Future Internet Congestion Control: The Diminishing Feedback Problem
Michael Welzl, Peyman Teymoori, Safiqul Islam, David Hutchison, Stein, Gjessing

TL;DR
The paper discusses the increasing difficulty of obtaining feedback for Internet congestion control, proposing a shift from end-to-end mechanisms towards more flexible, context-aware solutions to improve performance in the evolving Internet landscape.
Contribution
It advocates for moving away from strict end-to-end congestion control towards more adaptable, context-specific mechanisms to address feedback limitations in future Internet architectures.
Findings
Feedback challenges will worsen without fundamental changes
End-to-end control may be insufficient for future Internet needs
Proposes alternative congestion control strategies
Abstract
It is increasingly difficult for Internet congestion control mechanisms to obtain the feedback that they need. This lack of feedback can have severe performance implications, and it is bound to become worse. In the long run, the problem may only be fixable by fundamentally changing the way congestion control is done in the Internet. We substantiate this claim by looking at the evolution of the Internet's infrastructure over the past thirty years, and by examining the most common behavior of Internet traffic. Considering the goals that congestion control mechanisms are intended to address, and taking into account contextual developments in the Internet ecosystem, we arrive at conclusions and recommendations about possible future congestion control design directions. In particular, we argue that congestion control mechanisms should move away from their strict "end-to-end" adherence. This…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNetwork Traffic and Congestion Control · Internet Traffic Analysis and Secure E-voting · Software-Defined Networks and 5G
