The paper the article references can be found here:

http://netlab.caltech.edu/pub/papers/Doyle-topology-PNAS-0508.pdf

I've several good discussions on this topic with David Alderson, one of the 
co-authors, and they understand this area as well as anyone.  The paper and 
their previous ones definately debunk that the Internet is not successfully 
descibed by the scale free model, but I still have not seen a refutation of the 
empirical work.  

Still need to read the latest paper, but their previous work was based on 
simulations of network structures, or samples of the Abeliene network.  While 
the SF model fails, I have not seen an argument to contracdict that when hub 
routers were failed on empirical (real world) data the network did not degrade 
gracefully. It could be that the data used to create the router network was 
flawed by various sampling techniques, a point David has made in the past, but 
have not seen an empirical study with "better" or "accurate" data from the 
whole Internet that refutes the earlier studies.  

I'd guess that the Cal Tech team makes the case the prior work was so flawed 
there is nothing to refute, and we are starting from zero and their 
approximations are a much cloesr starting point.  Still it would be interesting 
to have a real world accurate global router data set to test against.  This 
probably gets back to information sharing issues, but intersting paper.  Thanks 
for the link.

sean

----- Original Message -----
From: Sean Donelan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Tuesday, October 4, 2005 11:26 am
Subject: The Internet is not scale-free

> 
> 
> The Internet may not be as vulnerable to centralized attacks as 
> previouslysuggested, researchers in California reported Monday.
> 
> http://www.physorg.com/news6940.html
> 

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