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- Written Testimony of
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- Dr. Vinton G. Cerf
- Vice President
- Corporation for National Research Initiatives
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- and
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- President
- Internet Society
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- US House of Representatives
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- Committee on Science, Space and Technology
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- Subcommittee on Technology, Environment and Aviation
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- March 23, 1993
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- Corporation for National Research Initiatives
- 1895 Preston White Drive, Suite 100
- Reston, VA 22091
- +1 703-620-8990
- +1 703-620-0913
-
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- National Information Infrastructure
-
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
- Mr. Chairman, distinguished members of the subcommittee
- and guests, my name is Vinton G. Cerf and I am Vice
- President of the non-profit Corporation for National Research
- Initiatives (CNRI). I also have the honor to serve as President of
- the Internet Society (ISOC), which is a professional society of
- individuals who are users, developers or operators of the
- Internet. My remarks today are personal in nature, but they
- are colored by my past and present professional experiences
- which form the backdrop against which my opinions and ob-
- servations have evolved.
-
- I worked on the ARPANET project while a graduate student at
- UCLA in the early 1970s, helping to develop the protocols used
- to support communication between the computers (╥hosts╙) on
- the network. The highly successful ARPANET experience with
- packet switching technology led to additional satellite, mobile
- radio and local area packet networks, developed under
- Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) sponsorship and,
- in the case of Ethernet, at the Palo Alto Research Center of the
- Xerox Corporation. Dr. Robert Kahn, now the president of
- CNRI, initiated an ARPA internetting research program to ex-
- plore techniques to connect different packet networks in such
- a way that the host computers did not have to know anything
- about the intermediate networks linking them together. Dr.
- Kahn and I developed the idea of gateways and wrote the first
- specification for the basic TCP/IP protocols now used in the
- Internet.
-
- The idea behind Internet was the seamless linking of many
- different kinds of packet switched networks. I came to ARPA in
- 1976 to manage the Internetting research program and by the
- time I left ARPA in 1982, the TCP/IP protocols were widely
- used and the Department of Defense had declared them stan-
- dards for military use. The Internet has blossomed in the sub-
- sequent 10 years, particularly after the National Science
- Foundation (NSF) introduced the NSFNet as part of the
- Internet in the mid-1980s. In 1982, there were about 100
- computers on the ARPANET and a few score others were part
- of the NSF-sponsored CSNET which also used the Telenet
- public data network. In 1993 there are over 1.5 million of
- them. The system links over 10,000 networks in roughly 50
- countries. Although it is not known for certain how many
- users there are, we believe there are well over 5 million. The
- system is tied into most public and many private electronic
- messaging services and this expands the population able to
- exchange email to some 15 million. They include business
- people, academics, government workers, scientists, engineers,
- librarians, schoolteachers, astronomers, oceanographers, biol-
- ogists, historians, reporters, attorneys, homemakers, and sec-
- ondary school students .
-
- The system is doubling annually in users, networks, hosts and
- traffic. In some parts of the Internet, such as the NSFNet
- backbone, traffic growth rates as high as 15% per month have
- been measured. Internet is growing faster than any other
- telecommunications systems ever built, including the tele-
- phone network. Today, over half of the networks registered are
- associated with business users. Of course, these rates of
- growth cannot continue indefinitely, but there is reason to ex-
- pect that the user population will exceed 100M by 1998.
-
- Perhaps even more important, this federal investment in re-
- search has created new industries revolving at first around the
- hardware and software of Internet technology, and more re-
- cently, around network and information services supported by
- the Internet. The new businesses (such as Sun Microsystems,
- 3COM and Cisco Systems) have highly positive international
- trade balances and phenomenal growth, commensurate with
- the rapid growth of the Internet itself. The growth rate is ex-
- tremely strong in Europe, South America and the Pacific Rim
- creating major export markets for the US firms offering
- Internet products and services.
-
- In 1975, operational management of the ARPANET was trans-
- ferred to the Defense Communication Agency (now the Defense
- Information Systems Agency - DISA). In the mid-80s, the
- National Science Foundation (NSF), the Department of Energy
- (DOE), and the National Aeronautics and Space
- Administration (NASA) joined in supporting the evolution of
- the Internet and developing and applying its technologies. In
- addition to developing their own networks (that became inte-
- gral components of the Internet), these agencies participated
- in the development and standardization of the Internet proto-
- cols (TCP/IP Protocol Suite) and provided support to the sec-
- retariats of the Internet Architecture Board (IAB) and Internet
- Engineering and Research Task Forces (IETF and IRTF). This
- included support for the Internet Assigned Number Authority
- (IANA), document editor (╥RFC Editor╙), and Network
- Information Centers which provide information and assistance
- to users and deal with Internet network address assignments.
