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Identifying High Cardinality Internet Hosts
2009
IEEE INFOCOM 2009 - The 28th Conference on Computer Communications
The Internet host cardinality, defined as the number of distinct peers that an Internet host communicates with, is an important metric for profiling Internet hosts. Some example applications include behavior based network intrusion detection, p2p hosts identification, and server identification. However, due to the tremendous number of hosts in the Internet and high speed links, tracking the exact cardinality of each host is not feasible due to the limited memory and computation resource.
doi:10.1109/infcom.2009.5061990
dblp:conf/infocom/CaoJCBZ09
fatcat:t57os3j7lbg2zibvtkjzkkjlvy