 |
Hobbes'
Internet
Timeline |
v7.0
by
Robert H'obbes'
Zakon
Zakon Group LLC
- 1957
- USSR launches Sputnik, first artificial earth satellite. In
response, US forms the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA),
the following year, within the Department of Defense (DoD) to establish
US lead in science and technology applicable to the military (:amk:)
- 1961
- Leonard Kleinrock, MIT: "Information
Flow in Large Communication Nets" (May 31)
- First paper on packet-switching (PS) theory
- 1962
- J.C.R. Licklider & W. Clark, MIT: "On-Line
Man Computer Communication" (August)
- Galactic Network concept encompassing distributed social
interactions
- 1964
- Paul Baran, RAND: "On
Distributed Communications Networks"
- Packet-switching networks; no single outage point
- 1965
- ARPA sponsors study on "cooperative network of time-sharing
computers"
- TX-2 at MIT Lincoln Lab and AN/FSQ-32 at System Development
Corporation (Santa Monica, CA) are directly linked (without packet
switches) via a dedicated 1200bps phone line; Digital Equipment
Corporation (DEC) computer at ARPA later added to form "The
Experimental Network"
- 1966
- Lawrence G. Roberts, MIT: "Towards a Cooperative Network of Time-Shared
Computers" (October)
- 1967
- ARPANET design discussions held by Larry Roberts at ARPA IPTO PI
meeting in Ann Arbor, Michigan (April)
- ACM Symposium on Operating Systems
Principles in Gatlinburg, Tennessee (October)
- First design paper on ARPANET published by Larry Roberts: "Multiple
Computer Networks and Intercomputer Communication
- First meeting of the three independent packet network teams (RAND,
NPL, ARPA)
- National Physical Laboratory (NPL) in Middlesex, England develops
NPL Data Network under Donald Watts Davies who coins the term packet.
The NPL network, an experiment in packet-switching, used 768kbps lines
- 1968
- PS-network presented to the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA)
-
Request for quotation for ARPANET (29 Jul) sent out in August;
responses received in September
- University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) awarded Network
Measurement Center contract in October
- Bolt Beranek and Newman, Inc. (BBN) awarded Packet Switch contract
to build Interface Message Processors (IMPs)
- US Senator Edward Kennedy sends a congratulatory telegram to BBN for
its million-dollar ARPA contract to build the "Interfaith" Message
Processor, and thanking them for their ecumenical efforts
- Network Working Group (NWG), headed by Steve Crocker, loosely
organized to develop host level protocols for communication over the
ARPANET. (:vgc:)
- Tymnet built as part of Tymshare service (:vgc:)
- 1969
-
- ARPANET commissioned by DoD for research into networking
- Nodes are stood up as BBN builds each IMP [Honeywell DDP-516 mini
computer with 12K of memory]; AT&T provides 50kbps lines
- Node 1: UCLA (30 August, hooked up 2 September)
- Node 2: Stanford Research Institute (SRI) (1 October)
- Network Information Center (NIC)
- SDS940/Genie
- Doug Engelbart's project on "Augmentation of Human Intellect"
- Node 3: University of California Santa Barbara (UCSB) (1 November)
- Culler-Fried Interactive Mathematics
- IBM 360/75, OS/MVT
- Node 4: University of Utah (December)
- Graphics
- DEC PDP-10, Tenex
-
Diagram of the 4-node ARPAnet
- First Request for Comment (RFC): "Host
Software" by Steve Crocker (7 April)
- RFC 4: Network
Timetable
- First packets sent by Charley Kline at UCLA as he tried logging into
SRI. The first attempt resulted in the system crashing as the letter G
of LOGIN was entered. (October 29) [
Log entry ]
- Univ of Michigan, Michigan State and Wayne State Univ establish
X.25-based Merit network for students, faculty, alumni (:sw1:)
- 1970
- First publication of the original ARPANET Host-Host protocol: C.S.
Carr, S. Crocker, V.G. Cerf, "HOST-HOST Communication Protocol in the
ARPA Network," in AFIPS Proceedings of SJCC (:vgc:)
- First report on ARPANET at AFIPS: "Computer Network Development to
Achieve Resource Sharing" (March)
- ALOHAnet, the first packet radio network, developed by Norman
Abramson, Univ of Hawaii, becomes operational (July) (:sk2:)
- connected to the ARPANET in 1972
- ARPANET hosts start using Network Control Protocol (NCP), first host-to-host
protocol
- First cross-country link installed by AT&T between UCLA and BBN at
56kbps. This line is later replaced by another between BBN and RAND. A
second line is added between MIT and Utah
- 1971
- 15 nodes (23 hosts): UCLA, SRI, UCSB, Univ of Utah, BBN, MIT, RAND,
SDC, Harvard, Lincoln Lab, Stanford, UIU(C), CWRU, CMU, NASA/Ames
- BBN starts building IMPs using the cheaper Honeywell 316. IMPs
however are limited to 4 host connections, and so BBN develops a
terminal IMP (TIP) that supports up to 64 terminals (September)
- Ray Tomlinson of BBN invents email program to send messages across a
distributed network. The original program was derived from two others:
an intra-machine email program (SENDMSG) and an experimental file
transfer program (CPYNET) (:amk:irh:)
- Project Gutenberg is started by Michael Hart with the purpose of
making copyright-free works, including books, electronically available.
The first text is the US Declaration of Independence (:dhr,msh:)
- 1972
- Ray Tomlinson (BBN) modifies email program for ARPANET where it
becomes a quick hit. The @ sign was chosen from the punctuation keys on
Tomlinson's Model 33 Teletype for its "at" meaning (March)
- Larry Roberts writes first email management program (RD) to list,
selectively read, file, forward, and respond to messages (July)
- International Conference on Computer Communications (ICCC) at the
Washington D.C. Hilton with demonstration of ARPANET between 40 machines
and the Terminal Interface Processor (TIP) organized by Bob Kahn. (October)
- First computer-to-computer chat takes place at UCLA, and is repeated
during ICCC, as psychotic PARRY (at Stanford) discusses its problems
with the Doctor (at BBN).
- International Network Working Group (INWG) formed in October as a
result of a meeting at ICCC identifying the need for a combined effort
in advancing networking technologies. Vint Cerf appointed first Chair.
By 1974, INWG became IFIP WG 6.1 (:vgc:)
- Louis Pouzin leads the French effort to build its own ARPANET -
CYCLADES
- RFC 318: Telnet
specification
- 1973
- First international connections to the ARPANET: University College
of London (England) via NORSAR
(Norway)
- Bob Metcalfe's Harvard PhD Thesis outlines idea for
Ethernet.
The concept was tested on Xerox PARC's Alto computers, and the first
Ethernet network called the Alto Aloha System (May) (:amk:)
- Bob Kahn poses Internet problem, starts Internetting research
program at ARPA. Vinton Cerf sketches gateway architecture in March on
back of envelope in a San Francisco hotel lobby (:vgc:)
- Cerf and Kahn present basic Internet ideas at INWG in September at
Univ of Sussex, Brighton, UK (:vgc:)
- RFC 454: File Transfer specification
- Network Voice Protocol (NVP) specification (RFC 741) and
implementation enabling conference calls over ARPAnet. (:bb1:)
- SRI (NIC) begins publishing ARPANET News in March; number of ARPANET
users estimated at 2,000
- ARPA study shows email composing 75% of all ARPANET traffic
- Christmas Day Lockup - Harvard IMP hardware problem leads it to
broadcast zero-length hops to any ARPANET destination, causing all other
IMPs to send their traffic to Harvard (25 December)
- RFC 527: ARPAWOCKY
- RFC 602: The
Stockings Were Hung by the Chimney with Care
- 1974
- Vint Cerf and Bob Kahn publish "A
Protocol for Packet Network Interconnection" which specified in
detail the design of a Transmission Control Program (TCP). [IEEE Trans
Comm] (:amk:)
- BBN opens Telenet, the first public packet data service (a
commercial version of ARPANET) (:sk2:)
- 1975
- Operational management of Internet transferred to DCA (now
DISA)
- First ARPANET mailing list,
MsgGroup, is created by Steve Walker. Einar Stefferud soon took over
as moderator as the list was not automated at first. A science fiction
list, SF-Lovers, was to become the most popular unofficial list in the
early days
- John Vittal develops MSG, the first all-inclusive email program
providing replying, forwarding, and filing capabilities.
- Satellite links cross two oceans (to Hawaii and UK) as the first TCP
tests are run over them by Stanford, BBN, and UCL
- "Jargon File", by
Raphael Finkel at SAIL, first released (:esr:)
- Shockwave Rider by John Brunner (:pds:)
- 1976
- Elizabeth II, Queen of the United Kingdom sends out an email on 26
March from the Royal Signals and Radar Establishment (RSRE) in Malvern
- UUCP (Unix-to-Unix CoPy) developed at AT&T Bell Labs and distributed
with UNIX one
year later.
