Showing posts with label networks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label networks. Show all posts

Sunday, 21 January 2018

Reflections after 5G Transformer plenary

Last week I had the opportunity to assist to a 5G Transformer plenary. It was hosted by IRT bcom, here in Rennes. This project, which belongs to the European Commission, has the objective to transform today’s mobile transport network into an SDN/NFV-based Mobile Transport and Computing Platform (MTP). With this, incorporate the Network Slicing paradigm into mobile transport networks, empowering the operator to provision and manage MTP slices designed to fulfill specific needs of vertical industries.

This was a great experience, on two planes. On the personal one, it was great to meet people with tons of experience and expertise. Each one with unique points of view about the proposed challenges, with disposition to share and construct knowledge. It was interesting to experience the openness to listen: I had the opportunity to talk with some of them about my thesis and provided valuable feedback and references to explore further. On the technical plane, seems like their problems are also my problems about network slicing, how to orchestrate the resources and abstract correctly the resources for consumers. I also witnessed the importance of the participation of stakeholders like telecom operators and the automotive industry into the plenary, because provide concrete use cases and practical views on the subject. 

 One aspect that caught my attention was the trade-off between the desire to provide a complete architecture (one that looks into the future, that is flexible enough to embrace the use cases we still have not thought of) and the complex task of explaining this architecture to a stakeholder. I sensed that there was a inner desire to avoid complexity and just provide an architecture for a simple scenario, that is easy to support and communicate. I sincerely dislike this approach, since we would be limiting the scope of the architecture to simple use cases. 
Future scenarios will involve intensive mobility management, frequent handover, heterogeneous (access and core) networks spanning through multiple domains and administrative boundaries. Do you need to support and push forward ($$€€) this complex idea to a stakeholder? Call a marketing guy, which I am sure can come up with a business idea that would support the use case. We have to aim higher and try to cover as many scenarios as possible. Make the architecture as flexible and open as possible. This will ensure that all sectors of society are included and that technology will find a way to contribute not only to industries, government, cities, but to benefit people, enhancing its quality of living. We need to focus on humanity.

Or maybe there were other interests behind that I could not grasp at the moment, who knows. In either case, it was a great experience, I learned a lot, and had a view of the complexity of putting a large audience on the same page, the difficult task of persuading people, how to lead a technical discussion and the different methods that can be used to present ideas and technical information. 

Thursday, 30 November 2017

European Cyber Week à Rennes: Cybersecurity and healthcare focus day

For me, the key conference today was The Future of Healthcare – Scotland: paving the way, by Pr. William (Bill) BUCHANAN (@billatnapier). This conference blew my mind away.

It is known for all of us that the current technologies that we use to access Internet and the services built over it, use inventions developed more than 30 years ago. Improvements to the web, IP and TCP have been made by patching new features over them or creating new layers over them to provide new functions. And it is not only IP, or TCP: this involves also the use of STP on L2 networks, or BGP as a protocol used on Internet route announcement (and now inside data centers). Attention please, those layers are not like abstraction layers, but layers that obscure and makes difficult the operation of the system. We are using the same old tools to try to fix new problems envisioned by the massive growth of the Internet ecosystem and all the services that are supported. As suggested by Prof. Buchanan, a master reset should be done, in order to re-create the foundations of Internet having a security framework in mind.  But so far, we know this is very difficult. Just check out the example of IPv6, in which its adoption has had a low pace, because of the lack of incentive$ for telecoms to fully deploy it. All is about businesses and the return of investment after a change in a network. 

The key message here is that we are in the middle of a great opportunity to “make things right” in the foundation of the standardization process for 5G. Learn from the old technologies, have a security and privacy mindset in the implementation. The network may be seen by others like a dumb pipe, but the communication service operators are the aggregators of those pipes, and have to make sure that those pipes behave well and do not mess one with another. On the other hand, the deployment of (virtual) network functions and applications should be taken care too: this because 5G relies on software to provide functionality and is easily corruptible. How to make sure that the (virtual) network function is issued by a trusted entity? How I make sure that the orders from OSS/BSS are legitimate?

Assorted ideas in my conversation with Prof. Buchanan: encryption should be made on the source of data generation, or near the edge. The user must have the power over the data. The network must provide the necessary QoS according to the type of data, but  has to be agnostic to the content: the operator must not know about the data.

On the other side, since this focus day is centered on healthcare, convinces me once more on my quest to have a human approach of technology: to empower, enable him to pursue its dreams, to protect  the user and his data. This way, people will trust the system.

Monday, 27 November 2017

Faire la pause: European Cyber Week à Rennes, day one

During this week, Rennes is hosting the European Cyber Week. This event, in its second edition, covers several programs that relate to the cyber security treats in scenarios such as connected vehicles, naval environments, e-health and IoT.

This event began with the Journées C&ESAR, which will make emphasis on Data protection facing cyber threats. Conferences today covered the following use cases:

  • Naval environment
  • Laboratory of research
  • Autonomous connected vehicles
  • e-health applications and the privacy of the patient data
  • IoT
  • Government / enterprise reputation management
Each vertical has its own point of view about the treats and the value of its data: different core businesses, different kinds of data generators - consumers, networking requirements regarding QoS - QoE, types of information, metadata and associated value of it. Compromising these businesses would create havoc at different scales: measurements not arriving on time, stealing of sensitive research results; crash of vehicles, liberation of confidential medical data, economic and trust issues among countries all over the world, just to say some examples.

These variety of use cases and exigencies would finally land on the tangible entity all people only notices (the one to blame) when it fails: the network. Oh, well, human factor has to be taken into account too, but it is out of the scope for this moment ;)

The great challenge is to have a complete view, end to end, of all the components that make the service possible; to provide ground rules that provide coexistence and a "pacific" ecosystem. A common architecture that holds them all and provides communication capabilities as the users demand. 
  • How will the operation and management chain of command operate all the components and abstractions of the underlying control and infrastructure entities?
  • How involved should the communication service provider be in the data management of the segment (better: slice)?
  • Up to what extent the communication service provider must comply with certifications such as HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) in order to be able to provide services to a hospital? Or an aeronautical enterprise?
I love this conferences because provides food for the thought. A lot of questions, motivated by real world scenarios, that the telecoms (and the rest of players in the industry) must be able to answer. I hope to contribute in this process during the pursuit of my doctoral studies.

Sunday, 20 December 2015

Wireless Sensor Networks - intro

Long time, no see.
I am posting the Mind Maps I have made in order to prepare for my exam of Ad-hoc and Sensor Networks. I hope you find it useful.introduction to WSN