- ARPA, NSF, DISA, DOE and NASA now make up part of the
- Federal Networking Council which continues to oversee the
- development of networks used in government-sponsored re-
- search and education.
-
- Formed at the beginning of 1992, the non-profit, professional
- membership Internet Society provides an institutional frame-
- work for carrying out a variety of activities intended to foster
- the continued growth, evolution and application of the
- Internet. Included in this undertaking is the responsibility for
- the technical standards used in the Internet. Along with mem-
- bers of the Federal Networking Council, the Internet Society
- supports the IETF Secretariat. It sponsors conferences and
- workshops on the Internet and its technology, is establishing
- liaison relationships with the International Telecommunication
- Union (ITU) and Organization for International Standardization
- (ISO), works with various United Nations agencies (e.g. UN
- Development Program) to encourage the acquisition and use of
- Internet facilities in technologically-emerging countries, and
- participates in efforts to extend Internet services from univer-
- sity and research library communities to secondary school
- systems.
-
- The Internet Society does not operate any of the thousands of
- networks that make up the Internet, but it assists service
- providers by providing information to prospective users and
- involves product developers and researchers in the evolution of
- Internet technical standards. Corporate and individual, pro-
- fessional support for this organization is widespread and in-
- ternational in scope.
-
-
- High Performance Computing and Communication
-
- The High Performance Computing Act was signed into law late
- in 1991. The original impetus for this legislation came from
- then-Senator and now-Vice President Gore whose vision of
- ╥information superhighways╙ limned the potential of a comput-
- ing and communications infrastructure which would permeate
- and stimulate the government, business and private sectors of
- the US economy. The promise of a vast new economic engine
- equal to or larger than the engine sparked by the National
- Highway Act of 1956 was a powerful incentive for this bill and
- lies at the heart of the motivation for creating a new National
- Information Infrastructure.
-
- One of the key elements of the HPC initiative is its National
- Research and Education Network (NREN) program. Designed
- to extend the performance envelope of networking into billion
- bit per second (╥gigabit╙) territory and to extend the scope of
- access to a larger segment of the research and education
- communities, the effort spawned a major research program on
- gigabit networking. ARPA and NSF jointly funded an effort, or-
- ganized by the Corporation for National Research Initiatives, to
- establish multiple gigabit testbeds across the United States.
- The program is highly leveraged, involving major contributions
- from the computing and communications industries as well as
- several of the national laboratories and major research uni-
- versities .
-
- An important focus of the gigabit testbed program is to dis-
- cover by experimentation which technologies and applications
- are likely to form the core of the high performance communi-
- cation systems of the future. The deep involvement of industry
- is intended, in part, to assure that the results take into ac-
- count the plans and capabilities of the private sector. Such
- partnerships among government, industry and academic insti-
- tutions form a bedrock upon which new national infrastruc-
- ture can be founded.
-
- The vision of the NREN component of the HPC effort begins
- with the existing US component of the global Internet. Under
- the NREN program, key parts of the US Internet have been
- extended to operate at 45 million bits per second (in particular
- the NSFNet) and procurement of higher speed services by DOE
- and NASA is in progress. The gigabit testbed program is en-
- abling the early availability of very high speed network tech-
- nology and the results of the program will help to determine
- the architecture and technology of even higher capacity ser-
- vices. The NSFNet initiative, which began in 1986, has also led
- to the creation of dozens of new Internet service providers, in-
- cluding a number of for-profit networks offering unrestricted
- Internet service to all who desire it.
-
- Another fundamental motivation for the high performance
- networking component of HPC is the intense investment by the
- principal interexchange and local exchange telecommunica-
- tions carriers in the US in the use of optical fiber in their net-
- works. Capable of supporting operation in the billions of bits
- per second, the optical networks form the strands from which
- a national gigabit fabric can be woven. Investments by local
- exchange carriers and cable companies to increase the capac-
- ity of the lines reaching business and residential customers
- make it possible to envision a time when very high capacity
- services can be supported on an end-to-end basis.
-
- The far-sighted vision of the HPC effort, together with the ex-
- plosive growth of the Internet and basic communications fa-
- cilities resulting from private sector initiatives, have set the
- stage for a dramatic new step in the evolution and convergence
- of computing and communication: the creation of a National
- Information Infrastructure.
