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- ISOC-ANNOUNCEMENT 1/27/92
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- The Internet Society
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- Abstract
-
- The purpose of this document is to provide a brief description of the Internet
- Society and its goals and objectives. It will function as a professional
- society to facilitate, support and promote the evolution and growth of the
- Internet as a global research communications infrastructure. The suggestions
- and recommendations of all parties interested in the Internet are solicited to
- assist in making the Internet Society robust, productive and structured to meet
- the needs of its members.
-
-
- The Internet Society
-
- The Internet, is a collection of cooperating, interconnected, multiprotocol
- networks which supports international collaboration among thousands of
- organizations. Because of its current scope and rapid rate of growth, the
- Internet will benefit from a more organized framework to support its
- objectives. To this end, an Internet Society is being formed to foster the
- voluntary interconnection of computer networks into a global research and
- development communications and information infrastructure. The Internet Society
- will not operate the Internet. Internet operation will continue to be a
- collaborative activity which the Society will seek to facilitate. The Society
- will provide assistance and support to groups and organizations involved in the
- use, operation and evolution of the Internet. It will provide support for
- forums in which technical and operational questions can be discussed and
- provide mechanisms through which interested parties can be informed and
- educated about the Internet, its function, use, operation and the interests of
- its constituents.
-
-
- Membership
-
- The Internet Society will be a membership organization with voting individual
- members and non-voting institutional members. There will be several classes of
- institutional members. The society will produce a newsletter on a regular basis
- and hold an annual meeting to which all members and other interested parties
- will be invited. The topics of the annual meeting will vary, but are expected
- to focus on current research in networking, Internet functionality and growth,
- and other interests of the Society constituency. All members will receive the
- newsletter and an invitation to attend the annual meeting of the Internet
- Society.
-
- Membership dues will vary according to class of membership. The amounts of
- these dues and the basis on which they are set will be determined by the Board
- of Trustees of the Society and may be revised from time to time as set forth in
- the By-Laws.
-
- Charter
-
- The Society will be a non-profit organization and will be operated for
- academic, educational, charitable and scientific purposes among which are:
-
- A. To facilitate and support the technical
- evolution of the Internet as a research and
- education infrastructure and to stimulate
- involvement of the academic, scientific and
- engineering communities, among others in the
- evolution of the Internet.
-
- B. To educate the academic and scientific
- communities and the public concerning the
- technology, use and application of the
- Internet.
-
- C. To promote scientific and educational
- applications of Internet technology for the
- benefit of educational institutions at all grade
- levels, industry and the public at large.
-
- D. To provide a forum for exploration of new
- Internet applications and to foster
- collaboration among organizations in their
- operation and use of the Internet.
-
-
- Activities of the Society
-
- a. Support for Internet Technical Evolution
-
- The Internet Activities Board (IAB) has been concerned with the development and
- evolution of architectures supporting the use of multiple protocols in a
- networked environment. The Internet Society will incorporate the IAB and its
- functions into the operation of the Internet Society. The Internet Society
- will work with other interested organizations to support and assist efforts to
- evolve the multiprotocol Internet. The Internet Society will use the Internet
- Engineering and Research Task Forces to stimulate networking research and
- facilitate the evolution of the TCP/IP protocol suite and the integration of
- new protocol suites (e.g. OSI) into the Internet architecture. The Internet
- Society will work actively with parties and organizations interested in
- fostering improvement in the utility of the Internet for its constituent users.
-
- b. Meetings and Conferences
-
- Internet Society will convene an annual meeting and will organize and
- facilitate workshops and symposia, jointly with other organizations where
- appropriate, on specific topics of interest to the Society membership. The
- annual meeting will address issues of global and regional importance to the
- evolution and growth of the Internet. In particular, future INET conferences
- will be incorporated into the Society's annual meetings.
-
- c. Information and Infrastructure Services
-
- The Internet Society will publish an Internet Newsletter providing members with
- information about the international activities of Internet constituents. In
- addition, the Society will also provide assistance to and support for
- organizations responsible for maintaining the databases crucial to Internet
- function (e.g. the Domain Name System, X.500 Directory Services, etc.) and
- organizations concerned with the security of the Internet (e.g. the Software
- Engineering Institute Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT) and its
- CERT-System). The Society will assist in the development of educational,
- advisory and informative materials of use to Society members. Where
- appropriate, the Society will organize or support activities which aid in the
- coordination among the organizations operating components of the Internet.
