Development of the domain name system
SIGCOMM '88 Symposium proceedings on Communications architectures and protocols
The design and implementation of an intentional naming system
Proceedings of the seventeenth ACM symposium on Operating systems principles
SOSP '01 Proceedings of the eighteenth ACM symposium on Operating systems principles
BGP4: Inter-Domain Routing in the Internet
BGP4: Inter-Domain Routing in the Internet
Internet indirection infrastructure
Proceedings of the 2002 conference on Applications, technologies, architectures, and protocols for computer communications
Tussle in cyberspace: defining tomorrow's internet
Proceedings of the 2002 conference on Applications, technologies, architectures, and protocols for computer communications
A Waypoint Service Approach to Connect Heterogeneous Internet Address Spaces
Proceedings of the General Track: 2002 USENIX Annual Technical Conference
Infranet: Circumventing Web Censorship and Surveillance
Proceedings of the 11th USENIX Security Symposium
Addressing reality: an architectural response to real-world demands on the evolving Internet
FDNA '03 Proceedings of the ACM SIGCOMM workshop on Future directions in network architecture
Plutarch: an argument for network pluralism
FDNA '03 Proceedings of the ACM SIGCOMM workshop on Future directions in network architecture
FARA: reorganizing the addressing architecture
FDNA '03 Proceedings of the ACM SIGCOMM workshop on Future directions in network architecture
HLP: a next generation inter-domain routing protocol
Proceedings of the 2005 conference on Applications, technologies, architectures, and protocols for computer communications
NSDI'04 Proceedings of the 1st conference on Symposium on Networked Systems Design and Implementation - Volume 1
Tor: the second-generation onion router
SSYM'04 Proceedings of the 13th conference on USENIX Security Symposium - Volume 13
Perspective access networks
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Network fragmentation occurs when the accessibility of a network-based resource to an observer is a function of how the observer is connected to the network. In the context of the Internet, network fragmentation is well known and occurs in many situations, including an increasing preponderance of network address translation, firewalls, and virtual private networks. Recently, however, new threats to Internet consistency have received media attention. Alternative namespaces have emerged as the result of formal objections to the process by which Internet names and addresses are provisioned. In addition, various governments and service providers around the world have deployed network technology that (accidentally or intentionally) restricts access to certain Internet content. Combined with the aforementioned sources of fragmentation, these new concerns provide ample motivation for a network that allows users the ability to specify not only the network location of Internet resources they want to view but also the perspectives from which they want to view them. Our vision of a perspective access network (PAN) is a peer-to-peer overlay network that incorporates routing and directory services that allow network perspective-sharing and nonhierarchical organization of the Internet. In this paper, we present the design, implementation, and evaluation of a directory service for such networks. We demonstrate its feasibility and efficacy using measurements from a test deployment on PlanetLab.