-
- INFRASTRUCTURE
-
- Information Infrastructure is the ╥common ground╙ on which
- computer-based products and services depend to achieve
- commonality and interoperability. Included in infrastructure
- are technical standards and the organizations and procedures
- through which they are developed; communication services
- and the physical, human and organizational resources needed
- to deploy, maintain and operate them; legal and regulatory
- frameworks which encourage cooperative development of pre-
- competitive technology, foster the protection of computer-ac-
- cessible intellectual property, the protection of privacy, and
- support the conduct of electronic commerce; widely available
- computer software for many hardware and operating system
- platforms establishing ubiquitous and interoperable comput-
- ing environments in which applications can be embedded.
- Infrastructure supplies the raw material out of which limitless
- applications may be constructed.
-
- Some of the characteristics which mark elements of infrastruc-
- ture include: ubiquity, expandable capacity, simplicity of use,
- applicability to many uses and broad affordability. A function-
- ing information infrastructure will lower technical and eco-
- nomic barriers to the introduction of computer-based products
- and services. It will simplify the discovery and ordering of
- products and services as well as billing for their use or acqui-
- sition. It will also facilitate the day-to-day operation of busi-
- nesses, government, education, health care and all the myriad
- activities that rely increasingly on the use of computer and
- communication technology to accomplish their objectives.
-
- Infrastructure has an enabling character. The highway system
- enabled the suburban housing boom and convenient, door to
- door delivery of goods. Of course, it also stimulated the auto-
- mobile industry and travel. The power generation and distri-
- bution system enabled the facile application of fractional
- horsepower motors and a vast array of other electrical appli-
- ances wherever they were needed.
-
- Infrastructure development is almost always preceded by criti-
- cal inventions which motivate the need for the infrastructure.
- The light bulb preceded and motivated the need for power gen-
- eration and distribution. The invention of the internal com-
- bustion engine and its application in automobiles motivated
- the need for better roads, service stations, gasoline refining
- and distribution. Once the roads were in place, their ubiquity
- and easy accessibility stimulated the production of a vast ar-
- ray of different vehicles, all designed to conform to certain
- common constraints (size, height, weight) so as to be usable on
- most of the roads in the system.
-
- The computer is the automobile of the information infrastruc-
- ture. Laptops are the sports cars; desktops are the sedans;
- supercomputers are the formula 1 racing engines; and gigantic
- mainframe data storagesystems are the 18 wheelers. The local
- access networks form the neighborhood streets; high capacity
- computer networks are the superhighways; and circuit, cell
- and packet switching systems form the complex interchanges.
-
- Just as vehicles on the road can be filled with an endless
- variety of people and products performing a multitude of
- services, software applications fill the empty computing vessels
- to create the new products and services of the information
- infrastructure. Communication protocols and standards form
- the rules of the road. When traffic jams and accidents occur,
- we call on emergency services to assist. The same may prove
- true for the information infrastructure when viruses infect the
- system or other software and/or hardware failures occur; we
- will need comparable emergency assistance to restore critical
- services and functions.
-
- The Electronic Frontier Foundation speaks of computers and
- computer networking as a ╥frontier in cyberspace.╙ This is an
- interesting and apt analogy, given the relative immaturity of
- both technologies. Despite the apparent sophistication of to-
- day╒s computers, networks and software, their application has
- barely scratched the surface of the latent possibilities. The no-
- tion of frontier raises images of boundaries and limits. But cy-
- berspace is a virtual place. It is created out of software, mak-
- ing cyberspace an endlessly expandable environment.
-
- Information is, itself, an infinitely renewable resource to be
- harvested, shaped, applied and recycled. The products and
- services which can be built atop the computer and communi-
- cation infrastructure simply have no logical limits. It is this
- ceaselessly changing, growing, transmuting information re-
- source which will fuel the economic engine of the information
- infrastructure.
-
- INFORMATION INFRASTRUCTURE FORMATION
-
- The technical challenges to be overcome in creating a national
- information infrastructure may only be overshadowed by some
- of the legal and policy problems. Taking the easier ones, first,
- it should be apparent that standards for the exchange of a va-
- riety of types of information (data) are essential. The value of
- infrastructure is that providers of two services which must in-
- terwork do not have to make bilateral agreements with every
- partner if appropriate technical standards are developed which
- enable such interworking. In the case of program (software)
- interworking, common representations of shared information
- must be agreed upon so that software developers can be
- reasonably assured that, if they follow the protocols, their
- application programs will interwork with each other.
