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- Network Working Working Group B. Kahin, Editor
- Request for Comments: 1192 Harvard
- November 1990
-
-
- Commercialization of the Internet
- Summary Report
-
- Status of this Memo
-
- This memo is based on a workshop held by the Science, Technology and
- Public Policy Program of the John F. Kennedy School of Government,
- Harvard University, March 1-3, 1990.
-
- This memo provides information for the Internet community. It does
- not specify any standard. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
-
- Introduction
-
- "The networks of Stages 2 and 3 will be implemented and operated so
- that they can become commercialized; industry will then be able to
- supplant the government in supplying these network services." --
- Federal Research Internet Coordinating Committee, Program Plan for
- the National Research and Education Network, May 23, 1989, pp. 4-5.
-
- "The NREN should be the prototype of a new national information
- infrastructure which could be available to every home, office and
- factory. Wherever information is used, from manufacturing to high-
- definition home video entertainment, and most particularly in
- education, the country will benefit from deployment of this
- technology.... The corresponding ease of inter-computer
- communication will then provide the benefits associated with the NREN
- to the entire nation, improving the productivity of all information-
- handling activities. To achieve this end, the deployment of the
- Stage 3 NREN will include a specific, structured process resulting in
- transition of the network from a government operation a commercial
- service." -- Office of Science and Technology Policy, The Federal
- High Performance Computing Program, September 8, 1989, pp. 32, 35.
-
- "The National Science Foundation shall, in cooperation with the
- Department of Defense, the Department of Energy, the Department of
- Commerce, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and
- other appropriate agencies, provide for the establishment of a
- national multi-gigabit-per-second research and education computer
- network by 1996, to be known as the National Research and Education
- Network, which shall:
-
- (1) link government, industry, and the education
-
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- community;
- ....
- (6) be established in a manner which fosters and
- maintains competition and private sector investment in high
- speed data networking within the telecommunications
- industry;
- ....
- (8) be phased out when commercial networks can meet the
- networking needs of American researchers."
-
- -- S. 1067, 101st Congress, 2nd Session, as marked up April 3, 1990
- ["High-Performance Computing Act of 1990"], Title II, Section 201.
-
- Background
-
- This report is based on a workshop held at the John F. Kennedy School
- of Government, Harvard University March 1-3, 1990, by the Harvard
- Science, Technology and Public Policy Program. Sponsored by the
- National Science Foundation and the U.S. Congress Office of
- Technology Assessment, the workshop was designed to explore the
- issues involved in the commercialization of the Internet, including
- the envisioned National Research and Education Network (NREN).
- Rather than recapitulate the discussion at the workshop, this report
- attempts to synthesize the issues for the benefit of those not
- present at the workshop. It is intended for readers familiar with
- the general landscape of the Internet, the NSFNET, and proposals and
- plans for the NREN.
-
- At the workshop, Stephen Wolff, Director of the NSF Division of
- Networking and Communications Research and Infrastructure,
- distinguished "commercialization" and "privatization" on the basis of
- his experience developing policy for the NSFNET. He defined
- commercialization as permitting commercial users and providers to
- access and use Internet facilities and services and privatization as
- the elimination of the federal role in providing or subsidizing
- network services. In principle, privatization could be achieved by
- shifting the federal subsidy from network providers to users, thus
- spurring private sector investment in network services. Creation of
- a market for private vendors would in turn defuse concerns about
- acceptable use and commercialization.
-
- Commercialization and Privatization
-
- Commercialization. In the past, many companies were connected to the
- old ARPANET when it was entirely underwritten by the federal
- government. Now, corporate R&D facilities are already connected to,
- and are sometimes voting members of, mid-level networks. There are
- mail connections from the Internet to commercial services such as
-
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- MCIMAIL, SprintMail, and Compuserve. DASnet provides a commercial
- mail gateway to and from the Internet and commercial mail services.
- UUNET, a nonprofit corporation, markets TCP/IP services (Alternet)
- with access to the Internet as well as mail services. Performance
- Systems International (PSI), a startup company which now operates
- NYSERNET (the New York State regional network, partially funded by
- NSF) is aggressively marketing Internet-connected TCP/IP services on
- the East and West Coasts. RLG is selling access to its RLIN database
- over the Internet directly to end users. Other fee-based services
- include Clarinet, a private news filtering service, and FAST, a non-
- profit parts brokering service. However, in all these cases, any use
- of the NSFNET backbone must, in principle, support the "purpose of
- the NSFNET."
