PAPER DIGEST
Most Influential SIGCOMM 2002 Paper · 2026-03 edition

Tussle In Cyberspace: Defining Tomorrow's Internet

David D. Clark; John Wroclawski; Karen R. Sollins; Robert Braden

Venue
ACM SIGCOMM Conference (SIGCOMM) 2002
Recognition
Most Influential SIGCOMM 2002 Paper (Rank No. 8)
Edition
2026-03
Impact factor
7
Certificate ID
61ed357259b04f16

Abstract

The architecture of the Internet is based on a number of principles, including the self-describing datagram packet, the end to end arguments, diversity in technology and global addressing. As the Internet has moved from a research curiosity to a recognized component of mainstream society, new requirements have emerged that suggest new design principles, and perhaps suggest that we revisit some old ones. This paper explores one important reality that surrounds the Internet today: different stakeholders that are part of the Internet milieu have interests that may be adverse to each other, and these parties each vie to favor their particular interests. We call this process "the tussle". Our position is that accommodating this tussle is crucial to the evolution of the network's technical architecture. We discuss some examples of tussle, and offer some technical design principles that take it into account.

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