Packet Juggling - Floating Data Storage
Filthmaster writes "I just saw an interesting paper that has been posted to bugtraq, full-disclosure and vulnwatch. It deals with the principles of stealthily using network infrastructure as either short-term or long-term storage. Not sure if I'm ready to implement it, but it makes interesting food for thought." There's also a mirror up.
When our network fileserver fills up (as it does twice a week or so), I start emailing things to myself through the corporate mail server. When the mail server fills up, I start adding to my intranet HTTP pages. When all else fails, I start sending (encrypted) data back to myself via my ISPs external mail servers.
It would of course be far better for the company if they just sprang for some new drives in the fileserver, but engineer and bandwidth costs don't appear as capital expenses, so they are viewed as being effectively "free". Sigh.
If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
While the authors try to use existing protocols to simulate temporary storage in the Internet, we are working on a scalable, shared storage resource that is open to the community.
We currently have over 20 TB of storage around the world available in the public Logistical Networking Testbed and other groups have another 10-20 TB provisioned in private use testbeds.
In additon to storage, we are also working on providing simple computational services at the storage nodes (work on the data in place while it is stored rather than moving it to computation centers).
For more info, visit the LoCI Lab at http://loci.cs.utk.edu.
Download Linux ISOs in 5 minutes using LoRS Tools available at http://loci.cs.utk.edu
Not everyone can benefit, because of side effects of it's parasitic nature.
The amount of storage this system gives in the text would be total available for ALL users of the system. More users, less avaiable storage.
Parasites can do better when there little competition from other parasites, but if the system get's infested, the host it lives of may die. Or someone may develop a cure.
Either way, after a certain threshold, the more popular any system using this gets, the less useful it would be.
Just some random thoughts I had when I was talking about a similar idea with someone.
It was 1997 when Simon the BOFH wrote about such a contraption, which won him the IT Idiot Award for Least Intelligent Supervisor.
In Soviet Russia, Jesus asks: "What Would You Do?"