Who makes the Internet? A longitudinal analyses of the IETF

“Data and Web Science” Lecture Series

Department of Informatics, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece (http://dws.csd.auth.gr)

MONDAY March 21st, 2022, 7:00pm at :

https://authgr.zoom.us/j/97159727135?pwd=VzQ0bGYzNlcwUVQzZFlwa1pkV2dwZz09

Title:  Who makes the Internet? A longitudinal analyses of the IETF

Presenter: Ignacio Castro, Lecturer (i.e., Assist. Professor), Queen Mary University of London, UK.

Abstract: Operation of the Internet requires interoperability between networks, systems, and applications, as well as cooperation among a growing number of stakeholders. The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) is critical in supporting this cooperation and interoperability by bringing together interested parties and standardizing the protocols that enable Internet interconnectivity such as IPv4/6, HTTP/s or BGP.

In this talk I will present our work covering more than 50 years of IETF data, including the participants of the IETF, the emails they exchange, the documents they produce and institutions they are affiliated to. We measure the shifts and trends that have emerged, including the rise and fall of large Internet players, and the shift in relevance between industry and academia. We show how Internet’s growth and maturity has given rise to a longer and complex standardisation process with a rich social network where participants gain and exercise influence.

S. McQuistin, M. Karan, P. Khare, C. Perkins, G. Tyson, M. Purver, P. Healey, W. Iqbal, J. Qadir, I. Castro.

 “Characterising the IETF Through the Lens of RFC Deployment”. ACM Internet Measurement Conference (IMC). [PDF]

P. Khare, S. McQuistin, M. Karan, C. Perkins, G. Tyson, M. Purver, P. Healey, I. Castro.

“The Web We Weave: Untangling the Social Graph of the IETF”. International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media (ICWSM), 2022

 Bio: Ignacio Castro is Lecturer in Data Analytics at Queen Mary University of London. He obtained his PhD while researching at the Institute IMDEA Networks (Madrid, Spain), and visiting UC Berkeley (California, USA). His work sits at the intersection between economics and computer systems. His interest spans from online social networks and moderation to the macroscopic evolution of the Internet. He has been an investigator on three major EPSRC grants that hold over £6 million in funding. His work appears in top tier journals and conferences including Web Conference, ACM Internet Measurement Conference, and IEEE/ACM Trans. on Networking. He also serves in TPCs and organises top tier conferences including IMC, CoNEXT and SIGCOMM.

Site: https://icastro.info/