- Multiprocessing Pluribus IMPs are deployed
- 1977
- THEORYNET created by Larry Landweber at Univ of Wisconsin providing
electronic mail to over 100 researchers in computer science (using a
locally developed email system over TELENET)
- RFC 733: Mail
specification
- Tymshare spins out Tymnet under pressure from TELENET. Both go on to
develop X.25 protocol standard for virtual circuit style packet
switching (:vgc:)
- First demonstration of ARPANET/SF Bay Packet Radio Net/Atlantic
SATNET operation of Internet protocols with BBN-supplied gateways in
July (:vgc:)
- 1978
- TCP split into TCP and IP (March)
- RFC 748: TELNET
RANDOMLY-LOSE Option
- 1979
- Meeting between Univ of Wisconsin, DARPA,
National Science Foundation (NSF), and
computer scientists from many universities to establish a Computer
Science Department research computer network (organized by Larry
Landweber).
- USENET established using UUCP between Duke and UNC by Tom Truscott,
Jim Ellis, and Steve Bellovin. All original groups were under net.*
hierarchy.
- First MUD, MUD1, by Richard Bartle and Roy Trubshaw at U of Essex
- ARPA establishes the Internet Configuration Control Board (ICCB)
- Packet Radio Network (PRNET) experiment starts with DARPA funding.
Most communications take place between mobile vans. ARPANET connection
via SRI.
- On April 12, Kevin MacKenzie emails the MsgGroup a suggestion of
adding some emotion back into the dry text medium of email, such as -)
for indicating a sentence was tongue-in-cheek. Though flamed by many at
the time, emoticons became widely used after Scott Fahlman suggested the
use of :-) and :-( in a CMU BBS on 19 September 1982
- 1980
- ARPANET grinds to a complete halt on 27 October because of an
accidentally-propagated status-message virus
- First C/30-based IMP at BBN
- 1981
- BITNET, the "Because
It's Time NETwork"
- Started as a cooperative network at the City University of New
York, with the first connection to Yale (:feg:)
- Original acronym stood for 'There' instead of 'Time' in reference
to the free NJE protocols provided with the IBM systems
- Provides electronic mail and listserv servers to distribute
information, as well as file transfers
- CSNET (Computer Science NETwork) built by a collaboration of
computer scientists and Univ of Delaware, Purdue Univ, Univ of Wisconsin,
RAND Corporation and BBN through seed money granted by NSF to provide
networking services (especially email) to university scientists with no
access to ARPANET. CSNET later becomes known as the Computer and Science
Network. (:amk,lhl:)
- C/30 IMPs predominate the network; first C/30 TIP at SAC
- Minitel (Teletel) is deployed across France by France Telecom.
- True Names by Vernor Vinge (:pds:)
- RFC 801: NCP/TCP
Transition Plan
- 1982
- Norway leaves network to become an Internet connection via TCP/IP
over SATNET; UCL does the same
- DCA and ARPA establish the Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) and
Internet Protocol (IP), as the protocol suite, commonly known as TCP/IP,
for ARPANET. (:vgc:)
- This leads to one of the first definitions of an "internet" as a
connected set of networks, specifically those using TCP/IP, and
"Internet" as connected TCP/IP internets.
- DoD declares TCP/IP suite to be standard for DoD (:vgc:)
- EUnet (European UNIX Network) is created by EUUG to provide email
and USENET services. (:glg:)
- original connections between the Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden, and
UK
- Exterior Gateway Protocol (RFC 827) specification. EGP is used for
gateways between networks.
- 1983
- Name server developed at Univ of Wisconsin, no longer requiring
users to know the exact path to other systems
- Cutover from NCP to TCP/IP (1 January)
- No more Honeywell or Pluribus IMPs; TIPs replaced by TACs (terminal
access controller)
- Stuttgart and Korea get connected
- Movement Information Net (MINET) started early in the year in Europe,
connected to Internet in Sept
- CSNET / ARPANET gateway put in place
- ARPANET split into ARPANET and MILNET; the latter became integrated
with the Defense Data Network created the previous year. 68 of the 113
existing nodes went to MILNET
- Desktop workstations come into being, many with Berkeley UNIX (4.2
BSD) which includes IP networking software (:mpc:)
- Networking needs switch from having a single, large time sharing
computer connected to the Internet at each site, to instead connecting
entire local networks
- Internet Activities Board (IAB)
established, replacing ICCB
- EARN (European Academic and Research Network) established. Very
similar to the way BITNET works with a gateway funded by IBM-Europe
- FidoNet developed by Tom Jennings
- 1984
- Domain Name System (DNS)
introduced
- Number of hosts breaks 1,000
- JUNET (Japan Unix Network) established using UUCP
- JANET (Joint Academic Network)
established in the UK using the Coloured Book protocols; previously
SERCnet
- Moderated newsgroups introduced on USENET (mod.*)
- Neuromancer by William Gibson
- Canada begins a one-year effort to network its universities. The
NetNorth Network is connected to BITNET in Ithaca from Toronto (:kf1:)
-
Kremvax message announcing USSR connectivity to USENET
- 1985
- Whole Earth 'Lectronic Link (WELL)
started
- Information Sciences Institute (ISI) at USC is given responsibility
for DNS root management by DCA, and SRI for DNS NIC registrations
- Symbolics.com is assigned on 15 March to become the first registered
domain. Other firsts: cmu.edu, purdue.edu, rice.edu, berkeley.edu,
ucla.edu, rutgers.edu, bbn.com (24 Apr); mit.edu (23 May); think.com (24
may); css.gov (June); mitre.org, .uk (July)
- 100 years to the day of the last spike being driven on the cross-Canada
railroad, the last Canadian university is connected to NetNorth in a one
year effort to have coast-to-coast connectivity. (:kf1:)
- RFC 968: 'Twas the
Night Before Start-up
- 1986
- NSFNET created (backbone speed of 56Kbps)
- NSF establishes 5 super-computing centers to provide high-computing
power for all (JVNC@Princeton, PSC@Pittsburgh, SDSC@UCSD, NCSA@UIUC,
Theory Center@Cornell).
- This allows an explosion of connections, especially from
universities.
- NSF-funded SDSCNET, JVNCNET, SURANET, and NYSERNET operational
(:sw1:)
- Internet
Engineering Task Force (IETF) and Internet Research Task Force (IRTF)
comes into existence under the IAB. First IETF meeting held in January
at Linkabit in San Diego
- The first Freenet (Cleveland) comes on-line 16 July under the
auspices of the Society for Public Access Computing (SoPAC). Later
Freenet program management assumed by the National Public Telecomputing
Network (NPTN) in 1989 (:sk2,rab:)
- Network News Transfer Protocol (NNTP)
designed to enhance Usenet news performance over TCP/IP.
- Mail Exchanger (MX) records developed by Craig Partridge allow non-IP
network hosts to have domain addresses.
- The great USENET name change; moderated newsgroups changed in 1987.
- BARRNET (Bay Area Regional Research Network) established using high
speed links. Operational in 1987.
- New England gets cut off from the Net as AT&T suffers a fiber optics
cable break between Newark/NJ and White Plains/NY. Yes, all seven New
England ARPANET trunk lines were in the one severed cable. Outage took
place between 1:11 and 12:11 EST on 12 December
- 1987
- NSF signs a cooperative agreement to manage the NSFNET backbone with
Merit Network, Inc. (IBM and MCI
involvement was through an agreement with Merit). Merit, IBM, and MCI
later founded ANS.
- UUNET is founded with Usenix funds
to provide commercial UUCP and Usenet access. Originally an experiment
by Rick Adams and Mike O'Dell
- First TCP/IP Interoperability Conference (March), name changed in
1988 to INTEROP
- Email link established between Germany and China using CSNET
protocols, with the first message from China sent on 20 September.
(:wz1:)
- The concept and plan for a national US research and education
network is proposed by Gordon Bell et al in a report to the Office of
Science and Technology, written in response to a congressional request
by Al Gore. (Nov) It would take four years until the establishment of
this network by Congress (:gb1:)
- 1000th RFC: "Request
For Comments reference guide"
- Number of hosts breaks 10,000
- Number of BITNET hosts breaks 1,000
- 1988
- 2 November -
Internet worm burrows through the Net, affecting ~6,000 of the
60,000 hosts on the Internet (:ph1:)
- CERT (Computer Emergency Response
Team) formed by DARPA in response to the needs exhibited during the
Morris worm incident. The worm is the only advisory issued this year.
