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Marcelo Bagnulo, First member of a Spanish Institution to be elected
to the Internet Architecture Board

February 8, 2013

Dr. Bagnulo is a young leading researcher on Internet routing, mobile services, transition from IPv4 to IPv6 and security. His appointment to the IAB is the consequence of his outstanding contribution to the work of the IETF, where he is the chair of two of its Working Groups (IETF WGs), namely, mext (Mobility EXTensions for IPv6) and CSI (Cryptogaphic generated addresses and Send maIntenance). Dr. Bagnulo has also headed the Huawei Laboratory at UC3M, which was set up with the objective of researching Multihoming in IPv6 and produce IETF specifications.

Bagnulo’s career in Electrical Engineering up to date is an exemplary form of interdisciplinary collaboration –research, academia, industry – which has yielded cutting-edge results in the field of networking with a profound impact on the future of the Internet. The breath of his accomplishments has lead him to participate in several European Research projects, such as the successfully concluded LONG, DAIDALOS, E-Next, 6LINK, RING, OneLab and currently, on Trilogy (Re-Architecting the Future Internet), financed by the European Commission under the Seventh Framework Programme (FP7). In addition, Bagnulo – who was awarded a PhD Suma Cum Laude in Telecommunication Technologies by UC3M in 2005 – is now PhD Supervisor of several of IMDEA Networks’ promising Research Assistants. Moreover, Bagnulo is the fourth research collaborator of IMDEA Networks to have been appointed to the IAB in recent years, the other three being members of its Scientific Council: Gonzalo Camarillo of Nomadic Labs Ericsson Research, Professor Jon Crowcroft of University of Cambridge and Professor Lixia Zhang of UCLA. Amongst previous members of the IAB we can also find Vint Cerf, widely acknowledged as “the father of the Internet”, who was awarded the “Príncipe de Asturias Prize to Scientific and Technical Investigation” (Premio Príncipe de Asturias de Investigación Científica y Técnica) in 2002 . The IETF’s Internet Standardization work operates thanks to the volunteer work of its members, although membership of the IAB is a distinction only acquired as a result of direct election by the scientific community of the IETF. The IETF develops and promotes Internet standards, in particular the standardization of the group of TPC/IP protocols. The IETF produces Requests for Comments (RFCs) which define the protocols amply used in the Internet today, from those that allow emails to transmission, location or domain names. The IAB conducts the arquitectural supervision of the work performed by the IETF.

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Photograph of Marcelo Bagnulo