Interactions with industry and standardization groups, e.g. through the M3S workshop organized by the project, identified the importance of operational support for in-network measurement in the face of Internet traffic using ubiquitous encryption. Respectively, the MAMI project provided input to relevant work in different standardization bodies such as the IETF (quic, taps, tavwg, tcpm, acme, tls), ETSI (NFV ISG, TC CYBER), GSMA, IEEE (ETI WG), as well as the IRTF (establishment and chairing of maprg and panrg). A large part of the project's standardization efforts is focused on on-going work in the IETF in order to support in-network measurement (in QUIC but also in tcpm and tsvwg), the development of new schemes for MTU discovery using UDP options (tsvwg) and IPv6 HBH option (6man), mechanisms to support low latency (tsvwg), support of short-term certificates (acme), and in-network state management e.g using a DTLS connection ID (tls). Further, the industrial partners have identified NFV and cloud-based services that can apply the project's results and finding on middlebox cooperation approaches. MAMI results are being considered for application to mobile edge and core as well as Software Defined Networking (SDN)-based network management approaches. The collaboration with industry associations like GSMA is an important argument for these activities, and the partners keep leveraging dissemination activities at industrial events, dissemination in form of white papers targeted at an industry audience, as well as social media to increase internal impact in business units as well as external impact in cooperation with other industry partners.
The project has also contributed to the wider research community through continuous publications, participation in conferences, workshops, an other events, as well as organization of multiple of such events, e.g. two MNM workshops, the RCM SIGCOMM tutorial, and a summer school. The academic partners have incorporated MAMI results in their research portfolios, used these results for advanced teaching, and involved students in the research work conducted in the project. The measurement tools developed by the project will be maintained beyond the end of the project, supporting the research community as a whole.