[AfrICANN-discuss] So, who really did invent the Internet?

Anne-Rachel Inné annerachel at gmail.com
Tue Jul 24 22:47:52 SAST 2012


So, who really did invent the Internet?

http://www.latimes.com/business/money/la-mo-who-invented-internet-20120723,0,5052169.story
By Michael Hiltzik

July 23, 2012, 8:32 a.m.

Gordon Crovitz of the Wall Street
Journal<http://www.latimes.com/topic/arts-culture/mass-media/newspapers/the-wall-street-journal-PRDPER00035.topic>'s
editorial page reopens the ancient debate over who invented the Internet
with a column Monday <http://on.wsj.com/MSgjGd> calling out the notion that
it was the government as an "urban legend."

And while I'm gratified in a sense that he cites my book about Xerox
PARC, "Dealers
of Lightning,"<http://www.amazon.com/Dealers-Lightning-Xerox-PARC-Computer/dp/0887309895>to
support his case, it's my duty to point out that he's wrong. My book
bolsters, not contradicts, the argument that the Internet had its roots in
the ARPANet, a government project. So let's look at where Crovitz goes awry.

First, he quotes Robert Taylor, who funded the ARPANet as a top official at the
Pentagon<http://www.latimes.com/topic/unrest-conflicts-war/defense/the-pentagon-PLCUL00216.topic>'s
Advanced Research Projects Agency, or ARPA, as stating, "The Arpanet was
not an Internet. An Internet is a connection between two or more computer
networks." (Taylor eventually moved to Xerox's Palo Alto Research Center,
where he oversaw the invention of the personal computer, and continued
promoting research into networking.)

But Crovitz confuses AN internet with THE Internet. Taylor was citing a
technical definition of "internet" in his statement. But I know Bob Taylor,
Bob Taylor is a friend of mine, and I think I can say without fear of
contradiction that he fully endorses the idea as a point of personal pride
that the government-funded ARPANet was very much the precursor of the
Internet as we know it today. Nor was ARPA's support "modest," as Crovitz
contends. It was full-throated and total. Bob Taylor was the single most
important figure in the history of the Internet, and he holds that stature
because of his government role.

Crovitz then points out that TCP/IP, the fundamental communications
protocol of the Internet, was invented by Vinton Cerf (though he fails to
mention Cerf's partner, Robert Kahn). He points out that Tim Berners-Lee
"gets credit for hyperlinks."

Lots of problems here. Cerf and Kahn did develop TCP/IP--on a government
contract! And Berners-Lee doesn't get credit for hyperlinks--that belongs
to Doug Engelbart of Stanford Research Institute, who showed them off in a
legendary 1968 demo you can see here <http://bit.ly/SFkQ>. Berners-Lee
invented the World Wide Web--and he did so at CERN, a European
*government*consortium.

Cerf, by the way, wrote in 2009 that the ARPANet, on which he worked, "led,
ultimately, to the Internet."

As for Ethernet, which Bob Metcalfe and David Boggs invented at PARC (under
Taylor's watchful eye), that's by no means a precursor of the Internet, as
Crovitz contends. It was, and is, a protocol for interconnecting computers
and linking them to outside networks--such as the Internet. And Metcalfe
drew his inspiration for the technology from ALOHANet, an ARPA-funded
project at the University of Hawaii.

So the bottom line is that the Internet as we know it was indeed born as a
government project. In fact, without ARPA and Bob Taylor, it could not have
come into existence. Private enterprise had no interest in something so
visionary and complex, with questionable commercial opportunities. Indeed,
the private corporation that then owned monopoly control over America's
communications network, AT&T, fought tooth and nail against the ARPANet.
Luckily for us, a far-sighted government agency prevailed.

It's true that the Internet took off after it was privatized in 1995. But
to be privatized, first you have to be government-owned. It's another
testament to people often demeaned as "government bureaucrats" that they
saw that the moment had come to set their child free.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: https://lists.afrinic.net/pipermail/africann/attachments/20120724/100e788a/attachment-0001.htm


More information about the AfrICANN mailing list