Press Release
Johns Hopkins APL’s Dutta Inducted Into ‘New Internet’ Hall of Fame
Ashutosh Dutta, an engineer and computer scientist specializing in mobile networks and security, has been inducted into the New Internet Protocol version 6 Hall of Fame, the IPv6 Forum announced in December. Dutta was recognized for his leadership in the worldwide deployment of the next-generation protocol needed to support the global growth of the internet and improve its operation and security.
Dutta is chief 5G strategist at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland, and also serves as director of the Doctor of Engineering program at the Johns Hopkins Whiting School of Engineering and associate research professor at the Johns Hopkins Institute of Assured Autonomy.
The IPv6 Forum’s Hall of Fame recognizes the “experts and evangelists who have made extraordinary contributions” to the new protocol’s design and deployment. First deployed in 1996, version 6 provides the address infrastructure for connecting billions more devices and mobile phones, and offers improvements over IPv4, including auto-configuration, mobility, security and automation.
Over the past two decades, Dutta has been one of IPv6’s most prolific proponents, most notably in leadership roles in two professional societies — IEEE, the world’s largest technical professional organization for engineers, and the Association for Computing Machinery, the world’s largest computing society. As an IEEE Fellow and founding co-chair of IEEE Future Networks and the IEEE Connecting the Unconnected initiative, he has significantly grown global professional networks and promoted knowledge sharing to advance mobile wireless networks and expand internet access.