Ask Dr. Vinton Cerf About the Internet 284
If anyone can claim to have "invented the Internet," (or at least to have co-invented it) it's Vint Cerf, who never makes this claim himself. But he's certainly had a hand in shaping most of what we call "the Internet" today, and is now working on taking the Internet or something like it to Mars and other planets. A Google Search for "Vint Cerf" brings up thousands of responses, so you should have no trouble coming up with a unique, interesting question for him. (As is usual with Slashdot interviews, we'll send 10 of the top-moderated questions to Dr. Cerf about 24 hours after this post, and publish his answers shortly after he gets them back to us.)
Early days of the net (Score:3, Funny)
What was it like working with Al Gore?
Re:Early days of the net (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually Vint has publicly commented on this, and (seriously) said that Al Gore as a senator provided crucial support, allow me to quote: "The Internet would not be where it is in the United States without the strong support given to it and related research areas by the Vice President in his current role and in his earlier role as Senator."
No, Al did not invent the internet, but yes, he was a key player back then.
Al helped build the Intenet (Score:3, Informative)
Yes, Al misspoke. But he was also crucial to the Internet being what it is today, so he gets some points.
Re:Al helped build the Intenet (Score:3, Funny)
Al Gore's karma: Good (mostly affected by popular vote):
-1, Political Exaggeration
+2, Crucial Contribution
This senator is currently rated +1, Insightful but Boring.
Re:Al helped build the Intenet (Score:2)
It probably is true that Gore was an important -- but hardly crucial -- player during his years as a senator. I think Vint Cerf has said as much. However, I don't really think that the Clinton/Gore administration can be given a whole lot of credit for building the Internet. You might be able to make a case for the World Wide Web. At least they didn't get in the way, which is often what happens when politicians get interested in something.
Re:Al helped build the Intenet (Score:2)
Clinton/Gore went for the schools, got people used to it, and funded library and other public access systems to try to get as many people able to use the Internet as a tool as possible, and gave incentives to telecom companies to build networks as fast as possible.
I suppose saying "build the Internet" is a bit overkill -- the procols were in place, and there was a large, working network. Building the infrastructure that lets the thing exist today, and makes it available to everyone, though....it isn't just an academic tool, or a tool used for a couple of UNIX geeks to chat via talk.
Also, I think defining it as building the Web is a little too harsh. The Web *did* happen to get popularized around the same time, but it certainly wasn't because the government was directly pushing Web browsing.
Re:Al helped build the Intenet (Score:5, Interesting)
That would have been when Gore was Senator for Tennessee and lead the committee that gave funding to the NSFnet at that time. Gore was involved with the Internet when it was still the ARPAnet.
Heck, Gore was involved when we were still having problems with AT&T trying to stop us sending packet data over the telephone system because they saw packet data as competition to circuit switching.
In 1990 the email you sent to an 'Internet' would most likely have travelled over the NSF supported backbone. In addition NSF picked up the tab to run the DNS system, IANA and a lot of other infrastructure we needed.
Today of course those services are all supported on a commercial basis but anyone involved in the transition process knew that Gore was calling the shots. The civil service view at the time was that the administration should simply wait for OSI networking to take off. Tom Kalil and Jock Gill spent a lot of time knocking heads together on that one.
Although the Web grew quickly in academia we did not make much impact in the commercial world outside the computing industry until after whitehouse.gov went online. Afterwards it was like someone had turned on a lightswitch.
To be fair there were also Republicans who were very helpful. Newt Gingrich made a lot of enemies setting up the Congressional Web site. However the people who smeared Gore were the same folk who did Newt's political career in.
Re:Al helped build the Intenet (Score:2)
gps or moving IPs (Score:2, Interesting)
do you believe that the proliferation of internet will give rise to numerous GPS/IP points of contacts for each person, object, etc? I could see a myriad uses for this technology, real time tracking of people, real time product distribution, etc. There are obviously privacy issues but is there anyone in the industry developing prodcuts or solutions for this market?
Re:gps or moving IPs (Score:2)
Do a google ferchrissake. No need to bother Cerf with stuff you could ask any geek of the street.
RFC's and OS's (Score:2)
What do you think about Anonymnity? (Score:5, Interesting)
What's your take on anonymnity in the internent? Is a good thing? A bad thing? Just a thing not worth talking about?
Re:What do you think about Anonymnity? (Score:3, Insightful)
The fact that most people are irresponsible, and generally assholes when constrained only by their own moral princples shouldn't be terribly suprising.
