Submission declined on 13 August 2022 by
Stuartyeates (
talk).
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Submission declined on 22 February 2022 by
Slywriter (
talk). This draft's references do not show that the subject
qualifies for a Wikipedia article. In summary, the draft needs multiple published sources that are: Declined by
Slywriter 2 years ago.
|
Submission declined on 28 May 2021 by
Nightenbelle (
talk). This submission does not appear to be written in
the formal tone expected of an encyclopedia article. Entries should be written from a
neutral point of view, and should refer to a range of
independent, reliable, published sources. Please rewrite your submission in a more encyclopedic format. Please make sure to avoid
peacock terms that promote the subject. This draft's references do not show that the subject
qualifies for a Wikipedia article. In summary, the draft needs multiple published sources that are: Declined by
Nightenbelle 3 years ago.
|
Submission declined on 28 September 2020 by
Davidwr (
talk). The original version appears to be a copy of another web site. Fortunately, the content of that web site is licensed under the Creative Commons 4.0 license, so we can use it here. However, based on the username of the editor on that site who created it, it appears to have been written by someone with a close connection to the project. Since Wikipedia is not meant to be an advertising medium, I recommend totally rewriting it from scratch, possibly keeping some of the more useful references. BEFORE doing that, however, please read
WP:Notability and
WP:WEB and do an honest self-assessment about the notability of this topic. Not all software projects are notable. Not all web sites are notable. Not all BOINC projects are notable. Perhaps SOME of this content could be useful in existing articles about
BOINC. Please do not re-submit until you have 1) done a sober assessment of the project's notability, 2) put 3-5 references on the talk page that, collectively, would convinced an experienced reviewer that the TOPIC is notable, and 3) rewrite the content from scratch, preferably making it shorter and free of any promotional tone. If you would like to {{
ping}} me after step 2 and ask for an evaluation of the topic's "notability," just put Declined by
Davidwr 3 years ago.{{ping|davidwr}} along with 3-5 references on the talk page of this article. |
Submission declined on 9 September 2020 by
Nightenbelle (
talk). This submission is not adequately supported by
reliable sources. Reliable sources are required so that information can be
verified. If you need help with referencing, please see
Referencing for beginners and
Citing sources. Declined by
Nightenbelle 3 years ago. |
Developer(s) | Cyber-Complex Foundation |
---|---|
Initial release | September 26, 2019 |
Development status | Active |
Written in | ANSI C / C++ / Python / PHP |
Operating system | Microsoft Windows, Linux |
Platform | Cross-platform ( BOINC) |
Available in | English |
Type | Computer science, Computer network |
Average performance | 5098.07.. [1] + 2159.78 [2] GFLOPS |
Total users | 465,700 = 360,568 [3] + 105,132 [4] |
Total hosts | 110,707 = 107,029 [3] + 3,678 [4] |
Website | https://ithena.net |
iThena is a volunteer computing [5] project running on Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing (BOINC).
The goal of the iThena project is to model the infrastructure of networks of the global Internet as real as possible. This modelling can be done on many levels: routers, PoPs ( point of presence) and AS ( autonomous systems). The model may have characteristics such as latency, bandwidth, packet loss and others.
The first initiated test activity of the iThena project took place on August 29, 2019. First official message about the project was sent September 26, 2019 [7].
On September 10, 2020 the iThena project was placed on the official BOINC project list [6] of the University of California, Berkeley. On September 11, 2020, David Anderson publishes "Welcome iThena" news on the official BOINC forum [8].
The name of the project to the word cluster: iThena = Internet + Athena. The word Internet defines the global network infrastructure and the information it contains. The word Athena has a standard genesis that refers to Greek mythology and defines the crowds of knowledge, wisdom and prudence.
The main architect and system administrator is Lukasz Swierczewski, who was previously the administrator of many other large scale systems (e.g. OProject@Home [9]). He graduated from Lomza State University of Applied Sciences in Łomża ( Engineer's degree [10]), Maria Curie-Skłodowska University in Lublin ( Master's degree [11]) and National Defence University of Warsaw ( Postgraduate education). Computer scientist [12] and programmer supporting open-source software initiatives. Previously mainly programmer in the area of high performance computing systems (HPC) and supercomputers. A member of the Polish Mathematical Society.
