Rodney M Bliss

Did The Internet Really Begin In Some Guy’s Garage? (A Brief History of ICANN)

No, but it’s not far off. The internet, as we know it today, had its beginnings in the US government’s Defense Advanced Research Project Agency (DARPA.) On April 7th, 1969 DARPA awarded the first contract to build their “outlandish proposal” called Advanced Research Project Agency Network, or ARPANET, to BBN Technologies. The system got turned on nine months later. The first computers on what would become the internet had just 24 kilobytes of memory. This entire blog entry, if put into a Microsoft Word document would take 20 kilobytes of memory. The new iPhone 7 with the least memory comes standard with 32 gigabytes of memory. That’s over a million times more memory than those early computers had 50 years ago.

But, if the Internet began as a government research project, (partly envisioned as a system to survive a nuclear war) how can I even suggest it was built by some guy in his garage? The problem is that those early computers of the internet were pretty limited in who they could talk to. We take it for granted that a computer in Utah can reach out and talk to a server in Japan, or Washington DC or anywhere, really. The early computers didn’t have names. They had addresses. Think of your neighborhood. Every house has an address. The Jones family might live at 123 Main Street and their friends the Smiths live at 456 Center Street. You can get to either house by finding it’s address. 

But, you probably don’t know your friends’ addresses. You obviously know their names. If you try to give someone directions, it doesn’t do any good to say, “Go to the Smith house.” But, if you tell someone to go to 456 Center street, they can easily find the house. 

The internet is the same way. The computers and websites have addresses, and we need a way to associate names with those addresses. You would never type 64.233.171.113 to get to a Google Search screen, although you could. Instead, you’d type www.google.com, or even google.com to get to their site. Just as you may not know your friend Smith’s address, you most likely don’t know the physcial address of any website you go to. 

This is where the guy in his garage comes in. Although it wasn’t actually a garage. It was a guy named Jon Postel (yes, the guy who who figured out how to associate names with address on the internet was named “Postel.” Sometimes the universe shows us its sense of humor.) Postel’s regular job was as a computer science researcher who helped create ARPANET. As often happens, he had a side project. The side project was administering registries of name names and IP addresses. Eventually, it got too much for him. 

On January 30, 1998, the National Telecommunication and Information Administration (NTIA), which was part of the US Department of Commerce, issued a “green paper,” or request for comment on “A Proposal to Improve the Technical Management to Internet Names AND Addresses.” This proposal was to take over the work that Jon Postel had been doing in his spare time. ICANN was formed as a result of the recommendations from this request for comment. 

The new corporation, ICANN was tasked with managing the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA.) ICANN was incorporated as a not-for-profit corporation on September 30, 1998. Jon Postel became its first Chief Technology Officer. From a side project to CTO. Not exactly Steve Job’s garage, but also evidence of the sometimes organic nature of how the internet came about. It’s important to understand how ICANN got to the place it is in today in order to consider the risks of where it might go in the future. As you consider the history of ICANN below, here are a couple of vocabulary terms that will help make it a little more understandable.

DNS:
Domain Name Service – This is the process of associating names and addresses on the internet. DNS has, at it’s heart the root zone file. This 1MB file is the ultimate arbiter of all address resolution.
ICANN:
Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers – This is the corporation that controls the distribution of names and addresses.
IANA:
Internet Assigned Numbers Authority – this is the rules book for assigning names and address on the internet.
Registrars:
Companies that contract with ICANN to resell domain names and IP addresses.
TLDs:
Top Level Domains – these are the part of your domain name at the end. The most common are .com for businesses, .net for private groups, .org for non profits, .mil for military, .edu for educational institutions and .gov for government sites. There are also country specific TLDs like .uk for Great Britain, .us for the United States, etc. 

Here are some key dates in the history of ICANN and the IANA.

Some of these dates and events will become key discussion points as the world looks at an “independent” ICANN. Will the corporation be free to raise prices however it wants? Will it be free to enforce “rules” based on the input of it’s multi stakeholder governing board some of whom may be countries interested in censoring dissent? 

This is the third in a five part series on ICANN and the recent change to remove Department of Commerce oversight. 

Rodney M Bliss is an author, columnist and IT Consultant. His blog updates every weekday. He lives in Pleasant Grove, UT with his lovely wife, thirteen children and grandchildren. 

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(c) 2016 Rodney M Bliss, all rights reserved 

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