Re:What do you think about Anonymnity? (Score:2)
The fact that most people are irresponsible, and generally assholes when constrained only by their own moral princples shouldn't be terribly suprising.
It isn't... but most of the time, people ARE restrained by more than just abstract morals.
Re:What do you think about Anonymnity? (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually there is a significant amount of research into the phenomena which sees people lose or relax social and/or moral control when given anonymity.
The opportunity to vent destructive behaviour otherwise unacceptable in society is a coping mechanism employed by some people. It is often done in a (socially) harmless manner - yelling in your own back yard, hitting walls, going to gym - but occaionally people go "over the edge".
Anonymity brings the edge closer: it seems that people are just naturally more destructive when they cannot be held accountable.
At the core of the whole problem is that a society cannot exist with true anonymity. Society requires the ability to identify individuals who are acting against society.
Hindsight (Score:5, Interesting)
Dan Bricker
Re:Hindsight (Score:2)
Re:Hindsight (Score:2)
So should we really say (Score:2, Funny)
DRM? (Score:5, Interesting)
How? (Score:2)
1)Did you ever work with Al Gore? (not really a question)
2)How would we tansmit (speeds, reliability, etc) from Mars to Earth? To me it seems that with solar flares and metors, reliability would be low. Also how will you be able to get a reliable test of connection from Earth to Mars? How would we test this connection without being on Mars?
Better place? (Score:3, Interesting)
Do you think the Internet has changed the world? Is it now a better place?
Re:Better place? (Score:5, Funny)
Commercial Email's Early Days (Score:5, Interesting)
As most engineers know, we have to make some sacrifices with every project and get rid of certain features that we had hoped would be there but cannot due to monetary constraints, etc.
Could you explain some of the more difficult decisions you had to make as the head of this particular project? Moreover, was there ever a point in the project where no one thought the final product was viable?
Thanks.
Do you use AOL Instant Messenger? [bucknell.edu]
Re:Commercial Email's Early Days (Score:2)
Having worked with MCI Mail, at least indirectly, I would think that it would be easier to mention the person who thought it was viable. He would be one of the first to be stood up against the wall when the revolution comes. Along with Bill, a bundle of his more enthusiastic minions, the guy who invented muzac, the original Kilroy, both Bushes, Osama and his gang of merry martyrs, Hilary Rosen, Jack Valenti, the Dell guy and...
OK, so we need a really, really big wall - big deal - there's one in China.
Taming the Spam (Score:4, Interesting)
On a related note...
Spam is growing out of control and many
administrators now consider SMTP/email to
be broken by design.
Did the problem of unsolicited email, forged
addresses and falsified mail headers ever occur
in the early design of SMTP/email?
What was the opinion on internet abuse and
forgery back in the early days?
Do you think there is a possibility to replace
SMTP with a new design?
IP vs. IP? (Score:5, Interesting)
TCP/IP (Score:5, Interesting)
On a related note... (Score:2)
What about NAT? (Score:4, Interesting)
Since the IP protocols were originally built around the idea of unique addresses, I'm wondering if you think NAT has been a beneficial kludge or a curse. Do you think IP should have been had a built-in NAT mechanism allowing for a more protocol-friendly NAT?
Will the (eventual) adoption of the larger address space of IPv6 lead to the elimination of NAT? Should it?
Negatives of the 'Net (Score:5, Interesting)
Largest Milestone (Score:3, Interesting)
(i.e.: xml, php/asp, etc...)
WWW (Score:2)
Changing the 'Net (Score:2, Redundant)
Question (Score:5, Interesting)
My question (Score:4, Interesting)
The most surprising thing? (Score:5, Interesting)
Beyond Internet (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, is IP protocol The Wheel? And is will this wheel be always a near-round polygon with several holes on it? Isn't any avenue of future for a better protocol? Will we see "ping Mars - timeout, timeout, timeout, timeout - 48 minutes - Mars pinged 80% lost packets" as a common reality?
Where Wizards Stay Up Late (Score:2)
- Tim
Disappointment? (Score:4, Interesting)
But what about the development of the Internet has disappointed you? Commercial dominance? Trivialization of the new resource? "Digital Divide"? Security problems? The Microsoft monoculture? The hype of the bubble circa 1999?