Currently, the project is developed by the Cyber-Complex Foundation [13] [14] (place of institution registration: Europe/ Poland). The Foundation is also registered as a publisher with the National Library of Poland [15] [16] [17]. The Digital Library of the National Library of Poland and the general-purpose open-access repository Zenodo [18] make available the open datasets that result from the iThena project.
Historically, the predecessor of iThena is DIMES. DIMES analysed the topology of the Internet. CAIDA (Center for Applied Internet Data Analysis) and RIPE Atlas also has a great contribution to the mapping of the network structure.
The project has an experimental and research character. iThena in its area is largely consistent with MASINT (Measurement and Signature Intelligence) - intelligence, which is the analysis of data and information obtained through distributed measurement systems in order to determine all characteristics and other information about the recognized object. However, in this case, the project activity space is cyberspace.
The BOINC clients applications that are launched mapping the network structure of the Internet. The iThena applications [19] in the initial phase of the project are only in NCI (CPU Non-Intensive) mode. They do not make much use of computing resources ( CPU time, RAM memory). However, the computer network traffic can be used to a much greater extent. iThena NCI applications map and/or check the availability of individual network nodes using generally known and legal technologies (e.g. ping, traceroute, Iperf, OWAMP [20] [21]). The data obtained under the iThena project comes from open sources to a key extent. The whole open society of Internet users (including BOINC users) contributes to the implementation and development of the system. The data aggregated within the project will be partially classified as open and made available under an open licenses.
On the basis of data aggregated in the system it is possible to detect network anomalies. This area contains anomalies concerning manipulation of data transmission routes [22] - IP Hijack Attacks and other issues.
It is planned to use distributed nodes for typical computing tasks. By 24 April 2020, iThena has made about 250 billion distributed measurements. Project statistics are available, among others, in Free-DC [23] and BOINCStats [24] [25] services.
Although the iThena Project currently mainly implements distributed network measurements, there are modules that are typically computational. A subsystem using OpenHPC technology is such a module. The High-performance computing cluster (installation type: Research) of the Cyber-Complex Foundation was officially registered on March 19, 2021 [26]. The computing modules are an integral part of the whole system and are fed by measurement data.
The
neutrality of this section is
disputed. |
Information about the project is available in many information resources of many communities (including BOINC teams): seti-germany.de [27], bc-team.org [28], and others. A directory page for the project and other resources related to this project is also available in the official CAIDA resource catalog [29].
An Australian programmer, technologist, blockchain expert Delta described in an article [30] on Steemit the measurement principle implemented by the iThena distributed system.
In the Polish magazine Forum Akademickie No. 5/2020 [31] dealing with research and higher education issues an article was published describing the problems of the iThena project research area. The content of the entire issue of the magazine is available in Polish for free (PDF [32] or online website [33]).The official information about free access to the article was published in September 2020 [34]
A talk entitled "iThena Project: Distributed measurements and analysis of the global Internet – BOINC (Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing) and Big Data environment" [35] [36] was presented at the LVEE 2020 Winter Edition conference on December 19, 2020.
The project has been mentioned several times on BOINC Radio [37]. Sample broadcast: BOINC Radio - BOINC Network EPISODE 3, 29th January 2021: Sensor Projects [38] [39] and others [40] [41] [42]. On October 24, 2022, an entire radio episode [43] [44] was dedicated to the iThena project.
In the Polish magazine Nowoczesna Myśl Narodowa [45] (ang. Modern National Thought) No. 4-5 December 2020 - January 2021 an interview [46] with Lukasz Swierczewski appeared. The interview was conducted independently by the journal's Editorial Board. This interview also touched on the distributed and global iThena project. The creator of the project also mentioned other initiatives related to this project.
Part of the International Open Data Day initiative was an event: "Open.Data HowFaster.NET: Open Internet network measurement datasets" [47]. The event was held on March 6, 2021, and presented the open data available from the HowFaster.NET project, which is the result of network measurements obtained from the iThena project.
