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- <text id=93TT0582>
- <title>
- Dec. 06, 1993: First Nation In Cyberspace
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Dec. 06, 1993 Castro's Cuba:The End Of The Dream
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TECHNOLOGY, Page 62
- First Nation In Cyberspace
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Twenty million strong and adding a million new users a month,
- the Internet is suddenly the place to be
- </p>
- <p>By Philip Elmer-DeWitt--With reporting by David S. Jackson/San Francisco and Wendy King/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Back in the mid-1960s, at the height of the cold war, the Department
- of Defense faced a tough question: How could orders be issued
- to the armed forces if the U.S. were ravaged by a nuclear assault?
- The communication hubs in place at the time--the telephone
- switching offices and the radio and TV broadcast stations--were not only vulnerable to attack, they would also probably
- be the first to go. The Pentagon needed a military command-and-control
- system that would continue to operate even if most of the phone
- lines were in tatters and the switches had melted down.
- </p>
- <p> In 1964 a researcher at the Rand Corp. named Paul Baran came
- up with a bizarre solution to this Strangelovian puzzle. He
- designed a computer-communications network that had no hub,
- no central switching station, no governing authority, and that
- assumed that the links connecting any city to any other were
- totally unreliable. Baran's system was the antithesis of the
- orderly, efficient phone network; it was more like an electronic
- post office designed by a madman. In Baran's scheme, each message
- was cut into tiny strips and stuffed into electronic envelopes,
- called packets, each marked with the address of the sender and
- the intended receiver. The packets were then released like so
- much confetti into the web of interconnected computers, where
- they were tossed back and forth over high-speed wires in the
- general direction of their destination and reassembled when
- they finally got there. If any packets were missing or mangled
- (and it was assumed that some would be), it was no big deal;
- they were simply re-sent.
- </p>
- <p> Baran's packet-switching network, as it came to be called, might
- have been a minor footnote in cold war history were it not for
- one contingency: it took root in the computers that began showing
- up in universities and government research laboratories in the
- late 1960s and early 1970s and became, by a path as circuitous
- as one taken by those wayward packets, the technological underpinning
- of the Internet.
- </p>
- <p> The Internet, for those who haven't been hanging out in cyberspace,
- reading the business pages or following Doonesbury, is the mother
- of all computer networks--an anarchistic electronic freeway
- that has spread uncontrollably and now circles the globe. It
- is at once the shining archetype and the nightmare vision of
- the information highway that the Clinton Administration has
- been touting and that the telephone and cable-TV companies are
- racing to build. Much of what Bell Atlantic and Time Warner
- are planning to sell--interactivity, two-way communications,
- multimedia info on demand--the Internet already provides for
- free. And because of its cold war roots, the Internet has one
- quality that makes it a formidable competitor: you couldn't
- destroy it if you tried.
- </p>
- <p> Nobody owns the Internet, and no single organization controls
- its use. In the mid-1980s the National Science Foundation built
- the high-speed, long-distance data lines that form Internet's
- U.S. backbone. But the major costs of running the network are
- shared in a cooperative arrangement by its primary users: universities,
- national labs, high-tech corporations and foreign governments.
- Two years ago, the NSF lifted restrictions against commercial
- use of the Internet, and in September the White House announced
- a plan to make it the starting point for an even grander concept
- called the National Information Infrastructure.
- </p>
- <p> Suddenly the Internet is the place to be. College students are
- queuing up outside computing centers to get online. Executives
- are ordering new business cards that show off their Internet
- addresses. Millions of people around the world are logging on
- to tap into libraries, call up satellite weather photos, download
- free computer programs and participate in discussion groups
- with everyone from lawyers to physicists to sadomasochists.
- Even the President and Vice President have their own Internet
- accounts (although they aren't very good at answering their
- mail). "It's the Internet boom," says network activist Mitch
- Kapor, who thinks the true sign that popular interest has reached
- critical mass came this summer when the New Yorker printed a
- cartoon showing two computer-savvy canines with the caption,
- "On the Internet, nobody knows you're a dog."