-
- Under the draft acceptable use policy in effect from 1988 to mid-
- 1990, use of the NSFNET backbone had to support the purpose of
- "scientific research and other scholarly activities." The interim
- policy promulgated in June 1990 is the same, except that the purpose
- of the NSFNET is now "to support research and education in and among
- academic institutions in the U.S. by access to unique resources and
- the opportunity for collaborative work." Despite this limitation,
- use of the NSFNET backbone has been growing at 15-20% per month or
- more, and there are regular requests for access by commercial
- services. Even though such services may, directly or indirectly,
- support the purposes of the NSFNET, they raise prospects of
- overburdening network resources and unfair competition with private
- providers of network services (notably the public X.25 packet-
- switched networks, such as SprintNet and Tymnet).
-
- Privatization. In some respects, the Internet is already
- substantially privatized. The physical circuits are owned by the
- private sector, and the logical networks are usually managed and
- operated by the private sector. The nonprofit regional networks of
- the NSFNET increasingly contract out routine operations, including
- network information centers, while retaining control of policy and
- planning functions. This helps develop expertise, resources, and
- competition in the private sector and so facilitates the development
- of similar commercial services.
-
- In the case of NSFNET, the annual federal investment covers only a
- minor part of the backbone and the regional networks. Although the
- NSFNET backbone is operated as a cooperative agreement between NSF
- and Merit, the Michigan higher education network, NSF contributes
- less than $3 million of approximately $10 million in annual costs.
- The State of Michigan Strategic Fund contributes $1 million and the
- balance is covered by contributed services from the subcontractors to
- Merit, IBM and MCI.
-
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- At the regional level, NSF provides approximately 40% of the
- operating costs of the mid-level networks it funds -- with the
- remainder covered by membership and connection fees, funding from
- state governments, and in-kind contributions. This calculation does
- not include a number of authorized networks (e.g., PREPnet, and,
- until recently, NEARnet and CERFnet) that receive no NSF funding.
- However, NSF also funds institutional connections to the NSFNET,
- which includes payments by the institution to the regional network.
- Other agencies (DOD, NASA, and DOE) have also funded some connections
- to NSFNET networks for the benefit of their respective research
- communities -- and have occasionally funded the networks directly.
-
- Finally, the campus-level networks at academic institutions probably
- represent a perhaps 7-10 times larger annual investment than the
- mid-level networks and the backbone together, yet there is no federal
- funding program at this level. Furthermore, since these local
- networks must ordinarily be built by the institution rather than
- leased, there is an additional capitalization cost incurred by the
- institutions, which, annualized and aggregated, is perhaps another
- 20-50 times the annual costs of the mid-level and backbone networks.
- (These figures are the roughest of estimates, intended only for
- illustration.)
-
- The NSFNET Backbone as a Free Good
-
- Whereas the NSF funding of mid-level networks varies greatly -- from
- 0% to 75% -- the backbone is available as a free good to the NSF-
- funded mid-level networks. It is also used free of charge by other
- authorized networks, including networks not considered part of
- NSFNET: CSNET, BITNET, UUNET, and PSI, as well as the research
- networks of other federal agencies. As noted, their use of the
- backbone is in principle limited to the support of academic research
- and education.
-
- Through their use of the NSFNET backbone, these networks appear to be
- enjoying a subsidy from NSF -- and from IBM, MCI, and the State of
- Michigan. BITNET and some agency networks even use the backbone for
- their internal traffic. Nonetheless, these other networks generally
- add value to NSFNET for NSFNET users and regional networks insofar as
- all networks benefit from access to each other's users and resources.
-
- However, small or startup networks generally bring in fewer network-
- based resources, so one side may benefit more than the other. To the
- extent that the mail traffic is predominantly mailing lists (or other
- information resources) originating on one network, questions of
- imbalance and implicit subsidy arise. For example, because of the
- mailing lists available without charge on the Internet, three times
- as much traffic runs over the mail gateway from the Internet to
-
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- MCIMAIL as from MCIMAIL to the Internet. This pattern is reinforced
- by the sender-pays fee structure of MCIMAIL, which discourages
- mailing list distribution from within MCIMAIL.
