This article may be confusing or unclear to readers. (November 2015) |
A federation is a group of computing or network providers agreeing upon standards of operation in a collective fashion.
The term may be used when describing the inter-operation of two distinct, formerly disconnected, telecommunications networks that may have different internal structures.[1] The term "federated cloud" refers to facilitating the interconnection of two or more geographically separate computing clouds.[2]
The term may also be used when groups attempt to delegate collective authority of development to prevent fragmentation.
In a telecommunication interconnection, the internal modi operandi of the different systems are irrelevant to the existence of a federation.
Joining two distinct networks:
Collective authority:
In networking systems, to be federated implies when an authority or filtering mechanism allows means users are able to send messages from one network to the other.[citation needed] This is not the same as having a client that can operate with both networks, but interacts with both independently. For example, in 2009, Google allowed GMail users to log into their AOL Instant Messenger (AIM) accounts from GMail. One could not send messages from GTalk accounts or XMPP (which Google/GTalk is federated with—XMPP lingo for federation is s2s, which Facebook and MSN Live's implementations do not support[4]) to AIM screen names, nor vice versa.[5] In May 2011, AIM and Gmail federated, allowing users of each network to add and communicate with each other.
Unfortunately it seems the features exposed by their XMPP server are really limited, just like Facebook's XMPP.