- DoD chooses to adopt OSI and sees use of TCP/IP as an interim. US
Government OSI Profile (GOSIP) defines the set of protocols to be
supported by Government purchased products (:gck:)
- Los Nettos network created with no federal funding, instead
supported by regional members (founding: Caltech, TIS, UCLA, USC, ISI).
- NSFNET backbone upgraded to T1 (1.544Mbps)
- CERFnet (California Education and Research Federation network)
founded by Susan Estrada.
- Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) established in December
with Jon Postel as its Director. Postel was also the RFC Editor and US
Domain registrar for many years.
- Internet Relay Chat (IRC) developed by Jarkko Oikarinen (:zby:)
- First Canadian regionals join NSFNET: ONet via Cornell, RISQ via
Princeton, BCnet via Univ of Washington (:ec1:)
- FidoNet gets connected to the Net, enabling the exchange of email
and news (:tp1:)
- The first multicast tunnel is established between Stanford and BBN
in the Summer of 1988.
- Countries connecting to NSFNET: Canada (CA), Denmark (DK), Finland (FI),
France (FR), Iceland (IS), Norway (NO), Sweden (SE)
- 1989
- Number of hosts breaks 100,000
- RIPE (Reseaux IP Europeens)
formed (by European service providers) to ensure the necessary
administrative and technical coordination to allow the operation of the
pan-European IP Network. (:glg:)
- First relays between a commercial electronic mail carrier and the
Internet: MCI Mail through the Corporation for the National Research
Initiative (CNRI), and CompuServe through Ohio State Univ (:jg1,ph1:)
- Corporation for Research and Education Networking (CREN)
is formed by merging CSNET into BITNET (August)
- AARNET - Australian Academic Research Network - set up by AVCC and
CSIRO; introduced into service the following year (:gmc:)
- First link between Australia and NSFNET via Hawaii on 23 June.
Australia had been limited to USENET access since the early 1980s
- Cuckoo's Egg by Clifford Stoll tells the real-life tale of a German
cracker group who infiltrated numerous US facilities
- UCLA sponsors the Act One symposium to celebrate ARPANET's 20th
anniversary and its decommissioning (August)
- RFC 1121: Act One -
The Poems
- RFC 1097: TELNET
SUBLIMINAL-MESSAGE Option
- Countries connecting to NSFNET: Australia (AU), Germany (DE), Israel
(IL), Italy (IT), Japan (JP), Mexico (MX), Netherlands (NL), New Zealand
(NZ), Puerto Rico (PR), United Kingdom (UK)
- 1990
- ARPANET ceases to exist
- Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF)
is founded by Mitch Kapor
- Archie released by Peter Deutsch, Alan Emtage, and Bill Heelan at
McGill
- Hytelnet released by Peter Scott (Univ of Saskatchewan)
- The World comes on-line (world.std.com), becoming the first
commercial provider of Internet dial-up access
- ISO Development Environment (ISODE) developed to provide an approach
for OSI migration for the DoD. ISODE software allows OSI application to
operate over TCP/IP (:gck:)
- CA*net formed by 10 regional networks as national Canadian backbone
with direct connection to NSFNET (:ec1:)
- The first remotely operated machine to be hooked up to the Internet,
the Internet Toaster by John Romkey, (controlled via SNMP) makes its
debut at Interop.
- RFC 1149: A Standard
for the Transmission of IP Datagrams on Avian Carriers.
Implementation is
completed 11 years later by the Bergen Linux Users Group (28 Apr 2001)
- RFC 1178: Choosing a
Name for Your Computer
- Countries connecting to NSFNET: Argentina (AR), Austria (AT),
Belgium (BE), Brazil (BR), Chile (CL), Greece (GR), India (IN), Ireland
(IE), Korea (KR), Spain (ES), Switzerland (CH)
- 1991
- First connection takes place between Brazil, by
Fapesp, and the Internet at 9600
baud.
- Commercial Internet eXchange (CIX) Association, Inc. formed by
General Atomics (CERFnet), Performance Systems International, Inc. (PSInet),
and UUNET Technologies, Inc. (AlterNet), after NSF lifts restrictions on
the commercial use of the Net (March) (:glg:)
- Wide Area Information Servers (WAIS), invented by Brewster Kahle,
released by Thinking Machines Corporation
- Gopher released by Paul Lindner and Mark P. McCahill from the Univ
of Minnesota
- World-Wide Web (WWW)
released by CERN; Tim Berners-Lee
developer (:pb1:). First Web server is nxoc01.cern.ch, launched in Nov
1990 and later renamed info.cern.ch.
- PGP (Pretty Good Privacy) released by Philip Zimmerman (:ad1:)
- US High Performance Computing Act (Gore 1) establishes the National
Research and Education Network (NREN)
- NSFNET backbone upgraded to T3 (44.736Mbps)
- NSFNET traffic passes 1 trillion bytes/month and 10 billion packets/month
- Defense Data Network NIC contract awarded by DISA to Government
Systems Inc. who takes over from SRI in May
- Start of JANET IP Service (JIPS) which signaled the changeover from
Coloured Book software to TCP/IP within the UK academic network. IP was
initially 'tunneled' within X.25. (:gst:)
- RFC 1216: Gigabit
Network Economics and Paradigm Shifts
- RFC 1217: Memo from
the Consortium for Slow Commotion Research (CSCR)
- Countries connecting to NSFNET: Croatia (HR), Czech Republic (CZ),
Hong Kong (HK), Hungary (HU), Poland (PL), Portugal (PT), Singapore (SG),
South Africa (ZA), Taiwan (TW), Tunisia (TN)
- 1992
- Internet Society (ISOC) is chartered (January)
- IAB reconstituted as the Internet Architecture Board and becomes
part of the Internet Society
- Number of hosts breaks 1,000,000
- First MBONE audio multicast (March) and video multicast (November)
- RIPE Network Coordination Center
(NCC) created in April to provide address registration and coordination
services to the European Internet community (:dk1:)
- Veronica, a gopherspace search tool, is released by Univ of Nevada
- World Bank comes on-line
- The term "surfing
the Internet" is coined by Jean Armour Polly (:jap:)
-
Zen and the Art of the Internet is published by Brendan Kehoe (:jap:)
- Internet Hunt started by Rick Gates
- RFC 1300:
Remembrances of Things Past
- RFC 1313: Today's
Programming for KRFC AM 1313 - Internet Talk Radio
- Countries connecting to NSFNET: Antarctica (AQ), Cameroon (CM),
Cyprus (CY), Ecuador (EC), Estonia (EE), Kuwait (KW), Latvia (LV),
Luxembourg (LU), Malaysia (MY), Slovakia (SK), Slovenia (SI), Thailand (TH),
Venezuela (VE)
- 1993
- InterNIC created by NSF to
provide specific Internet services: (:sc1:)
- directory and database services (AT&T)
- registration services (Network Solutions Inc.)
- information services (General Atomics/CERFnet)
- US White House comes on-line (http://www.whitehouse.gov/):
- President Bill Clinton: president@whitehouse.gov
- Vice-President Al Gore: vice-president@whitehouse.gov
- Worms of a new kind find their way around the Net - WWW Worms (W4),
joined by Spiders, Wanderers, Crawlers, and Snakes ...
- Internet Talk Radio begins broadcasting (:sk2:)
- United Nations (UN) comes on-line
(:vgc:)
- US National Information Infrastructure Act
- Businesses and media begin taking notice of the Internet
- InterCon International KK (IIKK) provides Japan's first commercial
Internet connection in September. TWICS, though an IIKK leased line,
begins offering dial-up accounts the following month (:tb1:)
- Mosaic takes the Internet by storm (22 Apr); WWW proliferates at a
341,634% annual growth rate of service traffic. Gopher's growth is 997%.