IP Addresses (Score:2)
IPv6? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:IPv6? (Score:2)
[Paraphrased]"Realistically, IPv6 is necessary but it isn't going to happen until Microsoft move their Operating Systems to support it."
Re:IPv6? (Score:2)
Your most surprising personal use? (Score:5, Interesting)
How do you find yourself using the Internet, in ways that would have surprised you a decade ago?
Internet Survival (Score:2, Interesting)
Internet Governace (Score:5, Interesting)
How do they differ from what we have to day? On the whole, are you optimistic or pessimistic about all this?
Internet vs. Interweb (Score:4, Interesting)
filters? (Score:4, Interesting)
Triv
What about ICANN? (Score:2)
Re:What about ICANN? (Score:2)
Do you know runs [icann.org] ICANN?
parasitic computing and ai (Score:2, Interesting)
Last year, Jay Brockman and colleagues at the University of Notre Dame, Indiana sent out packets with carefully crafted checksums such that only the packet with the checksum which solved their mathematical problem returned an ack packet.
article here [nature.com]
this kind of distributed brute force search could be useful in the huge search spaces of ai.
Furthermore, instead of a single computer pretending it is a neural network, a different application of distributed parasitic computing could allow a network of computers to be tricked into having each computer spend a few clock cycles pretending it is a neuron.
Would you support the development future network protocols which encourage these kind of facilities?
Thanks
What's next? (Score:3, Interesting)
Advancing to the next phase (Score:4, Interesting)
Others take the Sony approach: the Internet will advance when we can use it as a facilitator -- such as being able to store photos or video from handheld cameras to servers, or access it from cell phones and PDAs for messaging and Bluetooth-type functionality.
Are there other approaches that you've seen (or considered!) for utilization of the Internet that don't head down these two widely-touted avenues?
OSI vs. TCP/IP (Score:5, Funny)
Oh, heck, I'll ask a question. (Score:4, Interesting)
When you were doing all the initial work, putting things together, and figuring out how things 'should' be, did you ever consider how easy it would become?
I mean, did you ever in your wildest dreams imagine AOL, or something like it? Instant Messaging, Plug and Play, and everything else? To me, back in the good old days (tm) the obfuscation of computer networking was a boon, even in the early '90's. Like Usenet before 1996. I'll admit to enjoying things maybe a bit more when everyone and their grandmother didn't contribute to discussions with one sided opinions in all caps.
So, I guess it's a to part question - did you ever imagine it becoming so easy, and do you wish it had stayed harder?
Distributed Computing (Score:5, Interesting)
Building on that last question, did you at any time consider the possibility of Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks against a single host on the inter-network, or against the inter-network as a whole? If so, what, if any safeguards did you consider implementing to protect against such problems?
Creators of the Internet (Score:4, Interesting)
When the Digital Pearl Harbor happens... (Score:4, Funny)
The Secret Service/NSA/FBI/CIA assure us that evil criminal masterminds and cyberterrorists are poised to take down the internet and cripple the global economy at any moment. Given the accuracy of their past predictions, this too will surely come to pass. When it does, the government will need a scapegoat, and fast. I think we know who that will be.
My question is: where do you plan to hide, what psueodonym will you adopt, and will you be travelling in company with Al Gore?
Don't worry, we won't tell them. This is just between you and us.
Which term do you hate more? (Score:4, Funny)
Information Superhighway
Cyberspace
Letter from John Gilmore (Score:5, Interesting)
Please mod parent up (Score:2)
Someone please mod parent up. I want to see VC's answer to this.
Re:Letter from John Gilmore (Score:3, Interesting)
OTOH, ICANN tried to use the letter against Karl in the court case. Properly, the court ruled that John's letter could not be attributed to Karl - without regard to whether Karl agreed with what John said.
Re:Letter from John Gilmore (Score:2, Insightful)
He probably has not responded to it, and even so, they won't give this question to him.
John Gilmore was not seeking a response. The time for that has long passed.
This is Mr. Gilmore going 'RASPBERRY!! THBPPPTTTTTPTTTT!!' it's an up raised arm at a 90 degree angle with a hand on the upper arm. It's not a call for a debate, it's a last ditch "Hey buddy, screw you, you suck."
Not that I DISAGREE with Mr. Gilmore about the state of ICANN, just the idea of this being a request for dialog. ICANN is going to be dragged down to its knees, pompous and proud the whole way.
Pehaps we could rephrase the question? (Score:2)
ICANN is seen from the outside as a self-serving and counterproductive entity. Given your support of it, I assume you disagree. Can you give us some reasons to see differently? Perhaps explain why ICANN has such a bad public image, and why the public is wrong on these things. Why has the increasingly unanimous need for reform been ignored? How can the public come to trust ICANN if ICANN won't trust the public with information about their business?
IP address shortage? (Score:5, Interesting)
Evolutionary vs. Revolutionary Change (Score:3, Interesting)
In the future, so you see the Internet envolving in a evolutionary fashion, or are revolutionary changes in store?
The Man (Score:2)
One the one hand, you're well-respected in technical circles for your engineer efforts in the early days of the internet, and generally thought of as a correct and forward-thinking person. On the other hand, you were employed for most of recent history (perhaps still?) by MCI/WorldCom, who've been accused of being shortsighted in many ways, and not very true to the spirit of the net. How do you reconcile these things? Do you have any say or sway?
Ten Years from Now... (Score:2)
In ten years, do you think that the average person's use of the Internet will be similar to today, or will it be drastically different?
IPv6? (Score:5, Interesting)
Internet and the Web (Score:2, Insightful)
How do you feel about the fact that many people think of the World Wide Web and the Internet as the same thing?
Email, FTP and even chat protocols seem to be more and more mediated by an HTTP interface. Is this just the price of making the 'Net available to more people, or do you think there is a chance for a non WWW or WWW-workalike to get significant public use?
long term (Score:2)
Any comments on the Whitehouse Cybersecurity proposal released last week?
Voice? (Score:3)
So... (Score:4, Interesting)
And in your opinion, what is it about ICANN that causes people to hate it so vehemently? Is it justified?
Open Source Movement? (Score:2)
What are your views of the Open Source Movement?
Porn and Scams and Cons (Score:2)
Subject to carrier terms (Score:2)
Now, some software firms, primarily under the banner of "fighting piracy" are looking again to the pay-to-play model and trying to implement this sort of system, most notably in the .NET framework. While the initial outlay for users may be much smaller (since software packages don't need to be purchased in bulk up-front), the long-term strategy is to bring in more money to the software creator.
However, personal computers are too powerful and there are too many people interested in having software which works locally -- obtained by paying a one-time fee or nothing at all -- that it would be difficult, if not impossible, to force people and companies back into the old model.
The Internet is another matter. Computer systems used to run exclusively locally. Thanks to the work by you and your peers, where it used to be near-impossible to hook up a couple VAXes together, it became possible to link more and more computers together into the Net we have today.
Political and corporate forces are attempting to divide and control this behemoth. While the first round of attempts in the form of the dot-bomb craze failed spectacularly in commercialising and segmenting the Net, a new wave is having much more success. The Great Firewall of China and damnable legislation is cutting access. Further attempts to force hardware manufacturers to make controls available continue.
Unlike software, which has been commoditised, carrier and connection are services which cross state and national borders. Furthermore, where there are few barriers to entry in the software field, a common carrier requires incredible up-front infrastructure. Hence, there are few major carriers, all of which are regulated by both domestic and foreign governments.
It is therefore rather unlikely, even with some clever hacks such as Triangle Boy [safeweb.com], that a return to closed loops and segments is unavoidable if the proponents are prepared to work at it, which they seemingly are.
What do you think about these developments? If your feeling is that they are anathema to the purpose of the Net (which was initially a defensive weapon and never meant to be what it has become), do you see any solutions beyond lobbying of Congressmen, which won't happen for the simple reason that the users are too dispersed as compared to those organised and deep-pocketed who would strongly control the Net?
woof.
third world access (Score:3)
The biggest set of have nots are still those who have not in respect of anything (the third world). We have the 'ring of fire' around Africa, but that's only really useful for the countries with a shoreline. Do you think your efforts for intra-planet internet-working would help to provide better satellite based access for making ISP's cheaper.
Taking it to Mars? (Score:2)
Sounds like Mr. Cerf has reached the dabbling stage of his career.
Policing the internet. (Score:2, Interesting)
As more and more crimes become committed on the internet, what is your take on how it should be policed?
Should the law of the country where the servers are held be applied, or the law of the country of the guilty party?
Who should be the police?
XML (Score:2)
XML has a similar goal. It has been used to connecting companies together who have different internal processes.
With web services and the explosion of XML based standards, what thoughts do you have on wether or not XML will succeed? What are its strengths and shortcomings when put along side of TCP/IP?