-
- A variety of high and low-level standards are needed for
- representation of digital documents; information retrieval
- queries and responses;remote program interactions; financial
- or other commercial transactions; privacy, integrity and
- authenticity preservation; and a plethora of application-
- specific standards for information interchange. These
- representations need to include the capability for a wide range
- of media, including sound and pictures. There are a number of
- representations available for encoding these various media,
- but there is not yet widespread agreement on a common set.
- Consequently, we are still some distance away from a workable
- information infrastructure.
-
- The applications that can be supported on a suitable
- information infrastructure are limited only by imagination and
- creativity. Examples include health care support (e.g., patient
- information, prescription databases, digitized X-Rays and MRI
- scans), remote consultation); education (classrooms without
- walls, using the information infrastructure to receive
- instruction, explore digital libraries and work with distant
- partners), manufacturing, provision of government
- information, and support for electronic commerce (e.g., order
- entry, electronic or physical delivery of products, electronic
- payments, product specifications).
-
- An important element of Internet growth is the typical pricing
- strategy of service providers: flat rates based on the bandwidth
- of the lines used to access the Internet. Unlike some
- commercial email and other public data network service
- providers, Internet service providers have not charged by the
- ╥packet.╙ Many believe that this policy has had a major,
- positive effect on the growth of the network because users had
- little uncertainty with respect to annual costs for use of the
- system.
-
- ANECDOTES FROM THE 21ST CENTURY
-
- Those of us who have lived with the Internet since its inception
- have been living in what will be common in the next century.
-
- In preparation for this testimony, I sent a brief message out on
- the Internet to hundreds of thousands of people who make
- daily use of the network. I asked them to offer their thoughts
- on points they considered important to make. Within hours, I
- had thousands of responses, not just from domestic sources
- but from all over the world. Without the infrastructure of the
- Internet, such a question would not have been worth asking
- since the answers would have taken far too long to receive,
- and I could not have applied available computer cycles to sort
- and sift the resulting responses. My correspondents were al-
- most uniformly enthusiastic about the prospects for national
- and global information infrastructure. The following were some
- of the points they made:
-
- o The Internet Society newsletter is created by correspondents
- all over the globe who email their stories to the editors in
- Los Angeles, California and Reston, Virginia. The whole
- process takes places over a few days, with all the editing
- taking place on-line. Each issue is available on-line within
- minutes of completion through a variety of information
- services on the Internet.
-
- o A professor at the University of Southern Louisiana offered
- to teach a class on Internet use through email on the
- Internet. 15,000 people applied to take the class! This is
- ╥distance-learning╙ with clout!!
-
- o A blind student of Shakespeare asked on the net, ╥where
- can I get on-line copies of the plays, it╒s the only convenient
- way for me to read them.╙ He uses a text-to-speech and
- text-to-Braille device. He got back many pointers to on-line
- archives around the world.
-
- o When President Clinton and Vice President Gore were visit-
- ing Silicon Graphics in California╒s Silicon Valley, the audio
- and video of the speeches were packetized and ╥multicast╙
- on the Internet to hundreds of participating sites. This is an
- example of the nascent potential in combining all forms of
- communication in computer-mediated form.
-
- o Internet Talk Radio recently made the front page of the New
- York Times - it is another example of the convergence of
- digital computer communications and mass media.
-
- o When I needed information about the Spratley Islands, I
- just turned to the CIA World Fact Book made available on
- the Internet by the University of Minnesota.
-
- o A technical problem arose with an application running on
- an Apple Macintosh. The user sent an email message to
- several distribution lists and news groups and got back
- helpful responses, some in minutes, from France, Germany,
- Italy, Australia, India, Singapore, Canada, England,
- Norway, United States, Finland, ... well, you get the idea.
- Cyberspace has common interest groups that transcend
- national boundaries.
-
- o The city of Wellington, New Zealand, has a computer on the
- Internet. It has placed there a wide range of information of
- interest to potential visitors and tourists, local residents,
- and Internet explorers. There is strong historical evidence
- that the rich personal interactions that take place on the
- Internet contribute to a marked increase in face-to-face
- meetings requiring travel, so the local government is to be
- commended for its foresight.
-
-
- IMPORTANT THINGS THE US GOVERNMENT CAN DO
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- Offered below is a representative set of comments and sugges-
- tions received over the course of a few days from the Internet
- community. Because of its source, it has an obvious Internet
- bias to it, but despite that, I think these ideas are worthy of
- serious consideration.