- RFC 1437: The
Extension of MIME Content-Types to a New Medium
- RFC 1438: IETF
Statements of Boredom (SOBs)
- Countries connecting to NSFNET: Bulgaria (BG), Costa Rica (CR),
Egypt (EG), Fiji (FJ), Ghana (GH), Guam (GU), Indonesia (ID), Kazakhstan
(KZ), Kenya (KE), Liechtenstein (LI), Peru (PE), Romania (RO), Russian
Federation (RU), Turkey (TR), Ukraine (UA), UAE (AE), US Virgin Islands
(VI)
- 1994
- ARPANET/Internet celebrates 25th anniversary
- Communities begin to be wired up directly to the Internet (Lexington
and Cambridge, Mass., USA)
- US Senate and
House provide information servers
- Shopping malls arrive on the Internet
- First cyberstation, RT-FM, broadcasts from Interop in Las Vegas
- The National Institute for Standards and Technology (NIST) suggests
that GOSIP should incorporate TCP/IP and drop the "OSI-only" requirement
(:gck:)
- Arizona law firm of
Canter & Siegel "spams" the Internet with email advertising green
card lottery services; Net citizens flame back
- NSFNET traffic passes 10 trillion bytes/month
- Yes, it's true - you can now order pizza from the Hut online
- WWW edges out telnet to become 2nd most popular service on the Net (behind
ftp-data) based on % of packets and bytes traffic distribution on NSFNET
- Japanese Prime Minister on-line (http://www.kantei.go.jp/)
- UK's HM Treasury on-line (http://www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/)
- New Zealand's Info Tech Prime Minister on-line (http://www.govt.nz/)
- First Virtual, the first cyberbank, open up for business
- Radio stations start rockin' (rebroadcasting) round the clock on the
Net: WXYC at Univ of NC, KJHK at Univ of KS-Lawrence, KUGS at Western WA
Univ
- IPng recommended by IETF at its Toronto meeting (July) and approved
by IESG in November. Later documented as RFC 1752
- The first banner ads appear on hotwired.com in October. They were
for Zima (a beverage) and AT&T
- Trans-European Research and Education Network Association (TERENA)
is formed by the merger of RARE and EARN, with representatives from 38
countries as well as CERN and ECMWF.
TERENA's aim is to "promote and participate in the development of a high
quality international information and telecommunications infrastructure
for the benefit of research and education" (October)
- After noticing that many network software vendors used domain.com in
their documentation examples, Bill Woodcock and Jon Postel register the
domain. Sure enough, after looking at the domain access logs, it was
evident that many users were using the example domain in configuring
their applications.
- RFC 1605: SONET to
Sonnet Translation
- RFC 1606: A
Historical Perspective On The Usage Of IP Version 9
- RFC 1607: A VIEW
FROM THE 21ST CENTURY
- Countries connecting to NSFNET: Algeria (DZ), Armenia (AM), Bermuda
(BM), Burkina Faso (BF), China (CN), Colombia (CO), Jamaica (JM), Jordan
(JO), Lebanon (LB), Lithuania (LT), Macao (MO), Morocco (MA), New
Caledonia (NC), Nicaragua (NI), Niger (NE), Panama (PA), Philippines (PH),
Senegal (SN), Sri Lanka (LK), Swaziland (SZ), Uruguay (UY), Uzbekistan (UZ)
- Top 10 Domains by Host #: com, edu, uk, gov, de, ca, mil, au, org,
net
- 1995
- NSFNET reverts back to a research network. Main US backbone traffic
now routed through interconnected network providers
- The new NSFNET is born as NSF establishes the
very high speed Backbone Network Service
(vBNS) linking super-computing centers: NCAR, NCSA, SDSC, CTC, PSC
- Neda Rayaneh Institute (NRI), Iran's first commercial provider,
comes online, connecting via satellite to Cadvision, a Canadian provider
(:rm1:)
- Hong Kong police disconnect all but one of the colony's Internet
providers for failure to obtain a license; thousands of users are left
without service (:kf2:)
- Sun launches JAVA on May 23
- RealAudio, an audio streaming technology, lets the Net hear in near
real-time
- Radio HK, the first commercial 24 hr., Internet-only radio station
starts broadcasting
- WWW surpasses ftp-data in March as the service with greatest traffic
on NSFNet based on packet count, and in April based on byte count
- Traditional online dial-up systems (CompuServe,
America Online, Prodigy) begin to
provide Internet access
- Thousands in Minneapolis-St. Paul (USA) lose Net access after
transients start a bonfire under a bridge at the Univ of MN causing
fiber-optic cables to melt (30 July)
- A number of Net related companies go public, with
Netscape leading the pack with the
3rd largest ever NASDAQ IPO share value (9 August)
- Registration of domain names is no longer free. Beginning 14
September, a $50 annual fee has been imposed, which up until now was
subsidized by NSF. NSF continues to pay for .edu registration, and on an
interim basis for .gov
- The Vatican comes on-line (http://www.vatican.va/)
- The Canadian Government comes on-line (http://canada.gc.ca/)
- The first official Internet wiretap was successful in helping the
Secret Service and Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) apprehend three
individuals who were illegally manufacturing and selling cell phone
cloning equipment and electronic devices
- Operation Home Front connects, for the first time, soldiers in the
field with their families back home via the Internet.
- Richard White becomes the first person to be declared a munition,
under the USA's arms export control laws, because of an RSA file
security encryption program tattooed on his arm (:wired496:)
- RFC 1882: The 12-Days
of Technology Before Christmas
- Country domains registered: Ethiopia (ET), Cote d'Ivoire (CI), Cook
Islands (CK) Cayman Islands (KY), Anguilla (AI), Gibraltar (GI), Vatican
(VA), Kiribati (KI), Kyrgyzstan (KG), Madagascar (MG), Mauritius (MU),
Micronesia (FM), Monaco (MC), Mongolia (MN), Nepal (NP), Nigeria (NG),
Western Samoa (WS), San Marino (SM), Tanzania (TZ), Tonga (TO), Uganda (UG),
Vanuatu (VU)
- Top 10 Domains by Host #: com, edu, net, gov, mil, org, de, uk, ca,
au
- Technologies of the Year: WWW, Search engines
- Emerging Technologies: Mobile code (JAVA, JAVAscript),
Virtual environments (VRML), Collaborative tools
- Hacks of the Year: The Spot (Jun 12), Hackers Movie Page (12
Aug)
- 1996
- Internet phones catch the attention of US telecommunication
companies who ask the US Congress to ban the technology (which has been
around for years)
- Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, PLO Leader Yasser Arafat,
and Phillipine President Fidel Ramos meet for ten minutes in an online
interactive chat session on 17 January.
- The controversial US Communications Decency Act (CDA) becomes law in
the US in order to prohibit distribution of indecent materials over the
Net. A few months later a three-judge panel imposes an injunction
against its enforcement. Supreme Court unanimously rules most of it
unconstitutional in 1997.
- 9,272 organizations find themselves unlisted after the InterNIC
drops their name service as a result of not having paid their domain
name fee
- Various ISPs suffer extended service outages, bringing into question
whether they will be able to handle the growing number of users. AOL (19
hours), Netcom (13 hours), AT&T WorldNet (28 hours - email only)
- Domain name tv.com sold to CNET for US$15,000
- New York's Public Access Networks Corp (PANIX) is shut down after
repeated SYN attacks by a cracker using methods outlined in a hacker
magazine (2600)
- MCI upgrades Internet backbone adding ~13,000 ports, bringing the
effective speed from 155Mbps to 622Mbps.
- The Internet Ad Hoc Committee
announces plans to add 7 new generic Top Level Domains (gTLD): .firm,
.store, .web, .arts, .rec, .info, .nom. The IAHC plan also calls for a
competing group of domain registrars worldwide.
- A malicious cancelbot is released on USENET wiping out more than
25,000 messages
- The WWW browser war, fought primarily between Netscape and
Microsoft, has rushed in a new age in software development, whereby new
releases are made quarterly with the help of Internet users eager to
test upcoming (beta) versions.
- RFC 1925: The Twelve
Networking Truths
- Restrictions on Internet use around the world:
- China: requires users and ISPs to register with the police
- Germany: cuts off access to some newsgroups carried on
CompuServe
- Saudi Arabia: confines Internet access to universities and
hospitals
- Singapore: requires political and religious content
providers to register with the state
- New Zealand: classifies computer disks as "publications"
that can be censored and seized
- source: Human Rights Watch
- Country domains registered: Qatar (QA), Central frican Republic (CF),
Oman (OM), Norfolk Island (NF), Tuvalu (TV), French Polynesia (PF),
Syria (SY), Aruba (AW), Cambodia (KH), French Guiana (GF), Eritrea (ER),
Cape Verde (CV), Burundi (BI), Benin (BJ) Bosnia-Herzegovina (BA),
Andorra (AD), Guadeloupe (GP), Guernsey (GG), Isle of Man (IM), Jersey (JE),
Lao (LA), Maldives (MV), Marshall Islands (MH), Mauritania (MR),
Northern Mariana Islands (MP), Rwanda (RW), Togo (TG), Yemen (YE), Zaire
(ZR)
- Top 10 Domains by Host #: com, edu, net, uk, de, jp, us, mil, ca, au
- Hacks of the Year: US Dept of Justice (17 Aug), CIA (19 Sep),
Air Force (29 Dec), UK Labour Party (6 Dec), NASA DDCSOL - USAFE - US
Air Force (30 Dec)
- Technologies of the Year: Search engines, JAVA, Internet
Phone
- Emerging Technologies: Virtual environments (VRML),
Collaborative tools, Internet appliance (Network Computer)
- 1997
- 2000th RFC:
"Internet Official Protocol Standards"
- 71,618 mailing lists registered at Liszt, a mailing list directory
- The American Registry for Internet
Numbers (ARIN) is established to handle administration and
registration of IP numbers to the geographical areas currently handled
by Network Solutions (InterNIC), starting March 1998.