-
- The impact of such imbalances is not clear. For now, the capacity of
- the NSFNET backbone is staying ahead of demand: It jumped from 56
- Kbps to 1.544 Mbps (T-1) in 1988 and will go to 45 Mbps over the next
- year. But NSF is concerned about a possible recurrence of the
- congestion which drove users off the NSFNET prior to the 1988
- upgrade. Given the tripling of campus-level connections over the
- past year, continued growth in users at each site, the parade of new
- resources available over the network, and, especially, the
- development of high-bandwidth uses, there is reason to fear that
- demand may again overwhelm capacity.
-
- Offering the NSFNET backbone at no cost to authorized networks both
- encourages undisciplined use of the backbone and inhibits private
- investment in backbone networks. It constrains the development of a
- market for commercial TCP/IP services by diverting an established and
- rapidly growing user base to a subsidized resource. Charging NSFNET
- regionals and other mid-level networks for the use of the NSFNET
- backbone would resolve this problem, but this would impose a
- substantial cost burden on the mid-level networks, which would in
- turn have to raise membership and connection fees dramatically. To
- compensate, the NSF subsidy that now underwrites the backbone could
- be moved down the distribution chain to the users of the backbone --
- i.e., to the regional networks, to the campuses, or even to
- researchers themselves.
-
- Each option poses unique opportunities and problems. In theory, the
- further down the chain the subsidy is pushed, the more accountable
- providers will be to end-user needs. Funding in hands of researchers
- would make universities more responsive to researchers' networking
- needs. Funding in the hands of universities would in turn make
- regional networks more responsive and competitive. And funds for
- regional networks would spur a general market for backbone services.
- But the mechanisms for expressing user demand upward through these
- tiers are imperfect. And, from an administrative standpoint, it is
- easier for NSF to simply provide one free backbone to all comers --
- rather than deal with 25 mid-level networks, or 500 universities, or
- perhaps tens or hundreds of thousands of individual researchers.
-
- Option: Funding Researchers
-
- It would be possible to earmark funds for network services in agency
- research grants as a matter of course, so that no new administrative
- process would be required. But since network costs are presently not
- usage based, such funding will not readily translate into
-
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- identifiable services and may simply end up in local overhead
- accounts since few institutions allocate out costs of access to the
- Internet. The use of vouchers rather than cash add-ons might help
- ensure that federal resources are in fact applied to qualifying wide
- area network services -- and possibly avoid the imposition of
- standard institutional overhead on direct funding. However, if
- vouchers can be sold to other institutions, as economists would
- advocate in the interests of market efficiency, these advantages may
- be compromised. Even non-transferable vouchers may create a unique
- set of accounting problems for both funding agencies and
- institutional recipients.
-
- A federal subsidy channeled automatically to research grants could
- substantially limit or segregate the user community. It would tend
- to divide the academic community by exacerbating obvious divisions
- between the resource-rich and resource-poor -- between federally
- funded researchers and other researchers, between scientists and
- faculty in other disciplines, and between research and education.
- Within the academic community, there is considerable sentiment for
- providing basic network services out of institutional overhead to
- faculty and researchers in all disciplines, at least as long as basic
- services remain unmetered and relatively low at the institutional
- level. Of course, special costing and funding may well make sense
- for high-bandwidth usage-sensitive network services (such as remote
- imaging) as they become available in the future.
-
- Option: Funding Institutions
-
- Alternatively, funding for external network services, whether in the
- form of cash or vouchers, could be provided directly to institutions
- without linking it directly to federal research funding. As it is,
- institutions may apply for one-time grants to connect to regional
- networks, and these are awarded based on peer assessment of a number
- of different factors, not just the quality of the institution's
- research. But redirecting the subsidy of the backbone could provide
- regular support at the institutional level in ways that need not
- involve peer review. For example, annual funding might be tied to
- the number of PhD candidates within specific disciplines -- or to all
- degrees awarded in science. Geographic location could be factored in
- -- as could financial need. This, of course, would amount to an
- entitlement program, a rarity for NSF. Nonetheless, it would allow
- institutions to make decisions based on their own needs -- without
- putting NSF in the position of judging among competing networks,
- nonprofit and for-profit.