- </p>
- <p> But the Internet is not ready for prime time. There are no TV
- Guides to sort through the 5,000 discussion groups or the 2,500
- electronic newsletters or the tens of thousands of computers
- with files to share. Instead of feeling surrounded by information,
- first-timers ("newbies" in the jargon of the Net) are likely
- to find themselves adrift in a borderless sea. Old-timers say
- the first wave of dizziness doesn't last long. "It's like driving
- a car with a clutch," says Thomas Lunzer, a network designer
- at SRI International, a California consulting firm. "Once you
- figure it out, you can drive all over the place."
- </p>
- <p> But you must learn new languages (like UNIX), new forms of address
- (like president@whitehouse.gov) and new ways of expressing feeling
- (like those ubiquitous sideways smiley faces), and you must
- master a whole set of rules for how to behave, called netiquette.
- Rule No. 1: Don't ask dumb questions. In fact, don't ask any
- questions at all before you've read the FAQ (frequently asked
- questions) files. Otherwise you risk annoying a few hundred
- thousand people who may either yell at you (IN ALL CAPS!) or,
- worse still, ignore you.
- </p>
- <p> All that is starting to change, however, as successive waves
- of netters demand, and eventually get, more user-friendly tools
- for navigating the Internet. In fact, anyone with a desktop
- computer and a modem connecting it to a phone line can now find
- ways into and around the network. "The Internet isn't just computer
- scientists talking to one another anymore," says Glee Willis,
- the engineering librarian at the University of Nevada at Reno
- and one of nearly 20,000 (mostly female) academic librarians
- who have joined the Internet in the past five years. "It's a
- family place. It's a place for perverts. It's everything rolled
- into one."
- </p>
- <p> As traffic swells, the Internet is beginning to suffer the problems
- of any heavily traveled highway, including vandalism, break-ins
- and traffic jams. "It's like an amusement park that's so successful
- that there are long waits for the most popular rides," says
- David Farber, a professor of information science at the University
- of Pennsylvania and one of the network's original architects.
- And while most users wait patiently for the access and information
- they need, rogue hackers use stolen passwords to roam the network,
- exploring forbidden computers and reading other people's mail.
- </p>
- <p> How big is the Internet? Part of its mystique is that nobody
- knows for sure. The only fact that can be measured precisely
- is the number of computers directly connected to it by high-speed
- links--a figure that is updated periodically by sending a
- computer program crawling around like a Roto-Rooter, tallying
- the number of connections (last count: roughly 2 million). But
- that figure does not include military computers that for security
- reasons are invisible to other users, or the hundreds of people
- who may share a single Internet host. Nor does it include millions
- more who dial into the Internet through the growing number of
- commercial gateways, such as Panix and Netcom, which offer indirect
- telephone access for $10 to $20 a month. When all these users
- are taken into account, the total number of people around the
- world who can get into the Internet one way or another may be
- 20 million. "It's a large country," says Farber of the Internet
- population. "We ought to apply to the U.N. as the first nation
- in cyberspace."
- </p>
- <p> That nation is about to get even bigger as the major commercial
- computer networks--Prodigy, CompuServe, America Online, GEnie
- and Delphi Internet Service--begin to dismantle the walls
- that have separated their private operations from the public
- Internet. The success of the Internet is a matter of frustration
- to the owners of the commercial networks, who have tried all
- sorts of marketing tricks and still count fewer than 5 million
- subscribers among them. Most commercial networks now allow electronic
- mail to pass between their services and the Internet. Delphi,
- which was purchased by Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. in September,
- began providing its customers full Internet access last summer.
- America Online (which publishes an electronic version of Time)
- is scheduled to begin offering limited Internet services later
- this month.
