The following text is copyright 1998 by
Network World, permission is hearby given for reproduction, as long as attribution
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An Internet management
with clues?
By Scott Bradner
Its been five and a half
years since I started writing this column. In the first two years I used many
of the columns to defend the Internet as real and claimed that it would grow in
importance in the future. In one of those columns I wrote "In the universe
where I live, the Internet is the future. The Internet is growing into the
ubiquitous connectivity service. In this universe we are building the future
rather than waiting for someone else to hand us something they think might be
what we want. (Generally determined without the process of asking.)" This
is not meant to be an 'I told you so' column but one of amazement and more than
a little bit of trepidation.
I just got back from
Geneva where I attended the Internet Society's annual meeting (http://www.isoc.org) and one day of the "International Forum on the
White Paper" which followed. (http://www.geneva.ifwp.org/). The forum is working towards a
consensus on how to deal with the US government's intention to withdraw from
funding some of the basic infrastructure operations for the Internet as
announced in a white paper. (http://www.ntia.doc.gov/ntiahome/domainname/6_5_98dns.htm)
The forum meeting had
people from around the world discussing the implications of a potential power
vacuum left behind as the US government withdraws from the scene. The results
of the meeting are still intermediate since this was one of a series of
meetings with the last one in Singapore in the middle of August. But what was
the most impressive about this meeting was the fact that it was not just a room
full of Internet geeks. Speakers included a top advisor to President Clinton
and a minister for the European Commission and participants were from all areas
of business, education, and government. If anything the Internet geek community
was under represented.
I've looked back on the
columns I've written in these past five years and have thought back to the many
conversations I've had during the same time period. It is clear that one area
where the Internet technical community, which I like to think myself part of,
missed the boat was in really understanding, deep down, how much of the control
of this network was going to slip out of our hands. Most of our predictions
about the inevitable success of the Internet in the face of governmental
regulations requiring the use of other technologies such as OSI have come true.
We knew we where going to be successful but failed to adequately appreciate how
much the result would look like honey to the regulatory bears and ants.
It is not going to get
easier in the future to minimize the effect of governmental "help."
The Internet now plays a role in the economic health of the industrialized
world that few observers could have imagined even a few years ago. The outcome
of this series of meetings will help determine if there will be a role for the
technically cluefull in Internet management, as the white paper recommends or
not, as some of the businessmen and politicians would rather. Wish us well.
disclaimer: Harvard has
no position on Internet governance (its too new) even though some Harvard
people do.