-
- 1. Invest in the development of pre-competitive software and
- technology which is made available to industry for competitive
- productizing. Historically, universities have developed sample
- implementations of new Internet software which is then used
- as the basis for product and service development in industry.
- Occasionally, industry will sponsor development of freely
- available software which can be readily distributed throughout
- the network, creating a kind of mini-infrastructure on which
- more elaborate, for-profit products and services may be based.
- In both cases, new businesses are often created to service the
- market created.
-
- 2. Foster and facilitate the development of technical informa-
- tion standards through cooperative efforts among industry,
- academia and government. The procedures of the Internet
- Engineering Task Force are a model for expeditious and
- effective development because the standards must be im-
- plemented by multiple parties and shown to interoperate be-
- fore they are eligible for standardization.
-
- 3. Revisit COCOM and US-specific policy on the application,
- use, and export of the RSA and DES cryptographic technology.
- Present policies inhibit the creation of particular aspects of
- global information infrastructure and, in some cases, US
- companies are placed at a severe disadvantage relative to
- competitors. These technologies are key elements [no pun
- intended] in solving problems of intellectual property protec-
- tion and management and electronic commerce in an on-line
- environment.
-
- 4. Adopt the TCP/IP protocols as coequal with the OSI proto-
- cols in the US GOSIP specifications (which describe the profile
- of protocols that are recommended for use in Government pro-
- curements). The TCP/IP protocols are already in wide-spread
- use within the government, so this change would merely
- acknowledge reality.
-
- 5. Move aggressively to support library access to Internet ser-
- vices, with particular attention to rural community access.
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- 6. Institute training programs to educate the nation╒s sec-
- ondary school teachers and support staff on the use of com-
- puter and communication technology in the classroom.
- Subsidize access where this is necessary. Involve state educa-
- tional infrastructure in this effort. Review highly successful
- state-level programs as input to national policy development.
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- 7. Stimulate the development of quality software for use in
- curricula at all levels. Consider programs to develop pre-pro-
- duction software and make it available at no charge, leveraging
- the creativity of national laboratories, universities and individ-
- uals.
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- 8. Mandate public, on-line availability of government-produced
- or sponsored information and allow the private sector to add
- value and resell it. For example, the White House is providing
- on-line access to unclassified executive orders and text of
- speeches by senior administration officials within hours (and
- sometimes minutes) of their release.
-
- 9. Foster programs to explore and experiment with the use of
- information infrastructure to support telecommuting. Not only
- as an energy-saving, pollution-reducing step, but a major tool
- for implementing the Americans with Disabilities Act provi-
- sions. It was noted that home-employment and suburban
- satellite offices illustrate that electronic communication infras-
- tructure is approaching the importance of the more concrete
- (pun intended) traffic highways.
-
- 10. Make use of the Internet to harvest information from its
- tens of thousands of public databases as an adjunct to intelli-
- gence gathering and analysis by various agencies of the federal
- government. Make available government unclassified
- information and analysis via the Internet as a contribution to
- the community (e.g. CIA World Fact Book).
-
- 11. Get all branches of the government on electronic mail and
- support the ability to exchange email with the public.
-
- 12. Encourage the deployment of ISDN services.
-
- 13 Foster the development of shared scientific databases and
- collaboration tools which can be used to enhance the utility of
- research results and provide access to raw as well as analyzed
- data to support corroborating research.
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- 14. Make use of the Internet to build bridges among the
- scientific, research, academic and educational communities.
-
- 15. Link the museums of the world on the Internet.
-
- 16. Avoid the unintentional creation of a gap between
- information rich and poor. The concern here is that private
- sector entrepreneurship may conflict with freedom of access to
- public information. Note that the potential gap problem applies
- equally as well to individuals and to large and small cor-
- porations!
-
- 17. Position national policy so that the government need not
- subsidize network service providers. Rather, subsidize users,
- where this is appropriate. By this means, remove most of the
- Appropriate Use Policy dilemmas from consideration at the
- network level. It is not technically possible today, using exist-
- ing capabilities, to distinguish different classes of traffic at the
- network level. [There were a few people who thought the gov-
- ernment should build the National Information Infrastructure
- but the vast majority who commented on this preferred private
- sector service provision, albeit under government policies
- which assure ubiquity of service, full interconnection of all
- service providers and reasonable costs].
-
- 18. Find a way to make advertising permissible and useful in
- the National Information Infrastructure.
-
-