-
- The Society will refer members to appropriate parties involved in operating the
- various parts of the Internet where they may be helpful with specific
- questions. Where possible, the Society would seek to provide access to its
- information on-line, but would also offer hard copy and, perhaps eventually,
- CD-ROM-based information resources.
-
- Plans
-
- The initial organizers of the Internet Society include the Corporation for
- National Research Initiatives (CNRI), EDUCOM and the Internet Activities Board.
- During the six month period from June - December 1991, the organizers will work
- with interested parties to prepare for beginning operation of the Society by
- the end of 1991. Computer networking has become a critical infrastructure for
- the research and development community and has the potential to become the
- basis for world-wide collaboration and cooperation in every field of human
- endeavor. The Internet Society will seek to solidify, enhance and encourage
- further international collaborative networking. Individuals joining the
- Society during its formation will receive special recognition as Society
- pioneers and will have the opportunity to shape the early agenda of Society
- activities. Opportunities for organizational and institutional participation
- are also available.
-
- It is time. The technology is available. A global renaissance of scientific and
- technical cooperation is at hand. You are cordially invited to take part in an
- enterprise without precedent and an adventure without boundary. The Internet
- Society sets sail in January of 1992 on a voyage of internetwork discovery.
- Will you be aboard?
-
-
- APPENDIX
-
- A Brief History of the Internet and Related Networks
-
-
- Introduction
-
- In 1973, the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) initiated a
- research program to investigate techniques and technologies for interlinking
- packet networks of various kinds. The objective was to develop communication
- protocols which would allow networked computers to communicate transparently
- across multiple, linked packet networks. This was called the Internetting
- project and the system of networks which emerged from the research was known as
- the "Internet". The system of protocols which was developed over the course of
- this research effort became known as the TCP/IP Protocol Suite, after the two
- initial protocols developed: Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) and Internet
- Protocol (IP).
-
- In 1986, the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) initiated the development
- of the NSFNET which, today, provides a major backbone communication service for
- the Internet. With its 45 megabit per second facilities, the NSFNET carries on
- the order of 7 billion packets per month between the networks it links. The
- National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the U.S. Department of
- Energy contributed additional backbone facilities in the form of the NSINET and
- ESNET respectively. In Europe, major international backbones such as NORDUNET
- and others provide connectivity to tens of thousands of computers on a large
- number of networks. Commercial network providers in the U.S. and Europe are
- beginning to offer Internet backbone and access support on a competitive basis
- to any interested parties.
-
- "Regional" support for the Internet is provided by various consortium networks
- and "local" support is provided through each of the research and educational
- institutions. Within the United States, much of this support has come from the
- federal and state governments, but a considerable contribution has been made by
- industry. In Europe and elsewhere, support arises from cooperative
- international efforts and through national research organizations. During the
- course of its evolution, particularly after 1989, the Internet system began to
- integrate support for other protocol suites into its basic networking fabric.
- The present emphasis in the system is on multiprotocol interworking, and in
- particular, with the integration of the Open Systems Interconnection (OSI)
- protocols into the architecture.
-
- Both public domain and commercial implementations of the roughly 100 protocols
- of TCP/IP protocol suite became available in the 1980's. During the early
- 1990's, OSI protocol implementations also became available and, by the end of
- 1991, the Internet has grown to include some 5,000 networks in over three dozen
- countries, serving over 600,000 host computers used by as many as 4,000,000
- people.
-
- Much of the support for the Internet community has come from the U.S. Federal
- Government, since the Internet was originally part of a federally-funded
- research program and, subsequently, has become a major part of the U.S.
- research infrastructure. During the late 1980s, however, the population of
- Internet users and network constituents expanded internationally and began to
- include commercial facilities. Indeed, the bulk of the system today is made up
- of private networking facilities in educational and research institutions,
- businesses and in government organizations across the globe.
-
- The Coordinating Committee for Intercontinental Networks (CCIRN), which was
- organized by the U.S. Federal Networking Council (FNC) and the European Reseaux
- Associees pour la Recherche Europeenne (RARE), plays an important role in the
- coordination of plans for government- sponsored research networking. CCIRN
- efforts have been a stimulus for the support of international cooperation in
- the Internet environment.
