Proceedings of the 2006 conference on Applications, technologies, architectures, and protocols for computer communications
A data-oriented (and beyond) network architecture
Proceedings of the 2007 conference on Applications, technologies, architectures, and protocols for computer communications
Lire: lucene image retrieval: an extensible java CBIR library
MM '08 Proceedings of the 16th ACM international conference on Multimedia
A Compact Multi-view Descriptor for 3D Object Retrieval
CBMI '09 Proceedings of the 2009 Seventh International Workshop on Content-Based Multimedia Indexing
Proceedings of the 5th international conference on Emerging networking experiments and technologies
CEDD: color and edge directivity descriptor: a compact descriptor for image indexing and retrieval
ICVS'08 Proceedings of the 6th international conference on Computer vision systems
Integrating commonsense knowledge into the semantic annotation of narrative media objects
AI*IA'11 Proceedings of the 12th international conference on Artificial intelligence around man and beyond
Content based image retrieval with LIRe
MM '11 Proceedings of the 19th ACM international conference on Multimedia
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Content searching and downloading are the two dominant actions of the Internet users today, despite the fact that the Internet was not originally architected to serve such actions. Content Centric Networking is the new trend in the research community to build network architectures that route content by name and not by the host's network address so as to efficiently deal with content persistence, availability and authenticity issues. In this work we propose an extension to the Content Centric Network protocol in order to support content search as a native process of the network. By using object descriptors to represent the actual content objects and integrate these descriptors in the network protocol we manage to search and retrieve content from the network not only by name but also by the content itself. In this approach, searching for information is a process distributed to the reachable network. Moreover, content aggregation is handled by the end user and not by content aggregation portals, thematic content search engines or information curators. By doing so, search is not any more an application but part of the network and can pave the way for many novel applications which have never been thought until today.