- </p>
- <p> People who use these new entry points into the Net may be in
- for a shock. Unlike the family-oriented commercial services,
- which censor messages they find offensive, the Internet imposes
- no restrictions. Anybody can start a discussion on any topic
- and say anything. There have been sporadic attempts by local
- network managers to crack down on the raunchier discussion groups,
- but as Internet pioneer John Gilmore puts it, "The Net interprets
- censorship as damage and routes around it."
- </p>
- <p> The casual visitor to the newsgroups on the Usenet (a bulletin-board
- system that began as a competitor to the Internet but has been
- largely subsumed by it) will discover discussion groups labeled,
- according to the Net's idiosyncratic cataloging system, alt.sex.masturbation,
- alt.sex.bondage and alt.sex.fetish.feet. On Internet Relay Chat,
- a global 24-hour-a-day message board, one can stumble upon imaginary
- orgies played out with one-line typed commands ("Now I'm taking
- off your shirt..."). In alt.binaries.pictures.erotica, a
- user can peek at snapshots that would make a sailor blush.
- </p>
- <p> But those who focus on the Internet's sexual content risk missing
- the point. For every sexually oriented discussion group there
- are hundreds on tamer and often more substantial topics ranging
- from bungee jumping to particle physics. Last week Virginia
- college student Chris Glover responded to a distressed message
- from a suicidal undergraduate in Denver. After two hours of
- messages back and forth, Glover was able to pinpoint the woman's
- location and call for help.
- </p>
- <p> With all this variety, Internet users are unimpressed by television's
- promise of a 500-channel future. The Internet already delivers
- 10,000 channels, and the only obstacle that prevents it from
- carrying live TV pictures is the bandwidth (or carrying capacity)
- of the data lines. Some video clips--and at least one full-length
- video movie--are already available on the network. And last
- spring, writer Carl Malamud began using the Internet to distribute
- a weekly "radio" interview show called Geek of the Week. Malamud
- is undeterred by the fact that it takes a computer about an
- hour over a high-speed modem to capture the 30 minutes of sound
- that a $10 radio can pick up instantly for free. But bandwidth
- capacity has nowhere to go but up, says Malamud, and its cost
- will only go down.
- </p>
- <p> The Internet, however, will have to go through some radical
- changes before it can join the world of commerce. Subsidized
- for so long by the Federal Government, its culture is not geared
- to normal business activities. It does not take kindly to unsolicited
- advertisements; use electronic mail to promote your product
- and you are likely to be inundated with hate mail directed not
- only at you personally but also at your supervisor, your suppliers
- and your customers as well. "It's a perfect Marxist state, where
- almost nobody does any business," says Farber. "But at some
- point that will have to change."
- </p>
- <p> The change has already begun. NSF's contribution now represents
- about 10% of the total cost of the network, and the agency is
- scheduled to start phasing out its support next April, removing
- at the same time what few restrictions still remain against
- commercial activity. According to Tim O'Reilly, president of
- O'Reilly & Associates, a publisher experimenting with advertiser-supported
- Internet magazines, the system could evolve in one of two ways:
- either entrepreneurs will manage to set up shop on a free-market
- version of the Internet, or some consortium will take the whole
- thing over and turn it into a giant CompuServe. "That's an outcome,"
- O'Reilly says, "that would effectively destroy the Internet
- as we know it."
- </p>
- <p> As the traffic builds and the billboards go up, some Internet
- veterans are mourning the old electronic freeway. "I feel kind
- of sad about it," says Denise Caruso, editorial director of
- Friday Holdings, a publisher specializing in new media. "It
- was such a dynamic, pulsing thing. I wonder whether we shouldn't
- have left it alone." Others see the period of uncertainty ahead
- as a rare opportunity for citizens to shape their own technological
- destiny. "We need...a firm idea of the kind of media environment
- we would like to see in the future," warns Howard Rheingold
- in his new book, The Virtual Community. While it may be difficult
- for communities as diverse as those on the Internet to set their
- own agenda, it seems increasingly likely that if they don't,
- someone else will do it for them.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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