion/collaboration? • Use Google Group or KOCSEA Wiki.