Added: Apr 29, 2008 1:52 pm
The vision of a digital system that makes information readily
available to an individual has evolved from Vannevar Bush’s Memex concept to
the revolutionary realities of the World Wide Web and millions of smaller
digital collections. Today, search
engines can recall thousands of potentially relevant documents in milliseconds
from digital storehouses that swell by petabytes each year. Preserving, securing, analyzing, and accessing
the contents of this digital ocean is essential to national security, commerce,
and daily life. Current systems are
divided into those that provide a query or aggregation layer on top of variably
restricted and implemented systems, and those that serve the specialized needs
of an enterprise, group, or individual. Major
challenges still exist in creating systems that can secure, organize,
characterize, search, and distribute digital information, in its many
encapsulations, across a unified framework. In many ways, the management of digital
information is still where computer systems were before the invention of
internetworking.
For military organizations, secure access to resilient,
reliable information is absolutely essential as it can be, literally, a matter
of life and death. Military operations
involve a multitude of networks and systems operating under various degrees of
duress, with a wide variety of information needs, objectives, and constraints.
In order to further explore these areas, the Defense
Advanced Research Projects Agency’s (DARPA) Information Processing Techniques
Office (IPTO) invites submission of whitepapers from all those engaged in
related research activities. In
addition, a DARPA-sponsored workshop has been planned for 15-16 July 2008 in Northern Virginia, for the purpose of reviewing on-going
research in the implementation of distributed, resilient, and secure, digital
object storage and retrieval (including analysis, query, and dissemination). Information presented at the DOSR workshop
will contribute to the formulation of future areas of DARPA research, such as
creating a prototype system capable of experimental deployment in an
incompletely trusted network.
Authors may be invited to present related work and on-going
research activities associated with digital object storage and retrieval
including:
· Secure, survivable, storage networks
· Object persistence by fragmentation, coding, and
replication
· Automated metadata extraction from unstructured
and semi-structured information
· Location and replication of objects near likely
users by means of adaptive user models
· Personalization of content
· Targeting of information to specific groups and
individuals based on interests, objectives, authorization, and constraints
· Secure peer-to-peer distribution of information
· Scalable, distributed digital security
· Scalable, secure, federated search
· Search of encrypted indexes
· Information consistency maintenance in
distributed, replicated, storage networks
· Decentralized, secure, self-configuring routing
· Resolution of object identifiers into the
address(es) of the most available copy.
· Reliable, persistent identification of unique
digital objects and variants
· Secure and shareable versioned objects
· Provenance
and tracking of objects
Please note that space
for the workshop is limited and attendance will be by invitation only. Invitations will be based on white papers submitted
by the candidate authors, per the instructions below, no later than 1200 (Noon)
ET, 23 May 2008. These white papers should
briefly summarize approaches, and not exceed 5 pages, including figures. Accepted authors will be notified via email by
15 June 2008 and will be invited to provide a 15 minute unclassified,
non-proprietary presentation, with five minutes for questions. No expenses will
be paid to the participants.
INSTRUCTIONS TO RESPONDENTS
DARPA appreciates responses from all capable and qualified
sources, including but not limited to, universities, university affiliated
research centers, federally-funded research centers, private or public
companies, and Government research laboratories. DARPA will employ an electronic upload system
for responses to this RFI. To respond to
the DOSR RFI, interested parties must complete an online cover sheet for each
white paper response, which will include the information outlined below. To do so, candidate authors must go to https://csc-ballston.com/rfi/rfiindex.asp?RFIid=08-33 and follow the instructions there.
Upon completion of the online cover sheet, a confirmation
screen will appear, along with instructions on uploading the white paper. All white paper submissions must be formatted
in either Microsoft Word or Adobe PDF.
Since candidate
authors may encounter heavy traffic on the web server, they SHOULD NOT wait
until the day submissions are due to fill out a coversheet and submit the white
paper!
DARPA will acknowledge receipt of submissions via email.
White papers should adhere to the following formatting and
outline instructions:
- Page format
specifications include: 12 point font, single spaced, single-sided, 8.5 by
11 inches paper, with 1-inch margins. All white papers must be written in English. All submissions must be formatted in either
Microsoft Word or Adobe PDF. NO
PROPRIETARY OR CLASSIFIED INFORMATION SHOULD BE INCLUDED IN THE RFI
RESPONSE.
- Cover
Page (1 page)
- Title;
- Organization;
- Responder’s
technical and administrative points of contact (names, addresses, phones
and fax numbers, and email addresses);
- Topic
area(s) addressed (chosen from bulleted list above); and
- Indication
of willingness to attend the Workshop.
- Technical
Ideas (up to 5 pages)
- Executive
summary;
- A
discussion of the capability/challenge addressed (from your perspective);
- Technical
Response - Your discussion should address the following: What is your proposed innovative
technology/concept? How does it
address the specific capability/challenge in Distributed Object Storage
and Retrieval? What is the current
capability versus the desired capability? What extensions or advances are needed to achieve the Distributed
Object Storage and Retrieval vision?; and
- Brief
summary of any relevant experience in Distributed Object Storage and
Retrieval implementations.
- An
optional list of citations, including URLs, if available. (1 page)
Candidate authors are encouraged to be as succinct as
possible while at the same time providing insight.
DISCLAIMERS AND IMPORTANT NOTES
This is an RFI issued solely for information and possible new
program planning purposes; the RFI and workshop do not constitute a formal
solicitation for proposals or abstracts. In accordance with FAR 15.201(e), responses to this notice are not
offers and cannot be accepted by the Government to form a binding contract. Submission of a white paper, and/or
attendance at the workshop, is voluntary and is not required to propose to
subsequent Broad Agency Announcements (if any) or research solicitations (if
any) on this topic. DARPA will not
provide reimbursement for costs incurred in responding to this RFI or
participating in the RFI workshop. NO
PROPRIETARY OR CLASSIFIED INFORMATION SHOULD BE INCLUDED IN THE RFI
RESPONSE. Candidate authors are advised
that DARPA is under no obligation to provide feedback to candidate authors with
respect to any information submitted under this RFI.
Submissions may be reviewed by: the Government (DARPA and
partners); Federally Funded R&D; Centers (such as MIT Lincoln Laboratory);
and Systems Engineering and Technical Assistance (SETA) contractors (such as
Schafer Corporation, Science and Technology Associates, CACI International, and
System Analysis, Inc.).
POINT OF CONTACT
Dr. Joshua Alspector, IPTO Program Manager, DARPA, Email SN08-33@darpa.mil. ANY INQUIRIES ON THIS
RFI AND/OR WORKSHOP MUST BE SUBMITTED TO SN08-33@darpa.mil. NO TELEPHONE INQUIRIES WILL BE ACCEPTED.