-
- There are, however, questions about what sort of services the
- earmarked funding or vouchers could be used for. Could they be used
- to pay the institution's BITNET fee? Or a SprintNet bill? Or to
-
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- acquire modems? For information services? And, if so, what sort?
- Such questions force the funding agency to assume a kind of
- regulatory in an environment where competing equities, demonstrated
- need, technological foresight, and politics must be constantly
- weighed and juggled.
-
- Option: Funding Regional Networks
-
- Shifting the subsidy to the regional networks is appealing in that it
- appears to be the least radical alternative and would only require
- allocating funds among some two dozen contenders. Since most of the
- regional networks are already receiving federal funding, it would be
- relatively simple to tack on funds for the purchase of backbone
- services. However, providing additional funding at this level
- highlights the problem of competition among mid-level networks.
-
- Although most regional networks are to some degree creatures of NSF,
- funded to ensure the national reach of NSFNET, they do not hold
- exclusive geographic franchises, and in some areas, there is
- competition between regionals for members/customers. NSF grants to
- regional networks, by their very size, have an effect of unleveling
- the playing field among regionals and distorting competitive
- strengths and weaknesses.
-
- Alternet and PSI further complicate the picture, since there is no
- clear basis for NSF or other agencies to discriminate against them.
- The presence of these privately funded providers (and the possibility
- of others) raises difficult questions about what network services the
- government should be funding: What needs is the market now capable of
- meeting? And where will it continue to fail?
-
- Experience with regulation of the voice network shows that it is
- inefficient to subsidize local residential service for everybody. If
- one is concerned about people dropping off the voice network -- or
- institutions not getting on the Internet -- the answer is to identify
- and subsidize those who really need help. The market-driven
- suppliers of TCP/IP-based Internet connectivity are naturally going
- after those markets which can be wired at a low cost per institution,
- i.e., large metropolitan areas, especially those with a high
- concentration of R&D facilities, such as Boston, San Francisco, and
- Washington, DC. In the voice environment, this kind of targeted
- marketing by unregulated companies is widely recognized as cream-
- skimming.
-
- Like fully regulated voice common carriers (i.e., the local exchange
- carriers), the non-profit NSF-funded regional networks are expected
- to serve all institutions within a large geographic area. In areas
- with few R&D facilities, this will normally result in a
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- disproportionately large investment in leased lines. Either remote
- institutions must pay for the leased line to the nearest network
- point of presence -- or the network must include the leased line as
- part of common costs. If the regional network assumes such costs, it
- will not be price-competitive with other more compact networks.
-
- Accordingly, a subsidy redirected to the regional networks could be
- keyed to the density of the network. This might be calculated by
- number of circuit miles per member institution or some form of
- aggregate institutional size, figured for either the network as a
- whole or for a defined subregion. This subsidy could be available to
- both for-profit and non-profit networks, but only certain non-profit
- networks would meet the density requirement, presumably those most in
- need of help.
-
- Increasing the Value of the Connection
-
- The principal advantage in underwriting the backbone is that it
- provides a evenhanded, universal benefit that does not involve NSF in
- choosing among competing networks. By increasing the value of
- belonging to a regional network, the backbone offers all attached
- networks a continuing annual subsidy commensurate with their size.
-
- Increased value can also derived from access to complementary
- resources -- supercomputer cycles, databases, electronic newsletters,
- special instruments, etc. -- over the network. Like direct funding
- of backbone, funding these resources would induce more institutions
- to join regional networks and to upgrade their connections. For
- example, where a database already exists, mounting it on the network
- can be a very cost-effective investment, increasing the value of the
- network as well as directly benefiting the users of the database.
-
- Commercial information services (e.g., Dialog, Orbit, Lexis) may
- serve this function well since they represents resources already
- available without any public investment. Marketing commercial
- services to universities over the Internet is permissible in that it
- supports academic research and education (although the guidelines
- state that such commercial uses "should be reviewed on a case-by-case
- basis" by NSF).
-
- But to date there has been remarkably little use of the regional
- networks, let alone the NSFNET backbone, to deliver commercial
- information services. In part, this is because the commercial
- services are unaware of the opportunities or unsure how to market in
- this environment and are concerned about losing control of their
- product. It is also due to uneasiness within the regional networks
- about usage policies and reluctance to compete directly with public
- packet-switched networks. However, for weak regional networks, it
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- may be necessary to involve commercial services in order to attract
- and hold sufficient membership -- at least if NSF subsidies are
- withdrawn. Without a critical mass of users, commercialization may
- need to precede privatization.