- CA*net II launched in June to provide Canada's next generation
Internet using ATM/SONET
- In protest of the DNS monopoly, AlterNIC's owner, Eugene Kashpureff,
hacks DNS so users going to www.internic.net end up at www.alternic.net
- Domain name business.com sold for US$150,000
- Early in the morning of 17 July, human error at Network Solutions
causes the DNS table for .com and .net domains to become corrupted,
making millions of systems unreachable.
- Longest hostname registered with InterNIC:
CHALLENGER.MED.SYNAPSE.UAH.UALBERTA.CA
- 101,803 Name Servers in whois database
- RFC 2100: The Naming
of Hosts
- Country domains registered: Falkland Islands (FK), East Timor (TP),
R of Congo (CG), Christmas Island (CX), Gambia (GM), Guinea-Bissau (GW),
Haiti (HT), Iraq (IQ), Libya (LY), Malawi (MW), Martinique (MQ),
Montserrat (MS), Myanmar (MM), French Reunion Island (RE), Seychelles
(SC), Sierra Leone (SL), Somalia (SO), Sudan (SD), Tajikistan (TJ),
Turkmenistan (TM), Turks and Caicos Islands (TC), British Virgin Islands
(VG), Heard and McDonald Islands (HM), French Southern Territories (TF),
British Indian Ocean Territory (IO), Svalbard and Jan Mayen Islands
(SJ), St Pierre and Miquelon (PM), St Helena (SH), South Georgia/Sandwich
Islands (GS), Sao Tome and Principe (ST), Ascension Island (AC), US
Minor Outlying Islands (UM), Mayotte (YT), Wallis and Futuna Islands (WF),
Tokelau Islands (TK), Chad Republic (TD), Afghanistan (AF), Cocos Island
(CC), Bouvet Island (BV), Liberia (LR), American Samoa (AS), Niue (NU),
Equatorial New Guinea (GQ), Bhutan (BT), Pitcairn Island (PN), Palau (PW),
DR of Congo (CD)
- Top 10 Domains by Host #: com, edu, net, jp, uk, de, us, au, ca, mil
- Hacks of the Year: Indonesian Govt (19 Jan, 10 Feb, 24 Apr,
30 Jun, 22 Nov), NASA (5 Mar), UK Conservative Party (27 Apr), Spice
Girls (14 Nov)
- Technologies of the Year: Push, Multicasting
- Emerging Technologies: Push
- 1998
- Hobbes' Internet Timeline is released as
RFC 2235 & FYI 32
- US Depart of Commerce (DoC) releases the
Green
Paper outlining its plan to privatize DNS on 30 January. This is
followed up by a
White Paper on June 5
- La Fête de l'Internet, a
country-wide Internet fest, is held in France 20-21 March
- Web size estimates range between 275 (Digital) and 320 (NEC) million
pages for 1Q
- Companies flock to the Turkmenistan NIC in order to register their
name under the .tm domain, the English abbreviation for trademark
- Internet users get to be judges in a performance by 12 world
champion ice skaters on 27 March, marking the first time a television
sport show's outcome is determined by its viewers.
- Network Solutions registers its 2 millionth domain on 4 May
- Electronic postal stamps become a reality, with the
US Postal Service allowing stamps to
be purchased and downloaded for printing from the Web.
- Canada kicks off CA*net 3, the first national optical internet
- Compaq pays US$3.3million for altavista.com
- CDA II and a ban on Net taxes are signed into US law (21 October)
- ABCNews.com accidentally posts test US election returns one day
early (2 November)
- Indian ISP market is deregulated in November causing a rush for ISP
operation licenses
- US DoC enters into an
agreement with the Internet
Corporation for Assigned Numbers (ICANN) to establish a process for
transitioning DNS from US Government management to industry (25 November)
- San Francisco sites without off-city mirrors go offline as the city
blacks out on 8 December
- Chinese government puts Lin Hai on trial for "inciting the overthrow
of state power" for providing 30,000 email addresses to a US Internet
magazine (December) [ He is later sentenced to two years in jail ]
- French Internet users give up their access on 13 December to boycott
France Telecom's local phone charges (which are in addition to the ISP
charge)
- Open source software comes of age
- RFC 2321: RITA --
The Reliable Internetwork Troubleshooting Agent
- RFC 2322: Management
of IP numbers by peg-dhcp
- RFC 2323: IETF
Identification and Security Guidelines
- RFC 2324: Hyper Text
Coffee Pot Control Protocol (HTCPCP/1.0)
- Country domains registered: Nauru (NR), Comoros (KM)
- Bandwidth Generators: Winter Olympics (Feb), World Cup
(Jun-Jul), Starr Report (11 Sep), Glenn space launch
- Top 10 Domains by Host #: com, net, edu, mil, jp, us, uk ,de, ca, au
- Hacks of the Year: US Dept of Commerce (20 Feb), New York
Times (13 Sep), China Society for Human Rights Studies (26 Oct), UNICEF
(7 Jan)
- Technologies of the Year: E-Commerce, E-Auctions, Portals
- Emerging Technologies: E-Trade, XML, Intrusion Detection
- 1999
- Internet access becomes available to the Saudi Arabian (.sa) public
in January
- vBNS sets up an OC48 link between CalREN South and North using
Juniper M40 routers
- First Internet Bank of Indiana,
the first full-service bank available only on the Net, opens for
business on 22 February
- IBM becomes the first Corporate partner to be approved for Internet2
access
- European Parliament proposes banning the caching of Web pages by
ISPs
- The Internet Fiesta kicks off in March across Europe, building on
the success of La Fête de l'Internet held in 1998
- US State Court rules that domain names are property that may be
garnished
- MCI/Worldcom, the vBNS provider for NSF, begins upgrading the US
backbone to 2.5GBps
- A forged Web page made to look like a Bloomberg financial news story
raised shares of a small technology company by 31% on 7 April.
- ICANN announces the five testbed registrars for the competitive
Shared Registry System on 21 April: AOL, CORE, France Telecom/Oléane,
Melbourne IT, Register.com. 29 additional post-testbed registrars are
also selected on 21 April, followed by 8 on 25 May, 15 on 6 July, and so
on for a total of 98 by year's end. The testbed, originally scheduled to
last until 24 June, is extended until 10 September, and then 30 November.
The first registrar to come online is Register.com on 7 June
- First large-scale Cyberwar takes place simultaneously with the war
in Serbia/Kosovo
- Abilene, the Internet2 network, reaches across the Atlantic and
connects to NORDUnet and SURFnet
- The Web becomes the focal point of British politics as a list of MI6
agents is released on a UK Web site. Though forced to remove the list
from the site, it was too late as the list had already been replicated
across the Net. (15 May)
- Activists Net-wide target the world's financial centers on 18 June,
timed to coincide with the G8 Summit. Little actual impact is reported.
- MCI/Worldcom launches vBNS+, a commercialized version of vBNS
targeted at smaller educational and research institutions
- DoD issues a memo requiring all US military systems to connect via
NIPRNET, and not directly to the Internet by 15 Dec 1999 (22 Aug)
- Somalia gets its first ISP - Olympic Computer (Sep)
- ISOC approves the formation of the Internet Societal Task Force (ISTF).