So... (Score:2, Funny)
Did you design the Internet for p0rn or mp3s?
An internet of the people, or for the people?... (Score:5, Interesting)
However, after the internet revolution (of the early 90's) freed it from being Arpa-Net, we had a "golden age" where anyone could connect, and anyone with enough technical know-how could run a server and become a permanent part of the system.
But now we see a day looming in the future where large media conglomerates control it all through draconian service agreements that dis-allow private individuals to run servers in their homes, as well as "linking lawsuits", and patents of obvious business methods, all resulting in an internet where the vast majority of the people can only passively view information rather than interactively take part in providing information.
Do you think it's a "good thing" for everyone to run servers (an internet of the people), or do you believe that it's better for the government and corporations to control the flow of information to citizens (an internet for the people).
While it seems an obvious choice, remember that the situation we have now, where the internet is the "wild west" and mailboxes are littered with spam, and internet rumours become accidental news stories, is a direct result of an internet "of the people".
So there are pros and cons either way. Basically the question boils down to "do you prefer the wild west" versus "do you prefer a controlled, moderated internet?"
IETF and ICANN (Score:5, Interesting)
Software Patents (Score:2)
No Selfish Naming (Score:2)
]
The internet and spam (Score:3, Interesting)
And, I'm sure you find some issues troubling. I would be interested in your views of SPAM. Did you anticipate it? What do you think about it? And do you have any ideas on how it can be managed or controlled (or, better yet, stopped)?
Biggest promise? (Score:4, Interesting)
What do you see as the largest promise of improvement of the Internet? Specifically, what would you like the Internet to be in 20 years?
best regards,
Jeppe
Security on the Mars run (Score:2)
Cerf? Surf? Surfing? (Score:2)
Internet amongst the grand scheme of things (Score:2, Interesting)
My question is how important a place in society is the internet now, and what do you expect its place to be in the future?
And now something completely different (Score:2)
What is her favorite meal that you cook?
Reciepes?
Spam and E-mail "rights." (Score:2)
I'm curious about your views on a couple of 'hot-button' topics. First, spam and spammers: How would you choose to deal with the problems created by both, assuming you were in a position to dictate such policy?
Second, building on the first question: One of the positions taken by, apparently, many SysAdmins (myself included) is that the ability to send E-mail is a privilege, not a right (just like driving), and that said privilege is revocable on a per-network basis by the specific system's administrator(s) at any time, and for any reason, primarily because the vast majority of hosts that make up the Internet are privately owned and operated.
What is your take on this position? Valid? Invalid? Somewhere in between? Do you see the sending of E-mail being legislated into a "right" in times to come? (My belief is that, if this happens, the 'net will drown in spam in short order as blocklists become outlawed).
Thanks much.
Do you see WiFi as a positive thing? (Score:2)
Dark Fiber (Score:2, Interesting)
What do you believe is going to happen to all the dark fiber that has been installed by Worldcom and others? It seems clear at this point that fiber networks have been grossly overbuilt, and demand for much, if not most, of this fiber is not about to materialize, at least within the context of current applications and cost structure. In your opinion, does this situation represent a massive loss of investment, or a tremendous opportunity to sell innovative new services, e.g. intercity video teleconferencing links which are cost-competitive with voice-only conferences?
Are innovations that could take advantage of this fiber likely to be stifled as a result of the current dependence of the telecom industry on high bandwidth charges? If this were a pure supply-and-demand situation, one might expect the cost to access dark fiber to sink like a rock until people were willing to pay for it, allowing small, entrepreneurial companies to begin to offer speculative new services. Does all that fiber remain dark only because the small number of fiber owners are unwilling to allow such price declines to happen?
Internet censorship (Score:3, Interesting)
Workstations and Timeshare Systems (Score:3, Interesting)
You and Kahn were doing your early work on TCP in the same years that the first workstations (at Xerox Parc, for example) were being developed. I'd like to know, if you can remember, when you first began to appreciate the magnitude of this change in the internet user base, and whether this change had any affect on your TCP/IP design work in the late 70s.
Answer (Score:4, Informative)
It's worth noting that he wrote those words when Clinton was still President and Gore -- you know, the elected President of the United States -- was still VP. Makes me nostalgic for the days when we had an administration that wasn't living in the Dark Ages. [sigh]
Re:Answer (Score:2)
Re:Question (Score:2)
How else do you parse the words "I took the initative in creating the Internet.">