The iThena project is rapidly growing with open-source and advanced Kernel-based Virtual Machine / OS-level virtualization ( LXC) environments. The website of major virtualization technology developer Proxmox mentions the iThena project story [48] [49]
As of early 2022, the iThena project is classified as a marathon in Formula BOINC competition [50]
As of Q3 2021, the iThena project is integrated into the Open Observatory of Network Interference platform and implements distributed censorship measurements over the Internet [51]. The iThena platform regularly performs measurements on censorship surveys and transfers the analysis results to the OONI systems.
Statistics on the iThena project are also officially, regularly published in the National Library of Poland. The information is stored digitally and on optical media also in the form of legal deposit copies at the National Library and the Jagiellonian Library.
Sub-Project name | Period | ISBN data |
---|---|---|
iThena.Measurements | March 5, 2022 to April 1, 2022 | 978-83-960621-4-7 [52] |
iThena.Measurements | April 1, 2022 to April 27, 2022 | 978-83-960621-5-4 [53] |
iThena.Measurements | April 27, 2022 to May 25, 2022 | 978-83-67414-01-2 [54] |
iThena.Measurements | May 25, 2022 to June 15, 2022 | 978-83-67414-03-6 [55] |
iThena.Measurements | June 16, 2022 to July 8, 2022 | 978-83-67414-04-3 [56] |
iThena.Computational | May 1, 2021 to June 1, 2022 | 978-83-960621-6-1 [57] |
Category:Science in society Category:Free science software Category:Distributed computing architecture Category:Middleware Category:Volunteer computing Category:Free entertainment software Category:Computing-related lists Category:Computer surveillance Category:Computer security Category:Computer network security Category:Network performance Category:Network architecture Category:Telecommunications engineering Category:Network service Category:Decentralization
Submission declined on 13 August 2022 by
Stuartyeates (
talk). This draft's references do not show that the subject
qualifies for a Wikipedia article. In summary, the draft needs multiple published sources that are:
Where to get help
How to improve a draft
You can also browse Wikipedia:Featured articles and Wikipedia:Good articles to find examples of Wikipedia's best writing on topics similar to your proposed article. Improving your odds of a speedy review To improve your odds of a faster review, tag your draft with relevant WikiProject tags using the button below. This will let reviewers know a new draft has been submitted in their area of interest. For instance, if you wrote about a female astronomer, you would want to add the Biography, Astronomy, and Women scientists tags. Editor resources
|
Submission declined on 22 February 2022 by
Slywriter (
talk). This draft's references do not show that the subject
qualifies for a Wikipedia article. In summary, the draft needs multiple published sources that are: Declined by
Slywriter 2 years ago.
|
Submission declined on 28 May 2021 by
Nightenbelle (
talk). This submission does not appear to be written in
the formal tone expected of an encyclopedia article. Entries should be written from a
neutral point of view, and should refer to a range of
independent, reliable, published sources. Please rewrite your submission in a more encyclopedic format. Please make sure to avoid
peacock terms that promote the subject. This draft's references do not show that the subject
qualifies for a Wikipedia article. In summary, the draft needs multiple published sources that are: Declined by
Nightenbelle 3 years ago.
|
Submission declined on 28 September 2020 by
Davidwr (
talk). The original version appears to be a copy of another web site. Fortunately, the content of that web site is licensed under the Creative Commons 4.0 license, so we can use it here. However, based on the username of the editor on that site who created it, it appears to have been written by someone with a close connection to the project. Since Wikipedia is not meant to be an advertising medium, I recommend totally rewriting it from scratch, possibly keeping some of the more useful references. BEFORE doing that, however, please read
WP:Notability and
WP:WEB and do an honest self-assessment about the notability of this topic. Not all software projects are notable. Not all web sites are notable. Not all BOINC projects are notable. Perhaps SOME of this content could be useful in existing articles about
BOINC. Please do not re-submit until you have 1) done a sober assessment of the project's notability, 2) put 3-5 references on the talk page that, collectively, would convinced an experienced reviewer that the TOPIC is notable, and 3) rewrite the content from scratch, preferably making it shorter and free of any promotional tone. If you would like to {{
ping}} me after step 2 and ask for an evaluation of the topic's "notability," just put Declined by
Davidwr 3 years ago.{{ping|davidwr}} along with 3-5 references on the talk page of this article. |
Submission declined on 9 September 2020 by
Nightenbelle (
talk). This submission is not adequately supported by
reliable sources. Reliable sources are required so that information can be
verified. If you need help with referencing, please see
Referencing for beginners and
Citing sources. Declined by
Nightenbelle 3 years ago. |
Developer(s) | Cyber-Complex Foundation |
---|---|
Initial release | September 26, 2019 |
Development status | Active |
Written in | ANSI C / C++ / Python / PHP |
Operating system | Microsoft Windows, Linux |
Platform | Cross-platform ( BOINC) |
Available in | English |
Type | Computer science, Computer network |
Average performance | 5098.07.. [1] + 2159.78 [2] GFLOPS |
Total users | 465,700 = 360,568 [3] + 105,132 [4] |
Total hosts | 110,707 = 107,029 [3] + 3,678 [4] |
Website | https://ithena.net |
iThena is a volunteer computing [5] project running on Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing (BOINC).