Vint Cerf serves as first chair
- Free computers are all the rage (as long as you sign a long term
contract for Net service)
- Country domains registered: Bangladesh (BD), Palestine (PS)
- vBNS reaches 101 connections
- business.com is sold for US$7.5million (it was purchased in 1997 for
US$150,000 (30 Nov)
- RFC 2549: IP over
Avian Carriers with Quality of Service
- RFC 2550: Y10K and
Beyond
- RFC 2551: The Roman
Standards Process -- Revision III
- RFC 2555: 30 Years
of RFCs
- RFC 2626: The Internet
and the Millennium Problem (Year 2000)
- Top 10 TLDs by Host #: com, net, edu, jp, uk, mil, us, de, ca, au
- Hacks of the Year: Star Wars (8 Jan), .tp (Jan), USIA (23 Jan),
E-Bay (13 Mar), US Senate (27 May), NSI (2 Jul), Paraguay Gov't (20
Jul), AntiOnline (5 Aug), Microsoft (26 Oct), UK Railtrack (31 Dec)
- Technologies of the Year: E-Trade, Online Banking, MP3
- Emerging Technologies: Net-Cell Phones, Thin Computing,
Embedded Computing
- Viruses of the Year:
Melissa (March),
ExploreZip
(June)
- 2000
- The US timekeeper (USNO) and
a few other time services around the world report the new year as 19100
on 1 Jan
- A massive denial of service attack is launched against major web
sites, including Yahoo, Amazon, and eBay in early February
- Web size estimates by NEC-RI and Inktomi surpass 1 billion indexable
pages
- ICANN redelegates the .pn domain, returning it to the Pitcairn
Island community (February)
- Internet2 backbone network deploys IPv6 (16 May)
- Various domain name hijackings took place in late May and early June,
including internet.com, bali.com, and web.net
- A testbed allowing the registration of domain names in Chinese,
Japanese, and Korean begins operation on 9 November. This testbed,
created by VeriSign without IETF authorization, only allows the second-level
domain to be non-English, still forcing use of .com, .net, .org. The
Chinese government blocks internal registrations, stating that
registrations in Chinese are its sovereignty right
- ICANN selects new TLDs: .aero, .biz, .coop, .info, .museum, .name,
.pro (16 Nov)
- Mexico's connection to Internet2 becomes fully operational as the
California research network (CalREN-2) is connected with Mexico's
Corporación Universitaria para el Desarrollo de Internet (CUDI) network.
Though connected in November, the link's inauguration by California's
Governor and Mexico's President was not until March of 2001.
- After months of legal proceedings, the French court rules Yahoo!
must block French users from accessing hate memorabilia in its auction
site (Nov). Given its inability to provide such a block on the Internet,
Yahoo! removes those auctions entirely (Jan 2001). The case is
eventually thrown out (Feb 2003).
- The European Commission contracts with a consortium of 30 national
research networks for the development of Géant, Europe's new gigabit
research network meant to enhance the current capability provided by
TEN-155 (6 Nov)
- Australian government endorses the transfer of authority for the .au
domain to auDA (18 Dec). ICANN signs over control to auDA on 26 Oct
2001.
- RFC 2795: The Infinite
Monkey Protocol Suite
- Hacks of the Year: RSA Security (Feb), Apache (May), Western
Union (Sep), Microsoft (Oct)
- Technologies of the Year: ASP, Napster
- Emerging Technologies: Wireless devices, IPv6
- Viruses of the Year:
Love Letter
(May)
- Lawsuits of the Year: Napster, DeCSS
- 2001
- The first live distributed musical -- The Technophobe & The
Madman -- over Internet2 networks debuts on 20 Feb
- VeriSign extends its multilingual domain testbed to encompass
various European languages (26 Feb), and later the full Unicode
character set (5 Apr) opening up most of the world's languages
- Forwarding email in Australia becomes illegal with the passing of
the Digital Agenda Act, as it is seen as a technical infringement of
personal copyright (4 Mar)
- Radio stations broadcasting over the Web go silent over actor
royalty disputes (10 Apr)
- High schools in five states (Michigan, Missouri, Oregon, Virginia,
and Washington) become the first to gain Internet2 access
- SETI@Home launches on 17 May and within four weeks its distributed
Internet clients provide more computing power than the most powerful
supercomputer of its time (:par:)
- US Dept of Commerce issues a notice of intent on 6 April to turn
over management for the .edu domain from VeriSign to
Educause. Award agreement is
reached on 29 October. Community colleges will finally be able to
register under .edu
- Napster keeps finding itself embroiled in litigation and is
eventually forced to suspend service; it comes back later in the year as
a subscription service
- European Council finalizes an international cybercrime treaty on 22
June and adopts it on 9 November. This is the first treaty addressing
criminal offenses committed over the Internet.
- .biz and .info are added to the root server on 27 June with
registrations beginning in July. .biz domain go live on 7 Nov.
- Afghanistan's Taliban bans Internet access country-wide, including
from Government offices, in an attempt to control content (13 Jul)
- Code Red worm and Sircam virus infiltrate thousands of web servers
and email accounts, respectively, causing a spike in Internet bandwidth
usage and security breaches (July)
- A fire in a train tunnel running through Baltimore, Maryland
seriously damages various fiber-optic cable bundles used by backbone
providers, disrupting Internet traffic in the Mid-Atlantic states and
creating a ripple effect across the US (18 Jul)
- Brazil RNP2 is connected to Internet2's Abilene over 45Mbps line (21
Aug)
- GÉANT, the pan-European
Gigabit Research and Education Network, becomes operational (23 Oct),
replacing the TEN-155 network which was closed down (30 Nov)
- .museum begins resolving (Nov)
- First uncompressed real-time gigabit HDTV transmission across a wide-area
IP network takes place on Internet2 (12 Nov).
- Dutch SURFnet and Internet2's Abilene connect via gigabit ethernet
(15 Nov)
- .us domain operational responsibility assumed by NeuStar (20 Nov)
- RFC 3091: Pi Digit
Generation Protocol
- RFC 3092: Etymology of
"Foo"
- RFC 3093: Firewall
Enhancement Protocol (FEP)
- Viruses of the Year: Code Red (Jul), Nimda (Sep), SirCam
(Jul), BadTrans (Apr, Nov)
- Emerging Technologies: Grid Computing, P2P
- 2002
- US ISP Association (USISPA) is created from the former CIX (11 Jan)
- .name begins resolving (15 Jan)
- .coop registrations begin (30 Jan)
- Global Terabit Research Network (GTRN)
is formed composed of two OC-48 2.4GB circuits connecting Internet2
Abiline, CANARIE CA*net3, and GÉANT (18 Feb)
- .aero registrations begin 18 March and beings resolving 2 September
- Federally recognized US Indian tribes become eligible to register
under .gov (26 Apr)
- Hundreds of Internet radio stations observe a Day of Silence
in protest of proposed song royalty rate increases (1 May)
- Abilene (Internet2) backbone deploys native IPv6 (5 Aug)
- The 69/8 IP range is allocated to ARIN in August after having been
in the bogon
list; users and servers assigned a 69/8 address find themselves blocked
from many Internet sites
- Internet2 now has 200 university, 60 corporate, and 40 affiliate
members (2 Sep)
- Having your own Blog becomes hip
- Hundreds of Spain-based web sites take their content offline in
protest of a new law that took effect on 12 Oct requiring all commercial
Web sites to register with the government
- A distributed denial of service (DDoS) attack struck the 13 DNS root
servers knocking out all but 5 (21-23 Oct). Amidst national security
concerns, VeriSign hastens a planned relocation of one of its two DNS
root servers
- A new US law creates a kids-safe "dot-kids" domain (kids.us) to be
implemented in 2003 (3 Dec)
- The FBI teams up with Terras Lycos to disseminate virtual wanted
posts across the Web portal's properties (11 Dec)
- RFC 3251: Electricity
over IP
- RFC 3252: Binary
Lexical Octet Ad-hoc Transport
- 2003
- Public Interest Registry (PIR) takes over as .org registry operator
on 1 Jan. Transition is completed on 27 Jan. By giving up .org, VeriSign
is able to retain control over .com domains
- The first official Swiss online election takes place in Anières (7
Jan)
- The registration for domain ogrish.com is deleted (11 Jan) by the
German registrar Joker.com at the request of a German prosecutor
claiming objectionable content; the site however is hosted in the United
States and complies with US laws.
- The SQL Slammer worm causes one of the largest and fastest spreading
DDoS attacks ever. Taking roughly 10 minutes to spread worldwide, the
worm took down 5 of the 13 DNS root servers along with tens of thousands
of other servers, and impacted a multitude of systems ranging from (bank)
ATM systems to air traffic control to emergency (911) systems (25 Jan).
This is followed in August by the Sobig.F virus (19 Aug), the fastest
spreading virus ever, and the Blaster (MSBlast) worm (11 Aug), another
one of the most destructive worms ever
- k.root-servers.net changes to using nsd vs. bind to increase
diversity of software in the root name server system (19 Feb)
- .nl registrations open up to anyone,
including individuals and foreigners (29 Jan);
.se also opens up its registration in
April.
