Who
Owns the Internet ?
Nobody - Internet
is truly a global society today. Admittedly,
the USA was the creator and developer of Internet
in its initial days, as a medium to connect
their defense labs in the advent of a nuclear
attack. But today, most of the initiative is
wrested from USA as a country and has gone to
a group of fiercely independent professionals
and groups who perhaps truly belong to world
community.
However, no owner
does not mean there is no governing body, organization
or conventions. In fact, the behaviour of individuals
in the Net are increasing governed by an agreed
set of norms collectively known as netiquette.
The NSF (National
Science Foundation, USA) continues to maintain
the backbone of the network (which carries data
at a rate of 45 million bits per second), but
Internet protocol development is governed by
the Internet Architecture Board (IAB), and the
InterNIC (Internet Network Information Center)
administers the naming of computers and networks.
The Internet Society (ISOC) is a voluntary membership
organization whose purpose is to promote global
information exchange through Internet technology.
It appoints a council of elders, which is responsible
for the technical management and direction of
the Internet. The council of elders is a group
of invited volunteers called the Internet Architecture
Board (IAB). The IAB meets regularly to agree
upon standards, allocation of resources, and
defines the rules of how to assign addresses.
The final organization responsible for the Internet
is the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF).
The IETF is another volunteer organization responsible
for the operational and near term technical
problems of the Internet.
There is no central
authority or organization which collects fees
for Internet use. Instead, everyone who uses
the Internet pays for their part. Most networks
get together and decide how to connect themselves
and fund these interconnections. An educational
facility, government agency, or corporation
pays for their connection to some regional network
which pays a national provider for its access.
The process eventually filters down to you the
end user, so everyone who uses the Internet
has a hand in paying for it.
Internet
Standards
The Internet is
made possible through creation, testing and
implementation of Internet Standards. These
standards are developed by the Internet
Engineering Task Force . The standards are
then considered by the Internet
Engineering Steering Group , with appeal
to the Internet
Architecture Board , and promulgated by
the Internet Society as international standards.
The RFC Editor is responsible for preparing
and organizing the standards in their final
form. The standards may be found at numerous
sites distributed throughout the world. See,
for example, the ds.internic.
At the applications
level, the MIT World Wide Web Consortium plays
the leading role in developing and promulgating
WWW standards.
Vint Cerf has
written a brief history of the relationship
of the Internet Society with the Internet Engineering
Task Force.