-
- Impact of Removing NSF Subsidy from the Backbone
-
- Any shift to a less direct form of subsidy may cause some disocation
- and distress at the regional network level -- until the benefits
- begin to be felt. No regional network has yet folded, and no
- institution has permanently dropped its connection to a regional
- network as a consequence of higher prices, but concerns about the
- viability of some regionals would suggest that any withdrawal of
- subsidy proceed in phases.
-
- Moreover, as the NSF subsidy vanishes, the operation of the backbone
- becomes a private concern of Merit, the Michigan Strategic Fund, IBM,
- and MCI. While Merit and the Michigan Strategic Fund are more or
- less public enterprises within the state, they are essentially
- private entrepreneurs in the national operation of a backbone
- network. Without NSF's imprimatur and the leveraging federal funds,
- the remaining parties are much less likely to treat the backbone as a
- charity offering and may well look to recovering costs and using
- revenues to expand service.
-
- The backbone operation could conceivably become either a nonprofit or
- for-profit utility. While nonprofit status might be more appealing
- to the academic networking community now served by the backbone, it
- is not readily apparent how a broadly representative nonprofit
- corporation, or even a cooperative, could be constituted in a form
- its many heterogeneous users would embrace. A non-profit
- organization may also have difficulty financing rapid expansion of
- services. At the same time, the fact that it will compete with
- private suppliers may preclude recognition as a tax-exempt
- organization -- and so its ability to reinvest retained earnings.
-
- Operation of the backbone on a for-profit basis would attract private
- investment and could be conducted with relative efficiency. However,
- given the dominant position of the backbone, a for-profit operation
- could conceivably get entangled in complex antitrust, regulatory, and
- political struggles. A nonprofit organization is not immune from
- such risks, but to the extent its users are represented in policy-
- making, tensions are more likely to get expressed and resolved
- internally.
-
- The status of backbone or regional networks within the Internet is
- entirely separate from the question of whether network services are
- metered and charged on a usage basis. Confusion in this regard stems
-
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- from the fact that the low-speed public data networks (SprintNet,
- TymNet), which are sometimes seen as competitive to Internet
- services, do bill on a connect-time basis. However, these commercial
- services use X.25 connection-based packet-switching -- rather than
- the connectionless (datagram) TCP/IP packet-switching used on the
- Internet. Internet services could conceivably be billed on per-
- packet basis, but the accounting overhead would be high and packets
- do not contain information about individual users. At bottom, this
- is a marketing issue, and there is no evidence of any market for
- metered services -- except possibly among very small users. The
- private suppliers, Alternet and PSI, both sell "pipes" not packets.
-
- Privatization by Function
-
- As an alternative approach to encouraging privatization, Dr. Wolff
- suggested barring mature services such as electronic mail from the
- subsidized network. In particular, NSF could bar the mail and news
- protocols, SMTP and NNTP, from the backbone and thereby encourage
- private providers to offer a national mail backbone connecting the
- regional networks. Implementation would not be trivial, but it would
- arguably help move the academic and research community toward the
- improved functionality of X.400 standards. It would also reduce
- traffic over the backbone by about 30% -- although given continued
- growth in traffic, this would only buy two months of time.
-
- If mail were moved off the regional networks as well as off the
- NSFNET backbone, this would relieve the more critical congestion
- problem within certain regions. But logistically, it would be more
- complicated since it would require diverting mail at perhaps a
- thousand institutional nodes rather than at one or two dozen regional
- nodes. Politically, it would be difficult because NSF has
- traditionally recognized the autonomy of the regional networks it has
- funded, and the networks have been free to adopt their own usage
- guidelines. And it would hurt the regional networks financially,
- especially the marginal networks most in need of NSF subsidies.
- Economies of scale are critical at the regional level, and the loss
- of mail would cause the networks to lose present and potential
- members.
