Virtual private network/Related Articles
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- See also changes related to Virtual private network, or pages that link to Virtual private network or to this page or whose text contains "Virtual private network".
Parent topics
- Computer network [r]: A collection of computers or digital devices ("nodes") connected by communication links. [e]
- Internet [r]: International "network of networks" that connects computers together through the Internet Protocol Suite and supports applications like Email and the World Wide Web. [e]
Subtopics
Implementation models
{{r|Extranet}
- Intranet [r]: A set of networked computers, under one administration, which can only communicate with one another. [e]
Technologies
- FreeSWAN [r]: A Linux implementation of the IPsec protocols, intended to make wholesale monitoring of the Internet impossible. [e]
- IPsec [r]: Internet Protocl security is a set of protocols for providing encryption and/or authentication services for Internet packets. [e]
Operational VPNs
- JWICS [r]: Add brief definition or description
- NIPRNET [r]: Add brief definition or description
- SIPRNET [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Cloud computing [r]: Use of computer networks, especially the Internet, to access computer resources, operated by a third party; access is on-demand and dynamically assigned — cloud computing differs from managed hosting with resources dedicated to users [e]
Bot-suggested topics
Auto-populated based on Special:WhatLinksHere/Virtual private network. Needs checking by a human.
- Application Service Provider [r]: An organization that offers host computers, leased or user-owned, with a high-availability infrastructure and the ability to support actual applications rather than connectivity to them. [e]
- Asynchronous Transfer Mode [r]: A technology for the transfer of fixed-length "cells" of digital information through specialized cell switches built on top of optical transmission networks; increasingly obsolescent [e]
- BGP community [r]: One or more 16- or 32-bit fields that accompany an address advertised by the Border Gateway Protocol, describing some administrative aspect of the address, such as membership in a group of routes or instructions on how widely the recipient should readvertise it [e]
- Bandwidth [r]: In engineering, the length between two cut-off frequencies, as measured in hertz. [e]
- Domain Name System security [r]: A set of extensions to the Domain Name System to protect it from security threats known at the time [e]
- Frame relay [r]: A layer 2 digital data transmission system, used for low to medium speed permanent connection in the wide area, and beginning to be replaced by MPLS [e]
- Information assurance [r]: The combination of computer security, communications security, auditing and administrative controls such as physical security and personnel security clearances [e]
- Internet Protocol version 6 laboratory [r]: An example of a testing and learning facility for familiarization with Internet Protocol version 6 [e]
- Internet Protocol [r]: Highly resilient protocol for messages sent across the internet, first by being broken into smaller packets (each with the endpoint address attached), then moving among many mid-points by unpredictable routes, and finally being reassembled into the original message at the endpoint. IP version 4 (IPv4) is from 1980 but lacked enough addresses for the entire world and was superseded by IP version 6 (IPv6) in 1998. [e]
- Internet Service Provider [r]: A business, or possibly an internal support organization, that manages connectivity among end user workstations, local area networks, servers, and the public Internet using Internet Protocol version 4, Internet Protocol version 6, or both. [e]
- Man-in-the-middle attack [r]: An attack on a communications system in which the attacker deceives the communicating parties so they both talk to him while believing they are talking to each other. [e]
- Middlebox [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Multihoming [r]: A wide range of techniques for providing multiple communications paths among logical or physical points in computer networks, primarily for fault tolerance but also for load distribution or traffic engineering [e]
- Open Shortest Path First [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Routing policy [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Small and home office [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Telemetry [r]: Add brief definition or description