- .af is
redelegated on 8 Jan and becomes live once again on 12 Feb with UNDP
technical assistance. First domains are moc.gov.af and undp.org.af (15
Feb)
- .pro sunrise registration begins 23 Apr under .cpa.pro, .law.pro, .med.pro
- Flash mobs, organized over the Net, start in New York and quickly
form in cities worlwide
- Taxes make headlines as: larger US Internet retailers begin
collecting taxes on all purchases; some US states tax Internet bandwidth;
and the EU requires all Internet companies to collect value added tax
(VAT) on digital downloads starting 1 July
- The French Ministry of Culture bans the use of the word "e-mail" by
government ministries, and adopts the use of the more French sounding "courriel"
(Jul)
- KRNIC begins offering Hangeul.kr domains (19 Aug)
- .kids.us sunrise registration begins 17 June and public registration
on 9 Sep
- The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) sues 261
individuals on 8 Sep for allegedly distributing copyright music files
over peer-to-peer networks
- VeriSign deploys a wildcard service (Site Finder) into the .com and
.net TLDs causing much confusion as URLs with invalid domains are
redirected to a VeriSign page (15 Sep). ICANN orders VeriSign to stop
the service, which they comply with on 4 Oct
- Last Abilene segment upgraded to 10Gbps (5 Nov)
- National LambdaRail announced as a new US R&D networking
infrastructure (16 Sep). The first connection takes place between
Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center (PSC) and Extensible Terascale Facility
(ETF) in Chicago (18 Nov)
- Little GLORIAD (Global Ring
Network for Advanced Application Development) starts operations (22 Dec),
consisting of a networked ring across the northern hemisphere with
connections in Chicago, Amsterdam, Moscow, Novosibirsk, Zabajkal'sk,
Manzhouli, Beijing, and Hong Kong. This is the first-ever fiber network
connections across the Russia-China border
- RFC 3514: The Security
Flag in the IPv4 Header (The Evil Bit)
Internet | Networks | WWW | USENET | Security
Internet growth:
Date Hosts | Date Hosts Networks Domains
----- --------- + ----- --------- -------- ---------
12/69 4 | 07/89 130,000 650 3,900
06/70 9 | 10/89 159,000 837
10/70 11 | 10/90 313,000 2,063 9,300
12/70 13 | 01/91 376,000 2,338
04/71 23 | 07/91 535,000 3,086 16,000
10/72 31 | 10/91 617,000 3,556 18,000
01/73 35 | 01/92 727,000 4,526
06/74 62 | 04/92 890,000 5,291 20,000
03/77 111 | 07/92 992,000 6,569 16,300
12/79 188 | 10/92 1,136,000 7,505 18,100
08/81 213 | 01/93 1,313,000 8,258 21,000
05/82 235 | 04/93 1,486,000 9,722 22,000
08/83 562 | 07/93 1,776,000 13,767 26,000
10/84 1,024 | 10/93 2,056,000 16,533 28,000
10/85 1,961 | 01/94 2,217,000 20,539 30,000
02/86 2,308 | 07/94 3,212,000 25,210 46,000
11/86 5,089 | 10/94 3,864,000 37,022 56,000
12/87 28,174 | 01/95 4,852,000 39,410 71,000
07/88 33,000 | 07/95 6,642,000 61,538 120,000
10/88 56,000 | 01/96 9,472,000 93,671 240,000
01/89 80,000 | 07/96 12,881,000 134,365 488,000
| 01/97 16,146,000 828,000
| 07/97 19,540,000 1,301,000
*** see Note below ***
Hosts = a computer system with registered ip address (an A record)
Networks = registered class A/B/C addresses
Domains = registered domain name (with name server record)
Note: A more accurate survey mechanism was developed in 1/98; new and
some corrected numbers are shown below. For further info, see
Sources section.
Date Hosts | Date Hosts | Date Hosts
----- ----------- + ----- ----------- + ----- -----------
01/95 5,846,000 | 01/98 29,670,000 | 01/01 109,574,429
07/95 8,200,000 | 07/98 36,739,000 | 07/01 125,888,197
01/96 14,352,000 | 01/99 43,230,000 | 01/02 147,344,723
07/96 16,729,000 | 07/99 56,218,000 | 07/02 162,128,493
01/97 21,819,000 | 01/00 72,398,092 | 01/03 171,638,297
07/97 26,053,000 | 07/00 93,047,785 |
Worldwide Networks Growth: (I)nternet (B)ITNET (U)UCP (F)IDONET
(O)SI
____# Countries____ ____# Countries____
Date I B U F O Date I B U F O
----- --- --- --- --- --- ----- --- --- --- --- ---
09/91 31 47 79 49 02/94 62 51 125 88 31
12/91 33 46 78 53 07/94 75 52 129 89 31
02/92 38 46 92 63 11/94 81 51 133 95 --
04/92 40 47 90 66 25 02/95 86 48 141 98 --
08/92 49 46 89 67 26 06/95 96 47 144 99 --
01/93 50 50 101 72 31 06/96 134 -- 146 108 --
04/93 56 51 107 79 31 07/97 171 -- 147 108 --
08/93 59 51 117 84 31
WWW Growth:
12/90 1 | 03/98 2,084,473 | 02/01 28,125,284
12/91 10 | 04/98 2,215,195 | 03/01 28,611,177
12/92 50 | 05/98 2,308,502 | 04/01 28,669,939
06/93 130 | 06/98 2,410,067 | 05/01 29,031,745
09/93 204 | 07/98 2,594,622 | 06/01 29,302,656
10/93 228 | 08/98 2,807,588 | 07/01 31,299,592
12/93 623 | 09/98 3,156,324 | 08/01 30,775,624
06/94 2,738 | 10/98 3,358,969 | 09/01 32,398,046
12/94 10,022 | 11/98 3,518,158 | 10/01 33,135,768
06/95 23,500 | 12/98 3,689,227 | 11/01 36,458,394
01/96 100,000 | 01/99 4,062,280 | 12/01 36,276,252
03/96 135,396 | 02/99 4,301,512 | 01/02 36,689,008
04/96 150,295 | 03/99 4,349,131 | 02/02 38,444,856
05/96 193,150 | 04/99 5,040,663 | 03/02 38,118,962
06/96 252,000 | 05/99 5,414,325 | 04/02 37,585,233
07/96 299,403 | 06/99 6,177,453 | 05/02 37,574,105
08/96 342,081 | 07/99 6,598,697 | 06/02 38,807,788
09/96 397,281 | 08/99 7,078,194 | 07/02 37,235,470
10/96 462,047 | 09/99 7,370,929 | 08/02 35,991,815
11/96 525,906 | 10/99 8,115,828 | 09/02 35,756,436
12/96 603,367 | 11/99 8,844,573 | 10/02 35,114,328
01/97 646,162 | 12/99 9,560,866 | 11/02 35,686,907
02/97 739,688 | 01/00 9,950,491 | 12/02 35,543,105
03/97 883,149 | 02/00 11,161,811 | 01/03 35,424,956
04/97 1,002,612 | 03/00 13,106,190 | 02/03 35,863,952
05/97 1,044,163 | 04/00 14,322,950 | 03/03 39,174,349
06/97 1,117,259 | 05/00 15,049,382 | 04/03 40,100,739
07/97 1,203,096 | 06/00 17,119,262 | 05/03 40,444,778
08/97 1,269,800 | 07/00 18,169,498 | 06/03 40,936,076
09/97 1,364,714 | 08/00 19,823,296 | 07/03 42,298,371
10/97 1,466,906 | 09/00 21,166,912 | 08/03 42,807,275
11/97 1,553,998 | 10/00 22,282,727 | 09/03 43,144,374
12/97 1,681,868 | 11/00 23,777,446 | 10/03 43,700,759
01/98 1,834,710 | 12/00 25,675,581 | 11/03 44,946,965
02/98 1,920,933 | 01/01 27,585,719 | 12/03 45,980,112
| | 01/04 46,067,743
Sites = # of web servers (one host may have multiple sites by
using different domains or port numbers)
USENET Growth:
Date Sites ~MB ~Posts Groups | Date Sites ~MB ~Posts Groups
---- ----- --- ------ ------ + ---- ------- --- ------ ------
1979 3 2 3 | 1987 5,200 2 957 259
1980 15 10 | 1988 7,800 4 1933 381
1981 150 0.05 20 | 1990 33,000 10 4,500 1,300
1982 400 35 | 1991 40,000 25 10,000 1,851
1983 600 120 | 1992 63,000 42 17,556 4,302
1984 900 225 | 1993 110,000 70 32,325 8,279
1985 1,300 1.0 375 | 1994 180,000 157 72,755 10,696
1986 2,200 2.0 946 241 | 1995 330,000 586 131,614
~ approximate: MB - megabytes per day, Posts - articles per day
Security (CERT) Incidents:
Date Incidents Advisories Vulnerabilities
---- --------- ---------- ---------------
1988 6 1
1989 132 7
1990 252 12
1991 406 23
1992 773 21
1993 1,334 19
1994 2,340 15
1995 2,412 18 171
1996 2,573 27 345
1997 2,134 28 311
1998 3,734 13 262
1999 9,859 17 417
2000 21,756 22 774
2001 52,658 37 2,437
2002 82,094 37 4,129
2003/1-3Q 114,855 25 2,982
- 1. How do I get Hobbes' Internet Timeline?
