Distributed Hash Tables and Internet Architecture

Speaker: Professor Scott Shenker , ICSI Berkeley
Date: April 15 2004
Time: 3:30PM to 5:00PM
Location: Wong Auditorium, E51-115
Host: Professor Victor Zue, Co-Director, CSAIL
Contact: Raina Duran, 617-253-0145, raina@csail.mit.edu
Relevant URL: "Distributed Hash Tables and Internet Architecture"
The explosive growth but primitive design of early peer-to-peer (P2P) file sharing systems led the research community to develop a more sophisticated technology called distributed hash tables (DHTs).
Despite their origin, DHTs have had only a limited impact on P2P file sharing. Instead, DHTs have become a rather popular systems hammer in search of application nails. This talk will first review the basics of DHTs and their use in various settings and then wander into speculations about the possible role of DHTs in a future Internet architecture. Given MIT's role in both DHTs and Internet architecture, this talk is a massive exercise in "bringing coals to Newcastle".
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