The Hindu News Update Service
 
News Update Service
Wednesday, November 26, 2008 : 1210 Hrs       

Sci. & Tech.
Developing a neighborhood watch for the Internet 

Internet network performance problems are not only annoying to users -- they 
are costly to businesses and network operators. But since the Internet has
no built-in monitoring system, network problems often go unnoticed. 

To help fix this problem, researchers at the McCormick School of Engineering 
and Applied Science at Northwestern University have developed a new way to
detect and report such problems in real time through their Network Early 
Warning System. 

While choppy playback on streaming video may be irritating to a user, it can 
drive thousands of potential customers away from the site providing the feed.
As the Internet continues to grow, these network problems, or anomalies, become 
all the more frequent and frustrating. 

According to a press release issued by EurekAlert, determining the existence, 
let alone the impact, of network anomalies is important because the Internet
has no overall monitoring system. Current monitoring systems try to identify 
network anomalies and can look for issues that could lead to performance 
problems
but cannot tell whether individual users are actually experiencing problems. 

Yet every day, millions of Internet users worldwide naturally generate data 
traffic that inherently provides information about whether the network is 
working
or not. (Think of the million of peer-to-peer users in systems like BitTorrent 
or Skype.). By sharing high-level information about their experience, these
users could very efficiently and accurately detect where problems occur in real 
time. 

So Fabián Bustamante, associate professor of electrical engineering and 
computer science, and doctoral student David Choffnes are exploiting this 
observation
to build a participatory approach to detecting, isolating and reporting network 
anomalies: the Network Early Warning System, or NEWS for short. 

"You can think of it as crowd sourcing network monitoring," said Bustamante. 

While the concept behind NEWS is straightforward, Bustamante and Choffnes 
overcame a number of design challenges to bring the approach to an 
Internet-scale
deployment. By gathering information about network conditions from natural data 
traffic, NEWS focuses only on problems that affect end-users and does so
without requiring any extra and potentially wasteful network-measurement 
traffic. NEWS incorporates knowledge of "normal" behavior for network 
applications
to prevent false alarms and confirms suspected problems by checking with other 
nearby users. 

NEWS is currently implemented as an extension to a popular BitTorrent client. 
By generating warnings about problems in the network, the software allows
users to ensure that they get the proper Internet service they pay for. This 
was incentive enough for more than 12,000 users to install the software during
its beta-testing phase. The researchers are also developing a portal for 
network providers to be notified about the network problems reported by their
users. 

Bustamante and Choffnes, who previously released the popular Ono extension for 
BitTorrent (now with more than 300,000 users worldwide), are applying the
NEWS approach to build other valuable services, such as enabling comparison 
shopping for different Internet Service Providers based on the performance
seen from subscribers. 

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