The goal of the iThena project is to model the infrastructure of networks of the global Internet as real as possible. This modelling can be done on many levels: routers, PoPs ( point of presence) and AS ( autonomous systems). The model may have characteristics such as latency, bandwidth, packet loss and others.
The first initiated test activity of the iThena project took place on August 29, 2019. First official message about the project was sent September 26, 2019 [7].
On September 10, 2020 the iThena project was placed on the official BOINC project list [6] of the University of California, Berkeley. On September 11, 2020, David Anderson publishes "Welcome iThena" news on the official BOINC forum [8].
The name of the project to the word cluster: iThena = Internet + Athena. The word Internet defines the global network infrastructure and the information it contains. The word Athena has a standard genesis that refers to Greek mythology and defines the crowds of knowledge, wisdom and prudence.
The main architect and system administrator is Lukasz Swierczewski, who was previously the administrator of many other large scale systems (e.g. OProject@Home [9]). He graduated from Lomza State University of Applied Sciences in Łomża ( Engineer's degree [10]), Maria Curie-Skłodowska University in Lublin ( Master's degree [11]) and National Defence University of Warsaw ( Postgraduate education). Computer scientist [12] and programmer supporting open-source software initiatives. Previously mainly programmer in the area of high performance computing systems (HPC) and supercomputers. A member of the Polish Mathematical Society.
Currently, the project is developed by the Cyber-Complex Foundation [13] [14] (place of institution registration: Europe/ Poland). The Foundation is also registered as a publisher with the National Library of Poland [15] [16] [17]. The Digital Library of the National Library of Poland and the general-purpose open-access repository Zenodo [18] make available the open datasets that result from the iThena project.
Historically, the predecessor of iThena is DIMES. DIMES analysed the topology of the Internet. CAIDA (Center for Applied Internet Data Analysis) and RIPE Atlas also has a great contribution to the mapping of the network structure.
The project has an experimental and research character. iThena in its area is largely consistent with MASINT (Measurement and Signature Intelligence) - intelligence, which is the analysis of data and information obtained through distributed measurement systems in order to determine all characteristics and other information about the recognized object. However, in this case, the project activity space is cyberspace.
The BOINC clients applications that are launched mapping the network structure of the Internet. The iThena applications [19] in the initial phase of the project are only in NCI (CPU Non-Intensive) mode. They do not make much use of computing resources ( CPU time, RAM memory). However, the computer network traffic can be used to a much greater extent. iThena NCI applications map and/or check the availability of individual network nodes using generally known and legal technologies (e.g. ping, traceroute, Iperf, OWAMP [20] [21]). The data obtained under the iThena project comes from open sources to a key extent. The whole open society of Internet users (including BOINC users) contributes to the implementation and development of the system. The data aggregated within the project will be partially classified as open and made available under an open licenses.
On the basis of data aggregated in the system it is possible to detect network anomalies. This area contains anomalies concerning manipulation of data transmission routes [22] - IP Hijack Attacks and other issues.
It is planned to use distributed nodes for typical computing tasks. By 24 April 2020, iThena has made about 250 billion distributed measurements. Project statistics are available, among others, in Free-DC [23] and BOINCStats [24] [25] services.
