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- QUESTIONS-AND-ANSWERS 1/21/92
-
- Internet Society Q/A
-
-
- Date: Wed, 27 Nov 91 20:01:47 -0500
- Subject: More on the Internet Society
- From: Vint Cerf <vcerf@nri.reston.va.us>
-
- Let me try to offer a little perspective on the Internet Society objectives,
- organizational interests, and the Internet community. Your reactions would
- be most welcome.
-
- First, there has been a growing sense that the millions of people who are
- involved with the Internet on a daily basis form a new kind of community
- which has not really existed on such a large scale before. The diversity
- of this community is quite remarkable. There are people who carry out
- computer and communications research together with people who make products
- or sell communications services vital to Internet opreation and people who
- simply apply the technology and services to their problems. The Internet
- Society, as a professional membership organization for individuals, is
- intended to give some context for all these people who share a common
- interest: the health, well-being and continued growth and evolution of
- the Internet.
-
- We hope that the Society will offer opportunities to provide educational
- experiences for people new to the system and interested in learning what
- can be done with it. The annual conference gives us one means of sharing
- knowledge and enthusiasm for the Internet on an international basis, for
- example. We hope that the Newsletter will be another tool in that regard.
-
- The Society anticipates that it will integrate into its operation the
- IAB, IETF and IRTF functions, leaving them largely intact, but also
- imbuing them with additional support from the Internet Society
- Secretariat. Forming a real organization also makes it easier for
- the IAB to establish formal liaison with other national or international
- standards bodies.
-
- It is also expected that the Internet Society will try to stimulate
- new applications for the Internet and provide its members with information
- about new ways to participate in the life of the community. For example,
- several national and international disaster relief coordination groups
- have chosen to use the Internet for communications services. Perhaps
- Internet Society members will be able to volunteer to assist such groups.
-
- There are some important infrastructure functions which the Society
- will undertake to support - directly or indirectly. For instance,
- the block allocation of IP address space to delegated network and host
- registries (one of the Internet Assigned Number Authority functions);
- the assignment of domain name space allocation responsibilities;
- publication of RFCs (the RFC Editor will continue to function as
- part of the IAB which, in turn, will be a part of the Internet Society
- organization. The Society will also work with organizations such as
- the CERT at the Software Engineering Institute and the FIRST group
- (international security response teams) to help Internet users
- organize their systems to provide better network and host security.
-
- The Society is also expected to function as the Internet Certificate
- Authority (ICA) which will register Policy Certificate Authorities
- for Privacy Enhanced Mail (PEM).
-
- These various functions, in addition to newsletters, journals,
- conferences and standards activities, are benefits to individual
- and to corporate members. In the latter case, growth of the
- Society serves to increase the potential market for Internet
- products and services.
-
- Finally, it is hoped that the Internet Society can become a
- catalyst for the spread of multiprotocol internetworking -
- particularly in connection with the introduction and spread
- of OSI-protocols and services adjacent to the existing and
- widely-used TCP/IP offerings.
-
- I hope this brief response is helpful to you, but please feel
- free to raise additional questions or observations; your input
- is valued.
-
- Vint Cerf
-