Showing posts with label Internet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Internet. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Internet Systems Consortium's SIE & Google Protobufs

Internet Systems Consortium's SIE & Google Protobufs Tube. Duration : 49.95 Mins.


Google Tech Talk December 3, 2009 ABSTRACT Presented by Robert Edmonds, Eric Ziegast, and Paul Vixie. ISC SIE (Security Information Exchange) is a trusted, private framework for information sharing in the Internet Security field. Participants can operate real time sensors that upload and/or inject live data to SIE, and other participants can subscribe to this data either in real time, or by query access, or by limited and anonymized download. While SIE began in 2007 with a method for collecting and sharing raw packet captures for Passive DNS in near real time, correlation with other data types and data sources was required. SIE needed a way to efficiently pass structured data between participating nodes in the loosely-coupled broadcast ethernet message bus. We would like to present why SIE selected Google Protocol Buffers, how we utilize the technology within SIE, and how security researchers can use the libraries (libnmsg), APIs and tools for real-time analysis of disparate data sources.

Keywords: google, tech, talk, security, protocol, buffers

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Google Internet Summit 2009: Networks and Statistics Session

Google Internet Summit 2009: Networks and Statistics Session Tube. Duration : 74.88 Mins.


Google Internet Summit 2009: The State of the Internet May 5, 2009 Google Internet Summit 2009 Network and Statistics Session. Panelists for this session are Alan Mauldin, Tom Leighton, Stephen Stuart, and Greg Chesson. On May 5 and 6, 2009, in Mountain View, we brought together Googlers and leaders from academia and the corporate world for a 2-day summit to discuss the state of the global Internet. The goal of the summit was to collect a wide range of knowledge to inform Google's future plans--from product development and market reach to users' expectations and our ability to keep the Internet open yet secure. More than 30 speakers and moderators led discussions around 8 topics: Networks; Wireless and Sensor Technologies; Security; Standards; Applications; Democracy, Law, Policy and Regulation; Search and Cloud Computing; and The Future. Eric Schmidt, who offered some remarks, expressed optimism that the challenges we face with governments' walling off access to the Internet can be overcome technologically by building networks that are transparent, scalable, and open.

Keywords: google, 2009, internet, summit