Published: September 01, 2010
PARC Awarded 'National Science Foundation' Funding to Expand Fundamental Research in Content-Centric Networking
PALO ALTO, Calif. - (BUSINESS WIRE) - PARC,
a Xerox company, today announced it is one of four project teams
chosen by the National Science Foundation (NSF) to pursue ways to build
a more trustworthy and robust Internet. The new "Future Internet
Architecture" (FIA) program is focused on collaborative, long-range,
transformative thinking about new comprehensive network architectures
and concepts.
PARC - the sole commercial organization funded within the entire FIA
program - will be collaborating with nine universities in a team led by
UCLA for "Named-Data-Networking
(NDN)" in a grant worth up to $8M. NSF describes the NDN project as
follows:
Today's traditional approach to communications is based on a
client-server model...where data contained within IP packets are
transported along a single path. Today, however, the most predominant
use of the Internet is centered on content creation, dissemination, and
delivery...The proposed Named Data Networking (NDN) architecture moves the
communication paradigm from today's focus on "where" , i.e., addresses,
servers, and hosts, to "what" , i.e., the content that users and
applications care about. By naming data instead of their location (IP
address), NDN transforms data into first-class entities...[and] secures
the content and provides essential context for security. This approach
allows...[for example] the potential to move content along multiple paths
to the destination.
PARC brings to the program its Content-Centric
Networking (CCN) research launched by PARC Research Fellow Van
Jacobson just four years ago. The CCN work has produced early protocol
specifications and open
source software [available at http://www.ccnx.org/],
which PARC released to encourage collaborative experimentation by the
research community just as NSF is promoting with the FIA program. PARC
is contributing the open source software as a base for the NDN project
to build upon and extend. The NSF grant addresses the technical
challenges in creating NDN, including, as they note: routing
scalability, fast forwarding, trust models, network security, content
protection and privacy, and a new fundamental communication theory
enabling its design.
In addition to working on NDN for the NSF program (which starts today),
PARC has also been working with a number of companies to explore
commercial applications of Content-Centric Networking in various
domains. PARC continues to engage with clients who are motivated to
address some of the most challenging problems in networking and
communications today.
"Having worked at both large companies and startups, I came to PARC to
make Content-Centric Networking a reality. There aren't many
organizations that sit at the intersection of government, large
enterprises, and universities. Given its unique position in the market,
PARC understands the importance of openness and collaboration to achieve
success for new network architectures," said PARC Research Fellow, Van
Jacobson. "We are thrilled that NSF is challenging the research
community to look beyond incremental changes, and we hope that this NSF
support through the FIA program will be a significant catalyst in
helping bring about a future foundation of open protocols for content
networking."
PARC's legacy with networking began with the development of the PuP
protocols (contemporaneous with the creation of today's internet
protocols) and the invention of Ethernet. This year, PARC is celebrating
this invention - along with the GUI, ubiquitous computing, collaborative
filtering, and much more - as part of its 40th anniversary.
Since being incorporated as an independent subsidiary of Xerox in 2002,
PARC has been working with a number of clients around the world to
identify opportunities, conduct research, co-develop, and commercialize
its offerings across a multitude of industries. Some of its clients
include Xerox, Dai Nippon Printing, Sun (Oracle), NEC, Powerset (now
part of Microsoft), Fujitsu, SolFocus, Dowa Electronics, PowerAssure,
and the US Army.
"Given PARC's track record with pioneering technological change, people
continually ask me, 'What's the next big thing?'" PARC CEO, Mark
Bernstein noted. "Content-Centric Networking is one of two 'big
bets' we are investing in for the future. Given our decision to support
this research, we are honored to participate, along with our
collaborators, in NSF's effort to advance approaches to networking. The
world -- and the innovation landscape -- has changed so dramatically and
continues to rapidly evolve, especially since the Internet was invented.
We need these fundamental changes to enable the continued growth of
vital information services."
About PARC
A global center for commercial innovation, PARC, a Xerox company, works
closely with enterprises, entrepreneurs, and other clients to discover,
develop, and deliver new business opportunities, industrial-strength
prototypes, and technology platforms/ IP assets. Simply put, PARC is in
the business of breakthroughs. Previously known as "Xerox PARC", PARC
was incorporated in 2002 as a wholly owned subsidiary of Xerox
Corporation. PARC is celebrated for a number of game-changing industry
contributions such as laser printing, the Ethernet, the graphical user
interface (GUI), ubiquitous computing, blue lasers, MEMS, large-area
electronics, natural language processing applications, and more.

PARC Media contact:
Scout PR
Kelly Brieger, 650-704-1748
kelly@scoutprsf.com
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