Keeping DPI technology available to all
The computer network provides the bedrock of the modern world, and Deep Packet Inspection (DPI) has become a key element of service assurance and security. DPI is used to monitor and troubleshoot the health of both the network and the applications and services running over the network. DPI also continues to find new applications in cybersecurity, with examples including intrusion detection and prevention, web application firewalls, data loss prevention, and the detection and mitigation of malware activity such as reconnaissance, lateral movement, data staging, command and control connections and DDOS attacks.
The foundations of DPI were developed in the 1980’s and 1990’s, but this period of innovation has remained poorly documented because DPI was a niche technology at this time. As a result, many of the original DPI ideas have been rediscovered as DPI has found new application areas such as cybersecurity. The problem facing the industry is that some of these original ideas have been patented many years after they were already being used in DPI products. Such patents prevent companies from exploiting ideas and techniques that should now be free for everyone to use. More worryingly, some of these patents are being used by Patent Assertion Entities (PAEs) to threaten successful technology companies.
Deep Packet Inspection Applications
- Networking and application health monitoring
- Detection and mitigation of malware activity such as reconnaissance, lateral movement, data staging, command and control connections
- DDoS attack detection and mitigation
- Intrusion detection and prevention systems
- Web application firewall and data loss prevention functions
The purpose of the DPI Consortium is to bring to light and document the history of DPI technology and innovation for new generations. Not only will this help to enhance the quality of future patents, by ensuring they only protect inventions that are genuinely new and inventive, it will also help members of the Consortium to respond to attacks from PAEs seeking to benefit from people’s lack of knowledge about that history.

