Network Working Group                          Internet Activities Board
Request for Comments: 1262                   Vinton G. Cerf/CNRI, Editor
                                                           October 1991


            Guidelines for Internet Measurement Activities


Status of this Memo

  This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does
  not specify an Internet standard.  Distribution of this memo is
  unlimited.

Summary

  Measurement of the Internet is critical for future development,
  evolution and deployment planning.  Internet-wide activities have the
  potential to interfere with normal operation and must be planned with
  care and made widely known beforehand.  This document offers guidance
  to researchers planning Internet measurements.

  This RFC represents IAB guidance for researchers considering
  measurement experiments on the Internet.  This RFC does not represent
  a standard for the Internet but the Internet Activities Board
  strongly urges that Internet users follow the guidelines out of
  courtesy and professional consideration for the Internet community.

Guidelines

  The Internet has undergone dramatic growth in connectivity, use, and
  quality of service over the past several years.  As this growth
  continues and the Internet is used for increasingly diverse and
  demanding purposes, it is vital to collect data about a range of
  functions, from low-level packet switching services to considerations
  for the networking expectations of individual applications.  Such
  data is vital to research and engineering planning activities, as
  well as to ensure the continued development of the operational
  infrastructure.  Yet, it is also important that data collection
  activities do not interfere with the operational viability and
  stability of the network, and do not violate considerations regarding
  privacy, security, and acceptable use policies of the network.  In
  this light, the Internet Activities Board offers the following basic
  guidelines for network measurement activities.

  In general, any data collection activity should be undertaken with
  professional consideration of its impact on the services and users of
  the network, and activities should be planned to achieve operational



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RFC 1262                 Measurement Guidelines             October 1991


  or research goals with minimal impact.  In some cases, data may be
  collected continuously, for example to measure packet counts or the
  distribution of use of specific applications.  In other cases, the
  planned investigations will be too demanding to be undertaken
  continuously, because of the intensity of effort required by the
  researcher or the traffic load on the underlying network
  infrastructure.  Any data collection activity should be designed with
  careful consideration of this type of issue, and should be tested
  thoroughly before being deployed on the Internet.  Any individual
  initiating a network measurement activity should alert the relevant
  service providers using mechanisms such as bulletin boards, mailing
  lists and individual mail communications.

  Furthermore, the data being collected must not be gathered using
  break-ins to network systems or other illegal or unethical
  techniques.  If a measurement activity might be construed as a
  possible security intrusion, the researcher should make it easy for a
  system administrator at a remote site to determine that the activity
  is not a break in attempt, by informing the CERT, making information
  about the study easily available by anonymous FTP or other means
  [1,2,3].

  More specifically, an individual attempting a network measurement
  activity should ensure that the following conditions are met:

    1) the data collected will not violate privacy, security, or
       acceptable use concerns,

    2) if the aggregated data has a potential for privacy intrusions,
       the researcher must protect privacy, for example by limiting
       published statistics in such a fashion that individual users or
       institutions are not identified,

    3) if the data collection activity may be construed to be a
       security violation, the researchers are strongly advised to
       inform the CERT in advance, and, if applicable, request some
       guidance,

    4) the data collection does not unduly load or otherwise interfere
       with the network or attached machines, in particular, if at all
       feasible, non-invasive measurement, like passive monitoring,
       should be considered as the first choice,

    5) if there is an operational impact, the service providers must be
       contacted,

    6) the study goals, methodology, and plans are widely available, in
       a fashion that requires minimal effort to locate and retrieve,



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RFC 1262                 Measurement Guidelines             October 1991


       and

    7) if the activity would impose undue burden on a remote machine or
       network, the measurements should not be performed without prior
       explicit permission.

References

    [1] Internet Activities Board, "Ethics and the Internet", RFC-1087,
        January 1989.

    [2] Holbrook, P., and J. Reynolds, (Eds.), "Site Security
        Handbook", RFC-1244, FYI-8, CICnet and USC Information Sciences
        Institute, July 1991.

    [3] Computer Emergency Response Team/Coordination Center (CERT/CC),
        Software Engineering Institute, Carnegie Mellon University,
        Pittsburgh, PA 15213-3890, Internet E-mail:
        [email protected], Telephone: 412-268-7090 24-hour hotline.

Security Considerations

  The body of this memo does discuss security issues related to network
  measurement, particularly the potential confusion of benign
  measurement with hostile security attacks.

Author's Address

  Vinton G. Cerf
  Chair of the IAB
  Corporation for National Research Initiatives
  1895 Preston White Drive, Suite 100
  Reston, VA 22091

  1-703-620-8990

  [email protected]














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