A Tutorial on Support Vector Machines for Pattern Recognition
Data Mining and Knowledge Discovery
Quantum cryptography in practice
Proceedings of the 2003 conference on Applications, technologies, architectures, and protocols for computer communications
Pattern Classification (2nd Edition)
Pattern Classification (2nd Edition)
Path selection methods with multiple constraints in service-guaranteed WDM networks
IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking (TON)
Meeting Optical QoS Requirements with Reduced Complexity in Dynamic Wavelength Assignment
BROADNETS '04 Proceedings of the First International Conference on Broadband Networks
Cross-talk attack monitoring and localization in all-optical networks
IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking (TON)
IEEE Communications Magazine
Issues for routing in the optical layer
IEEE Communications Magazine
Traffic grooming in WDM networks
IEEE Communications Magazine
On IP-WDM integration: a retrospective
IEEE Communications Magazine
Performance engineering of metropolitan area optical networks through impairment constraint routing
IEEE Communications Magazine
On the design of self-organized cellular wireless networks
IEEE Communications Magazine
WDM optical communication networks: progress and challenges
IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications
IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications
Failure Location Algorithm for Transparent Optical Networks
IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in Communications
Security issues in all-optical networks
IEEE Network: The Magazine of Global Internetworking
Packet-level traffic measurements from the Sprint IP backbone
IEEE Network: The Magazine of Global Internetworking
Securing passive optical networks against signal injection attacks
ONDM'07 Proceedings of the 11th international IFIP TC6 conference on Optical network design and modeling
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The recent research on Internet Protocol-over-Wavelength Division Multiplexing (IP-over-WDM), driven by the explosion of the Internet data traffic, has uncovered many interesting issues, and much progress has been made as well. While transparent WDM optical networks become more and more popular as the basis of Next Generation Internet (NGI) infrastructure, such networks also raise many unique security issues. The existing protection schemes which only consider inadvertent failures and only rely on postmortem detection and reaction are not suitable for providing security assurance for such infrastructures which require timely protection from malicious sabotage as well as inadvertent faults. In addition, as may have been observed from the past practices, providing a particular solution dedicated to each incessantly discovered new problem would not dramatically improve the situation. In this paper, we discuss the diverse efforts reported in the literature to address the security problem in optical networks. Then, we propose a new approach to protect such infrastructure networks, which is to imbed intelligence into the network, such that they can continuously learn from different faults and attacks and self-organize to protect themselves from potential failures caused by malicious attacks or regular reliability problems.