On ensuring continuity of mobile communications in a disaster environment


Autoria(s): Ring, Jared W.; Foo, Ernest; Looi, Mark
Data(s)

2007

Resumo

Natural disasters and deliberate, willful damage to telecommunication infrastructure can result in a loss of critical voice and data services. This loss of service hinders the ability for efficient emergency response and can cause delays leading to loss of life. Current mobile devices are generally tied to one network operator. When a disaster is of significant impact, that network operator cannot be relied upon to provide service and coverage levels that would normally exist. While some operators have agreements with other operators to share resources (such as network roaming) these agreements are contractual in nature and cannot be activated quickly in an emergency. This paper introduces Fourth Generation (4G) wireless networks. 4G networks are highly mobile and heterogeneous, which makes 4G networks highly resilient in times of disaster.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/32383/

Publicador

The Research Network for a Secure Australia (RNSA)

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/32383/1/c32383.pdf

http://www.secureaustralia.org/NewsAndEvents/doc/2007/RNSA_Security_Technology_Proceedings_2007.pdf

Ring, Jared W., Foo, Ernest, & Looi, Mark (2007) On ensuring continuity of mobile communications in a disaster environment. In Research Network for a Secure Australia : Security Technology Conference, The Research Network for a Secure Australia (RNSA), Melbourne, pp. 268-278.

Direitos

Copyright 2007 Australian Homeland Security Research Centre and the Authors

Fonte

Computer Science; Faculty of Science and Technology; Information Security Institute

Palavras-Chave #080503 Networking and Communications #080502 Mobile Technologies
Tipo

Conference Paper