The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #74156 Message #1291336
Posted By: Amos
07-Oct-04 - 11:31 AM
Thread Name: BS: The Internet is 35 Years Old
Subject: RE: BS: The Internet is 35 Years Old
More interesting background from Peter J. Denning:
The four of us (Landweber, Farber, Hearn, and I) proposed CSNET in 1980 because the ARPANET was closed and the few universities connected were pulling way ahead of the others in terms of research capability and contribution. We proposed CSNET as a technology clone of ARPANET that would bring the functionality to the entire CS research community. At the time the ARPANET was closed, to about 180 DoD contractor nodes, a handful of which were universities.
The NSF wanted to help but was very cautious. They insisted that we be set up within the umbrellaship of UCAR, because they wanted CSNET to become self supporting within 5 years and UCAR had experience making university consortia work. We were funded for $5M for 5 years with this mandate. By 1985 we had achieved the primary goal of connecting all 120 CS PhD departments and industry labs. We had a governance structure that was self supporting. We created and provided several technologies to make the network usable for the community: Phonenet (based on MMDF and SMTP) that exchanged email by phone dialup; Telenet, a version of TCP/IP that ran over X.25 on GTE Telenet, thus providing the ARPANET protocols to those willing to pay the bill; a nameserver; and a bridge to the ARPANET. We negotiated two key deals between ARPA and NSF: (1) A policy statement that declared NSF grantees within the CSNET to be authorized users of ARPANET facilities; and (2) A policy statement that allowed commercial companies such as IBM and HP to put traffic on CSNET (and hence on ARPANET). These were the key policy statements that opened up the network to non-DOD and to commercial members.
By 1985, the success of CSNET was quite visible within the NSF communities. Many others started asking NSF to provide networking for them as well -- connecting the supercomputing centers and giving them network access to them and to each other. NSF responded by creating committees to help it create and implement NSFNET. These committees were initially populated by alumni of the CSNET project. The NSFNET backbone became the Internet backbone and ... well, "the rest is history". Thus CSNET was a critical driver in helping NSF get into the networking area and making the transition to the modern Internet. Without CSNET, the modern Internet would not have developed, at least not in the way it did.
Curiously, with NSFNET, NSF abandoned its insistence that the research community pay for its own networking. A generation of graduate students grew up thinking networking is free and ought to be free, an attitude that has become part of the spam problem.
So ... please put CSNET into your story book.
CS==Computer Science/Computational Science TCP/IP are two protocols (ways of forming data from bits) that govern Internet transactions. SMTP is a protocol for mail transactions. NSF is the National Science Foundation. DoD is the Department of Defense. HP is Hewlett-Packard (company) IBM is International Business Machines (company) GTE TELNET was a commercial network run by General Telephone Equipment company via phone lines.