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Date
2022-06-10Type
- Conference Paper
ETH Bibliography
yes
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Abstract
Today, the ICT industry has a massive carbon footprint (a few percent of the worldwide emissions) and one of the fastest growth rates. The Internet accounts for a large part of that footprint while being also energy inefficient; i.e., the total energy cost per byte transmitted is very high. Thankfully, there are many ways to improve on the current status; we discuss two relatively unexplored directions in this paper. Putting network devices to “sleep,” i.e., turning them off, is known to be an efficient vector to save energy; we argue that harvesting this potential requires new routing protocols, better suited to devices switching on/off often, and revising the cor- responding hardware/software co-design. Moreover, we can reduce the embodied carbon footprint by using networking hardware longer, and we argue that this could even be benefi- cial for reliability! We sketch our first ideas in these directions and outline practical challenges that we (as a community) need to address to make the Internet more sustainable. Show more
Publication status
publishedExternal links
Publisher
University of California, Center for Networked SystemsEvent
Organisational unit
09477 - Vanbever, Laurent / Vanbever, Laurent
Related publications and datasets
Is part of: https://hotcarbon.org/program/
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ETH Bibliography
yes
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