From the Internet Mapping Project, a long term project to track the growth of the Internet and its subnetworks.

How this was made: At Bell Labs, Ches modified a hacker trick and sent a storm of IP packets out randomly across the network. Each packet was programmed to self-destruct after a delay, and when this happens, the packet failure notice reports back the path the packet took before it died. To visualize this sea of data, Ches applied place & route software from the semiconductor CAD industry to untangle the hairball of links and spread them out in a 2D map that humans can easily absorb. When this is done from within a corporate network, one can find security gaps and unknown network connections. (disclosure: we invested them when they spun out of Bell Labs)

Here is a gallery of Internet maps by Ches of Lumeta.

This technique can also see the network “lights go out” during wartime bombing raids.

12 responses to “organic growth”

  1. Interesting that you just posted this. I just saw Ches a few hours ago… he lost some weight recently.

  2. i love maps. especially these ones!

  3. Got any videos across time? Most of the maps are from pre-2000. It would be really interstesting to not only visualize the changing networks across time, but to pull out some information on the shifting of importance in the networks. I assume other parts of the world are increasing thier network demand since the baseline measurements (1998) faster than the US, is this supported by the maps?

    Got a key to the color coding?

  4. Fascinating. Thanks.

  5. ha…cool. Looks like a weirdo flower.

  6. All the world’s a petri dish… what an incredible visualization tool!

  7. Cool
    Spotted cosin doing stuff like that too..
    http://www.cosinproject.org/
    P.S- its really thrilling to watch stuff out here on this space 🙂

  8. great stuff. oddwick et eppie, yes, I always want the decode colors, and I will ask Ches if he has them (with many maps, the ISP/network keys add a lot of color, so to speak). You can see the organic growth of BBN vs. the fiber network of Sprint with nested stars… and the relative network isolation of AOL in the early days.

  9. oh.my.word.
    joyous!

  10. Hi there,

    thanks for making this photo creative content!

    We liked it so much, we used it in our online article:
    Local internet traffic in Venezuela: More efficiency or more State control?
    http://www.apc.org/en/node/9308/

    Lisa Cyr
    Communications, Media and Promotions Associate
    Adjointe aux communications, médias et promotions
    Equipo de communicación
    Association for Progressive Communications
    http://www.apc.org
    Skype/yahoo: lisac_apc

  11. Hi,
    I’ve used this image on a blog post: olnet.org/node/621
    Thanks
    Karen

Leave a Reply to Automatt Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *