Alternative DNS systems and net neutrality - Was: Re: [governance] DNSsec and allternative DNS system
Ian Peter
ian.peter at ianpeter.com
Sat Nov 17 11:59:13 EST 2007
Just to get this a little more accurate -
Although one of the sources of funding that provided for the ARPANet was the
US military, we have to understand its origins as being in a cold war era
when most US research funding was diverted through the military mechanisms.
Bob Kahn and Vint Cerf were not military experts -rather they were engaged
by universities where the tradition of making available publicly funded
research was well established.
If this had been a purely military project, it probably would have not seen
the light of day. But then, given the work going on in Europe and elsewhere
on emerging network protocols, something would have emerged anyway and we
would have called it the Internet (TCP/IP is not rocket science and its
primary value is its universal adoption)
Ian Peter
Ian Peter and Associates Pty Ltd
PO Box 10670 Adelaide St Brisbane 4000
Australia
Tel (+614) 1966 7772 or (+612) 6687 0773
www.ianpeter.com
www.internetmark2.org
www.nethistory.info
-----Original Message-----
From: Veni Markovski [mailto:veni at veni.com]
Sent: 18 November 2007 02:52
To: governance at lists.cpsr.org; Meryem Marzouki
Subject: Re: Alternative DNS systems and net neutrality - Was: Re:
[governance] DNSsec and allternative DNS system
At 16:28 11/17/2007 +0100, you wrote:
>Veni, why do you think that being from a given country makes it
>compulsory for someone to approve and be proud of everything coming
>from this country?
Why do you think I feel that way?
And still, if the Internet was created in another country, under the
Defence Ministry, I have my doubts it would have ended with the
general public. I gave the example of Bulgaria, because I know the
military system there. Perhaps we, being from Europe, are not
thinking in the commerce world as much as the Americans; at the same
time many of their military projects have ended up being used by the
general public; the Internet being just one, probably the best example.
I don't admire the US military, but I think the people who made the
Internet possible - whether by creating it, or by standardizing it,
or by opening the code, or - you name it - deserve some credits, even
if they are Americans. And, by the way, wasn't Tim Berners-Lee an
English? So, how come that today, when we are all using the Internet,
we tend to forget about all these, and about the OPEN NATURE of the
Internet?
veni
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