As the era of the NSFnet Backbone Service came to a close in April
1995, the Internet community lost the ability to rely on what was the
only set of publicly available statistics for a large national U.S.
backbone. The transition to the new NSFnet program, with commercial
operations providing both regional service as well as cross-service
provider switching points (NAPs, also referred to as ( exchange points
), has virtually eliminated the public availability of statistics and
analysis at the national level. In this article we cover three areas:
limitations of current Internet statistics and why data collection is more difficult on the
Internet than on the public telephone network
who needs Internet statistics and why
possible models for ISPs and users to narrow the gap in understanding the nature of Internet
traffic
Datasets:
Experiments:
Results:
References:
Cooperative Association for Internet Data Analysis (CAIDA)
Last Modified: Tues Jul-8-2008 14:34:17 PDT
Maintained by: Alex Ma
Page URL: http://www.caida.org/publications/bib/networking/entries/claffy96measurement.xml