Description of impact
Research conducted at the University of Aberdeen has contributed new algorithms and protocols, measurement analysis, and architectural design to Internet Standards published by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Since 2015, the research team has published 11 specifications in the Requests for Comments (RFC) series. These are the key working documents underpinning the Internet, which have been and are being implemented by the networking industry, informing the current practice of Internet operators. Fairhurst’s RFCs are now deployed globally in products from companies such as Google and Apple.Stakeholders / Beneficiaries
Project summary and aims
Themes
The IETF is the primary Internet Standards Development Organisation (SDO). Its mission is to make the Internet work better by producing high quality relevant technical documents that influence the way people design, use, and manage the Internet. An open standards policy combines contributions from industry (such as Apple, Microsoft, Google, Ericsson), network operators (such as BT, Google, Akamai), leading research institutions (as in this case study) and other stakeholders, to provide the technical and operational expertise required to develop standards and industry Best Current Practice (BCP). BCP documents are published in the Request For Comments (RFC) series and can be accessed online from www.ietf.org/standards/rfcs. Fairhurst chairs the Transport area working group (TSVWG) and has co-authored 11 RFCs across the Internet and Transport areas since 2014.RFC specifications are crucial to the day-to-day running and expansion of the Internet. Although the commercial gain yielded by such open standards is not measurable, these standards are widely used at all stages in Internet service delivery: by networking equipment designers, by network and service operators, in data centres and as a basis for enterprise. RFCs are also used as the basis for government procurement of equipment and services, and underpin other standardisation, including cellular mobile standards for 5G technology.
Impact status | Impact Completed (Open) |
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Impact date | 2012 → 2020 |
Keywords
- Technological
Documents & Links
Related content
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Research output
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Exploring usable Path MTU in the Internet
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Published conference contribution
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Exploring DSCP modification pathologies in the internet
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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Overcoming the Sorrows of the Young UDP Options
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Published conference contribution