-
- The National Research and Education Network
-
- The initiative for a National Research and Education Network (NREN)
- raises a broader set of policy issues because of the potentially much
- larger set of users and diverse expectations concerning the scope and
- purpose of the NREN. The decision to restyle what was originally
- described as a National Research Network to include education was an
- important political and strategic step. However, this move to a
- broader purpose and constituency has made it all the more difficult
-
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- to limit the community of potential users -- and, by extension, the
- market for commercial services. At the regional, and especially the
- state level, public networking initiatives may already encompass
- economic development, education at all levels, medical and public
- health services, and public libraries.
-
- The high bandwidth envisioned for the NREN suggests a growing
- distance between resource-intensive high-end uses and wide use of
- low-bandwidth services at low fixed prices. The different demands
- placed on network resources by different kinds of services will
- likely lead to more sophisticated pricing structures, including
- usage-based pricing for production-quality high-bandwidth services.
- The need to relate such prices to costs incurred will in turn
- facilitate comparison and interconnection with services provided by
- commercial vendors. This will happen first within and among
- metropolitan areas where diverse user needs, such as
- videoconferencing and medical imaging, combine to support the
- development of such services.
-
- As shown in Figures 1. and 2., the broadening of scope corresponds to
- a similar generalization of structure. The path begins with
- mission-specific research activity organized within a single
- computer. It ends with the development of a national or
- international infrastructure: a ubiquitous, orderly communications
- system that reflects and addresses all social needs and market
- demand, without being subject to artificial limitations on purpose or
- connection. There is naturally tension between retaining the
- benefits of specialization and exclusivity and seeking the benefits
- of resource-sharing and economies of scale and scope. But the
- development and growth of distributed computing and network
- technologies encourage fundamental structures to multiply and evolve
- as components of a generalized, heterogeneous infrastructure. And
- the vision driving the NREN is the aggregation and maturing of a
- seamless market for specialized information and computing resources
- in a common, negotiable environment. These resources have costs
- which are far greater than the NREN. But the NREN can minimize the
- costs of access and spread the costs of creation across the widest
- universe of users.
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- Figure 1. Generalization of Purpose:
-
- Discipline-Specific Research CSNET, HEPnet, MFEnet
-
- General Research early NSFNET, "NRN"
-
- Research and Education BITNET, present NSFNET,
- early "NREN"
-
- Quasi-Public many regional networks,
- "NREN"
-
- National Infrastructure "commercialized NREN"
-
- _______________________________________________________________
-
-
- Figure 2. Generalization of Structure:
-
- Computer time-sharing hosts
-
- Network early ARPANET
-
- Internetwork ESNET, NSFNET (tiered)
-
- Multiple Internetworks present Internet
-
- Infrastructure "NREN"
-
-
- Workshop Participants
-
- Rick Adams, UUNET
- Eric Aupperle, Merit
- Stanley Besen, RAND Corporation
- Lewis Branscomb, Harvard University
- Yale Braunstein, University of California, Berkeley
- Charles Brownstein, National Science Foundation
- Deborah Estrin, University of Southern California
- David Farber, University of Pennsylvania
- Darleen Fisher, National Science Foundation
- Thomas Fletcher, Harvard University
- Kenneth Flamm, Brookings Institution
- Lisa Heinz, U.S. Congress Office of Technology Assessment
- Fred Howlett, AT&T
- Brian Kahin, Harvard University
- Robert Kahn, Corporation for National Research Initiatives
- Kenneth King, EDUCOM
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- Kenneth Klingenstein, University of Colorado
- Joel Maloff, CICNet
- Bruce McConnell, Office of Management and Budget
- Jerry Mechling, Harvard University
- James Michalko, Research Libraries Group
- Elizabeth Miller, U.S. Congress Office of Technology Assessment
- Eli Noam, New York State Public Service Commission
- Eric Nussbaum, Bellcore
- Peter O'Neil, Digital Equipment Corporation
- Robert Powers, MCI
- Charla Rath, National Telecommunications and Information
- Administration, Department of Commerce
- Ira Richer, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
- William Schrader, Performance Systems International
- Howard Webber, Digital Equipment Corporation
- Allan Weis, IBM
- Stephen Wolff, National Science Foundation
-
- Security Considerations
-
- Security issues are not discussed in this memo.
-
- Author's Address
-
- Brian Kahin
- Director, Information Infrastructure Project
- Science, Technology & Public Program
- John F. Kennedy School of Government
- Harvard University
-
- Phone: 617-495-8903
-
- EMail: kahin@hulaw.harvard.edu
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