-
-
- Internet Technical Evolution
-
- Over its fifteen year history, the Internet has functioned as a collaboration
- among cooperating parties. Certain key functions have been critical for its
- operation, not the least of which is the specification of the protocols by
- which the components of the system operate. These were originally developed in
- the DARPA research program mentioned above, but in the last five or six years,
- this work has been undertaken on a wider basis with support from Government
- agencies in many countries, industry and the academic community. The Internet
- Activities Board (IAB) was created in 1983 to guide the evolution of the TCP/IP
- Protocol Suite and to provide research advice to the Internet community.
-
- During the course of its existence, the IAB has reorganized several times. It
- now has two primary components: the Internet Engineering Task Force and the
- Internet Research Task Force. The former has primary responsibility for further
- evolution of the TCP/IP protocol suite, its standardization with the
- concurrence of the IAB, and the integration of other protocols into Internet
- operation (e.g. the Open Systems Interconnection protocols). The Internet
- Research Task Force continues to organize and explore advanced concepts in
- networking under the guidance of the Internet Activities Board and with support
- from various government agencies.
-
- A secretariat has been created to manage the day-to-day function of the
- Internet Activities Board and Internet Engineering Task Force. IETF meets three
- times a year in plenary and its approximately 50 working groups convene at
- intermediate times by electronic mail, teleconferencing and at face-to-face
- meetings. The IAB meets quarterly face- to-face or by videoconference and at
- intervening times by telephone, electronic mail and computer-mediated
- conferences.
-
- Two other functions are critical to IAB operation: publication of documents
- describing the Internet and the assignment and recording of various identifiers
- needed for protocol operation. Throughout the development of the Internet, its
- protocols and other aspects of its operation have been documented first in a
- series of documents called Internet Experiment Notes and, later, in a series of
- documents called Requests for Comment (RFCs). The latter were used initially to
- document the protocols of the first packet switching network developed by
- DARPA, the ARPANET, beginning in 1969, and have become the principal archive of
- information about the Internet. At present, the publication function is
- provided by an RFC editor.
-
- The recording of identifiers is provided by the Internet Assigned Numbers
- Authority (IANA) who has delegated one part of this responsibility to an
- Internet Registry which acts as a central repository for Internet information
- and which provides central allocation of network and autonomous system
- identifiers, in some cases to subsidiary registries located in various
- countries. The Internet Registry (IR) also provides central maintenance of the
- Domain Name System (DNS) root database which points to subsidiary distributed
- DNS servers replicated throughout the Internet. The DNS distributed database is
- used, inter alia, to associate host and network names with their Internet
- addresses and is critical to the operation of the higher level TCP/IP protocols
- including electronic mail.
-
- There are a number of Network Information Centers (NICs) located throughout the
- Internet to serve its users with documentation, guidance, advice and
- assistance. As the Internet continues to grow internationally, the need for
- high quality NIC functions increases. Although the initial community of users
- of the Internet were drawn from the ranks of computer science and engineering,
- its users now comprise a wide range of disciplines in the sciences, arts,
- letters, business, military and government administration.
-
- Related Networks
-
- In 1980-81, two other networking projects, BITNET and CSNET, were initiated.
- BITNET adopted the IBM RSCS protocol suite and featured direct leased line
- connections between participating sites. Most of the original BITNET
- connections linked IBM mainframes in university data centers. This rapidly
- changed as protocol implementations became available for other machines. From
- the beginning, BITNET has been multi-disciplinary in nature with users in all
- academic areas. It has also provided a number of unique services to its users
- (e.g., LISTSERV). Today, BITNET and its parallel networks in other parts of the
- world (e.g., EARN in Europe) have several thousand participating sites. In
- recent years, BITNET has established a backbone which uses the TCP/IP protocols
- with RSCS-based applications running above TCP.
-
- CSNET was initially funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) to provide
- networking for university, industry and government computer science research
- groups. CSNET used the Phonenet MMDF protocol for telephone-based electronic
- mail relaying and, in addition, pioneered the first use of TCP/IP over X.25
- using commercial public data networks. The CSNET name server provided an early
- example of a white pages directory service and is still in use at numerous
- sites. At its peak, CSNET had approximately 200 participating sites and
- international connections to approximately fifteen countries. Today, CSNET
- still provides services to a number of industrial sites and small colleges.
-
- In 1987, BITNET and CSNET merged to form the Corporation for Research and
- Educational Networking (CREN). A key feature of CREN and its predecessors is
- that they were entirely dependent on voluntary user fees; BITNET from the
- beginning and CSNET after the expiration of its initial five year NSF grant.
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