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Correcting the Record: the Government's Role In the Internet

TwobyTwo writes "Yesterday, Slashdot posted a piece titled Who Really Invented the Internet?. It quoted a Wall Street Journal article with the same title by Gordon Crovitz. Crovitz makes the claim that government research did not play a key role in driving the invention of the Internet, giving credit instead to Xerox PARC. Unfortunately, Crovitz' article is wrong on many specific points, and he's also wrong in his key conclusion about the government's role. In a wonderful piece in the LA Times Michael Hiltzik corrects the record. Hiltzik, who is the author of an excellent book about PARC called Dealers of Lightning, makes clear that government funded research was indeed the foundation for the Internet's success."

5 of 257 comments (clear)

  1. Don't put the modem before the router by davide+marney · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The technical community may have invented the Internet, but it was the users who made it valuable by entrusting to it their time, money, and content. The users made a huge investment, and while that investment has paid off handsomely, let's not pretend that technologists invented all that valuable content.

    --
    "We receive as friendly that which agrees with, we resist with dislike that which opposes us" - Faraday
  2. Re:Al Gore by Enry · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Before Al Gore got involved, there was little to no commercial traffic over the Internet (you couldn't sell anything). This was back when the NSF(?) was involved. Afterwards, you could start selling and interest in the Internet increased rapidly.

    Did Al Gore create the Internet? No. Was he one of the people primarily responsible for making it what it is today? Yes.

  3. Re:Government is good for jumpstarting tech/ideas by Schmorgluck · · Score: 5, Insightful

    (As opposed to other government projects like the Amtrak Monopoly that should have been sold to Conrail or some other profitable rail company years ago.)

    What's the point in turning a government monopoly into a corporate monopoly?

    You're aware that there can't be two railway networks on a given territory, right?

    Opening the trains to competition, okay, but the tracks are a natural monopoly, and should remain under control of the People, through an entity that is accountable to it. A corporate monopoly isn't accountable to the People.

    --
    There's nothing like $HOME
  4. WSJ and Gartner by querist · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It looks like both WSJ and Gartner have both long since jumped the shark. I was in university in the 80s. Anyone who was at large university in the 1980s would have been there to "watch the Internet happen", so to speak. BITNET, ARPANET, MILNET - how can these "reporters" (and yes, I used 'scare quotes' intentionally) hope to be taken seriously when there are plenty of people still alive who were there when the whole thing started? At least wait until most of us have died off before trying to rewrite history like that. Amateurs.

  5. Re:You don't say... by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The WSJ's editorial pages have long been a... special... zone untrammeled by any shreds of 'journalism' that might cling to other sections of the paper.

    Honestly, the only thing that vaguely surprised me about the mindbogglingly stupid article we examined yesterday was that(per his CV) the author should have been smart enough to know better...