Although the iThena Project currently mainly implements distributed network measurements, there are modules that are typically computational. A subsystem using OpenHPC technology is such a module. The High-performance computing cluster (installation type: Research) of the Cyber-Complex Foundation was officially registered on March 19, 2021 [26]. The computing modules are an integral part of the whole system and are fed by measurement data.
The
neutrality of this section is
disputed. |
Information about the project is available in many information resources of many communities (including BOINC teams): seti-germany.de [27], bc-team.org [28], and others. A directory page for the project and other resources related to this project is also available in the official CAIDA resource catalog [29].
An Australian programmer, technologist, blockchain expert Delta described in an article [30] on Steemit the measurement principle implemented by the iThena distributed system.
In the Polish magazine Forum Akademickie No. 5/2020 [31] dealing with research and higher education issues an article was published describing the problems of the iThena project research area. The content of the entire issue of the magazine is available in Polish for free (PDF [32] or online website [33]).The official information about free access to the article was published in September 2020 [34]
A talk entitled "iThena Project: Distributed measurements and analysis of the global Internet – BOINC (Berkeley Open Infrastructure for Network Computing) and Big Data environment" [35] [36] was presented at the LVEE 2020 Winter Edition conference on December 19, 2020.
The project has been mentioned several times on BOINC Radio [37]. Sample broadcast: BOINC Radio - BOINC Network EPISODE 3, 29th January 2021: Sensor Projects [38] [39] and others [40] [41] [42]. On October 24, 2022, an entire radio episode [43] [44] was dedicated to the iThena project.
In the Polish magazine Nowoczesna Myśl Narodowa [45] (ang. Modern National Thought) No. 4-5 December 2020 - January 2021 an interview [46] with Lukasz Swierczewski appeared. The interview was conducted independently by the journal's Editorial Board. This interview also touched on the distributed and global iThena project. The creator of the project also mentioned other initiatives related to this project.
Part of the International Open Data Day initiative was an event: "Open.Data HowFaster.NET: Open Internet network measurement datasets" [47]. The event was held on March 6, 2021, and presented the open data available from the HowFaster.NET project, which is the result of network measurements obtained from the iThena project.
The iThena project is rapidly growing with open-source and advanced Kernel-based Virtual Machine / OS-level virtualization ( LXC) environments. The website of major virtualization technology developer Proxmox mentions the iThena project story [48] [49]
As of early 2022, the iThena project is classified as a marathon in Formula BOINC competition [50]
As of Q3 2021, the iThena project is integrated into the Open Observatory of Network Interference platform and implements distributed censorship measurements over the Internet [51]. The iThena platform regularly performs measurements on censorship surveys and transfers the analysis results to the OONI systems.
Statistics on the iThena project are also officially, regularly published in the National Library of Poland. The information is stored digitally and on optical media also in the form of legal deposit copies at the National Library and the Jagiellonian Library.
Sub-Project name | Period | ISBN data |
---|---|---|
iThena.Measurements | March 5, 2022 to April 1, 2022 | 978-83-960621-4-7 [52] |
iThena.Measurements | April 1, 2022 to April 27, 2022 | 978-83-960621-5-4 [53] |
iThena.Measurements | April 27, 2022 to May 25, 2022 | 978-83-67414-01-2 [54] |
iThena.Measurements | May 25, 2022 to June 15, 2022 | 978-83-67414-03-6 [55] |
iThena.Measurements | June 16, 2022 to July 8, 2022 | 978-83-67414-04-3 [56] |
iThena.Computational | May 1, 2021 to June 1, 2022 | 978-83-960621-6-1 [57] |
Category:Science in society Category:Free science software Category:Distributed computing architecture Category:Middleware Category:Volunteer computing Category:Free entertainment software Category:Computing-related lists Category:Computer surveillance Category:Computer security Category:Computer network security Category:Network performance Category:Network architecture Category:Telecommunications engineering Category:Network service Category:Decentralization
-
in-depth (not just brief mentions about the subject or routine announcements)
-
reliable
-
secondary
-
strictly independent of the subject
Make sure you add references that meet all four of these criteria before resubmitting. Learn about mistakes to avoid when addressing this issue. If no additional references exist, the subject is not suitable for Wikipedia.