- The Timeline is archived at
http://www.zakon.org/robert/internet/timeline/. There are no
authorized mirrors for the Timeline.
- 2. Is the Timeline available in other languages or editions?
-
If you are interested in translating to another language or format,
email me first
- 3. Can I re-print the Timeline or use parts of it for ... ?
- Drop me an email. The answer is most likely (though don't assume) 'yes'
for non-profit use, and 'maybe' for for-profit; but to be sure you are
not going to break any copyright laws, drop me an email and wait for a
reply. Also, please note that I get a bunch of requests with improperly
formatted return email addresses. If you don't hear from me in a week (typical
turn around is < 1 hour), check your header and email again. BTW, don't
forget to tell me who you are, your affiliation and how you plans to use
the Timeline; anonymous copyright requests will not be granted.
- 4. What do you do when not updating the Timeline?
- For fun: travel, photography, R/C boats, developing technology
prototypes ranging from robots, speech to speech translators, and an
assortment of Web capabilities and outdoor activities. Professionally:
evangelize/research/develop advanced Internet, Web, e-commerce and
multilingual computing technologies. Explore
www.Zakon.org to learn more.
- 0. Peddie (Ala Viva!), CWRU (North Side), Amici usque ad aras (PKP
OH-EP), Colégio Andrews (Rio), Gordonstoun (Elgin)
- E-mail me if you know
Hobbes' Internet Timeline was compiled from a number of sources, with some
of the stand-outs being:
Cerf, Vinton (as told to Bernard Aboba). "How the Internet Came to Be."
This article appears in "The Online User's Encyclopedia," by Bernard Aboba.
Addison-Wesley, 1993.
Hardy, Henry. "The History of the Net." Master's Thesis, School of
Communications, Grand Valley State University.
http://www.vrx.net/usenet/history/hardy/
Hardy, Ian. "The Evolution of ARPANET email." History Thesis, UC Berkeley.
http://www.ifla.org/documents/internet/hari1.txt
Hauben, Ronda and Michael. "The Netizens and the Wonderful World of the Net."
http://www.columbia.edu/~hauben/netbook/
Kulikowski, Stan II. "A Timeline of Network History." (author's email below)
Quarterman, John. "The Matrix: Computer Networks and Conferencing Systems
Worldwide." Bedford, MA: Digital Press. 1990
"ARPANET, the Defense Data Network, and Internet". Encyclopedia of
Communications, Volume 1. Editors: Fritz Froehlich, Allen Kent.
New York: Marcel Dekker, Inc. 1991
Internet growth summary compiled from:
- Zone program reports maintained by Mark Lottor at:
ftp://ftp.nw.com/pub/zone/
Note: A more accurate host counting mechanism was used starting
with 1/98 count.
- Connectivity table maintained by Larry Landweber at:
ftp://ftp.cs.wisc.edu/connectivity_table/
- ARPAnet maps published in various sources
WWW growth summary compiled from:
- Web growth summary page by Matthew Gray of MIT:
http://www.mit.edu/people/mkgray/net/web-growth-summary.html
- Netcraft at http://www.netcraft.com/survey/
USENET growth summary compiled from Quarterman and Hauben sources above,
and news.lists postings. Lots of historical USENET postings also provided
by Tom Fitzgerald (fitz@wang.com).
CERT growth summary compiled from CERT reports at ftp://ftp.cert.org/
CERT stats are also now being made available by CERT at
http://www.cert.org/stats/cert_stats.html
Many of the URLs provided by Arnaud Dufour (arnaud.dufour@hec.unil.ch)
Country-specific Internet Histories:
- Australia - "A Brief History of the Internet in Australia" by Roger Clarke
http://www.anu.edu.au/people/Roger.Clarke/II/OzIHist.html
- Australia - "It Started with a Ping" by Jennie Sinclair
http://www.anu.edu.au/people/Roger.Clarke/II/Anniv.html
- Brazil - "Linha to Tempo da Internet no Brasil" by Érico Guizzo
http://www.ciberespaco.com.br/inetbr/
- South Africa - "The History of the Internet in South Africa - How it began"
http://www2.frd.ac.za/uninet/history/
- UK - "Early Experiences with the ARPANET and INTERNET in the UK" by Peter Kirstein
http://www.cs.ucl.ac.uk/staff/jon/arpa/internet-history.html
Additional books of interest:
- "How the Web Was Born - The Story of the World Wide Web"
by James Gillies and Robert Cailliau
- "Weaving the Web : The Original Design and Ultimate Destiny of the World Wide Web
by its Inventor"
by Tim Berners-Lee
- "Where Wizards Stay Up Late: The Origins of the Internet"
by Katie Hafner & Matthew Lyon
- "Nerds 2.0.1: A Brief History of the Internet"
by Stephen Segaller
- "Architects of the Web: 1,000 Days That Built the Future of Business"
by Robert H. Reid
- "Netizens: On the History and Impact of Usenet and the Internet"
by Michael Hauben et al
- "Exploring the Internet: A Technical Travelogue"
by Carl Malamud
Early works of interest:
- "As We May Think" by Vannevar Bush, 1945
http://www.theatlantic.com/unbound/flashbks/computer/bushf.htm
- "Man-Computer Symbiosis" by J.C.R. Licklider, 1960
http://gatekeeper.dec.com/pub/DEC/SRC/research-reports/abstracts/src-rr-061.html
- Assorted early documents
http://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/chris/think/digital_archive.html
---
Contributors to Hobbes' Internet Timeline have their initials next to the
contributed items in the form (:zzz:) and are:
ad1 - Arnaud Dufour (arnaud.dufour @ hec.unil.ch)
amk - Alex McKenzie (mckenzie @ bbn.com)
bb1 - Billy Brackenridge (billyb @ microsoft.com)
clg - C. Lee Giles (giles @ research.nj.nec.com)
dhr - David H. Rothman (davidrothman @ yahoo.com)
dk1 - Daniel Karrenberg (Daniel.Karrenberg @ ripe.net)
ec1 - Eric Carroll (eric @ enfm.utcc.utoronto.ca)
esr - Eric S. Raymond (esr @ locke.ccil.org)
feg - Farrell E. Gerbode (farrell @ is.rice.edu)
gb1 - Gordon Bell (GBell @ microsoft.com)
gck - Gary C. Kessler (kumquat @ hill.com)
glg - Gail L. Grant (grant @ glgc.com)
gmc - Grant McCall (g.mccall @ unsw.edu.au)
gst - Graham Thomas (G.S.Thomas @ uel.ac.uk)
irh - Ian R Hardy (hardy @ uclink2.berkeley.edu)
jap - Jean Armour Polly (mom @ netmom.com)
jg1 - Jim Gaynor (gaynor @ niherlas.com)
kf1 - Ken Fockler (fockler @ hq.canet.ca)
kf2 - Kinming Fung (kinming @ cuhk.edu.hk)
lb1 - Larry Backman (backman @ ultranet.com)
lhl - Larry H. Landweber (lhl @ cs.wisc.edu)
mpc - Mellisa P. Chase (pc @ mitre.org)
msh - Michael S. Hart (hart @ pobox.com)
par - Pierre A Renaud (yendred @ videotron.ca)
pb1 - Paul Burchard (burchard @ cs.princeton.edu)
pds - Peter da Silva (peter @ baileynm.com)
ph1 - Peter Hoffman (hoffman @ ece.nps.navy.mil)
rab - Roger A. Bielefeld (rab @ hal.cwru.edu)
rm1 - Rahi Moosavi (info @ farsi-freelance.com)
sc1 - Susan Calcari (susanc @ is.internic.net)
sk2 - Stan Kulikowski (stankuli @ uwf.bitnet) - see sources section
sw1 - Stephen Wolff (swolff @ cisco.com)
tb1 - Tim Burress (tim @ twics.com)
tp1 - Tim Pozar (pozar @ kumr.lns.com)
vgc - Vinton Cerf (vcerf @ isoc.org) - see sources section
wz1 - W. Zorn (zorn @ ira.uka.de)
zby - Zenel Batagelj (zenel.batagelj @ uni-lj.si)
:-) :-) :-) :-) :-) :-) ;-) Help the Author (-: (-: (-: (-: (-: (-: (-:
Thank you to the thousands of Net folks who contributed information to help
the author's genealogical search, yielding 45 new Zakon's from around the world!
Archive-name: Hobbes' Internet Timeline
Version: 7.0
Archive-location: http://www.zakon.org/robert/internet/timeline/
Last-updated: 1 January 2004
Maintainer: Robert H'obbes' Zakon, Robert@Zakon.org, www.Zakon.org
Description:
An Internet timeline highlighting some of the key events and technologies
that helped shape the Internet as we know it today.
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