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This article is about 'the Internet', the extensive, worldwide computer network available to the public. An internet is a more general term for any set of interconnected computer networks that are connected by internetworking.
WorldWideWebAroundWikipedia.png
The Internet, or simply the Net, is the publicly available worldwide system of interconnected computer networks that transmit data by packet switching using a standardised Internet Protocol (IP) and many other protocols. It is made up of thousands of smaller commercial, academic, and government networks. It carries various information and services, such as electronic mail, online chat and the interlinked web pages and other documents of the World Wide Web. Because this is by far the largest, most extensive internet (with a small i) in the world, it is simply called the Internet (with a capital I).
Creation of the Internet
Main article: History of the InternetThe core networks forming the Internet started out in
1969 as the
ARPANET, created by the
United States Department of Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA). Some early research which contributed to the ARPANET included work on decentralised networks,
queueing theory, and packet switching. On
January 1,
1983, the ARPANET changed its core networking protocols from
NCP to
TCP/IP, marking the start of the Internet as we know it today.
Another important step in the development was the
National Science Foundation's (NSF) building of a university backbone, the
NSFNet, in
1986. Important disparate networks that have successfully been accommodated within the Internet include
Usenet and
Bitnet.
The collective network gained a public face in the
1990s. In August
1991 Tim Berners-Lee publicized his new Word Wide Web project, two years after he'd begun creating
HTML,
HTTP and the first few web pages at
CERN. A few academic and government institutions contributed pages but the public didn't begin to see them yet. In
1993 the
Mosaic web browser version 1.0 was released, and by late
1994 there was growing public interest in the previously academic/technical internet. By 1996 the word "Internet" was common public currency, but it referred almost entirely to the
World Wide Web.
Meanwhile, over the course of the decade, the Internet successfully accommodated the majority of previously existing computer networks (some networks such as
Fidonet have remained separate). This growth is often attributed to the lack of central administration, which allows organic growth of the network, as well as the non-proprietary nature of the Internet protocols, which encourages vendor interoperability and prevents one company from exerting control over the network.
== Today's Internet ==
[[Image:Internet.png|thumb|400px|Different Internet applications, such as
Web browsers,
FTP, and
Telnet]]
Apart from the incredibly complex physical connections that make up its infrastructure, the Internet is held together by bi- or multi-lateral commercial contracts (for example
peering agreements) and by technical specifications or
protocols that describe how to exchange
data over the network.
Unlike older communications systems, the
Internet protocol suite was deliberately designed to be
agnostic with regard to the underlying physical medium. Any communications network, wired or wireless, that can carry two-way digital data can carry Internet traffic. Thus, Internet packets flow through wired networks like copper wire, coaxial cable, and fiber optic; and through wireless networks like
Wi-Fi. Together, all these networks, sharing the same high-level protocols, form the Internet.
The Internet protocols originate from discussions within the Internet Engineering Task Force (
IETF) and its working groups, which are open to public participation and review. These committees produce documents that are known as
Request for Comments documents (RFCs). Some RFCs are raised to the status of
Internet Standard by the Internet Architecture Board (
IAB).
Some of the most used protocols in the
Internet protocol suite are
IP,
TCP,
UDP,
DNS,
PPP,
SLIP,
ICMP,
POP3,
IMAP,
SMTP,
HTTP,
HTTPS,
SSH,
Telnet,
FTP,
LDAP,
SSL, and
TLS.
Some of the popular services on the Internet that make use of these protocols are
e-mail,
Usenet newsgroups,
file sharing, the
World Wide Web,
Gopher,
session access,
WAIS,
finger,
IRC,
MUDs, and
MUSHs. Of these, e-mail and the World Wide Web are clearly the most used, and many other services are built upon them, such as
mailing lists and
web logs. The Internet makes it possible to provide real-time services such as
web radio and
webcasts that can be accessed from anywhere in the world.
Some other popular services of the Internet were not created this way, but were originally based on proprietary systems. These include
IRC,
ICQ,
AIM, and
Gnutella.
There have been many analyses of the Internet and its structure.
For example, it has been determined that the Internet IP routing structure
and hypertext links of the World Wide Web are examples of
scale-free networks.
Similar to how the commercial Internet providers connect via
Internet exchange points, research networks tend to interconnect into large subnetworks such as:
-
GEANT-
Internet2- (*****)
These in turn are built around relatively smaller networks. See also the list of
academic computer network organizations.
== Internet culture ==
The Internet is also having a profound impact on
work,
knowledge and
worldviews.
The World Wide Web
Through
keyword-driven
Internet research, using
search engines, like
Google, millions worldwide have easy, instant access to a vast amount and diversity of online information. Compared to
encyclopedias and traditional
libraries, the Internet has enabled a sudden and extreme decentralization of information and data.
See
World Wide Web.
Remote access
The Internet allows computer users easily to connect to other computers and information stores wherever they may be across the world.
They may do this with or without the use of security, authentication and encryption technologies, depending on the requirements.
This is encouraging new ways of home-working, collaboration and information sharing in many industries. An
accountant sitting at home can
audit the books of a company based in another country, on a
server situated in a third country that is remotely maintained by IT specialists in a fourth. These accounts could have been created by home-working book-keepers, in other remote locations, based on information e-mailed to them from offices all over the world. Some of these things were possible before the widespread use of the Internet, but the cost of private,
leased lines would have made many of them infeasible in practice.
An office worker away from their desk, perhaps the other side of the world on a business trip or a holiday, can open a
remote desktop session into their normal office PC using a secure
Virtual Private Network (VPN) connection via the Internet. This gives him or her completely normally access to all their normal files and data, including e-mail and other applications, while they are away.
Collaboration
This low-cost and nearly instantaneous sharing of ideas, knowledge and skills has revolutionised some, and given rise to whole new, areas of human activity. One example of this is the collaborative development and distribution of
FLOSS (Free, Libre and Open-Source Software) such as
Linux,
Mozilla and
OpenOffice.org. See
Collaborative software.
A few other examples include
Wikipedia, a collaboratively edited and maintained free encyclopedia, the
Urban Dictionary project and
TEIS - the UK Telemedicine and E-health Information Service for those working in the field of telemedicine, telecare and ehealth.
File-sharing
A
computer file can be
e-mailed to customers, colleagues and friends as an
attachment. It can be uploaded to a
web site or
FTP server for easy download by others. It can be put into a "shared location" or onto a
file server for instant use by colleagues. The load of bulk downloads to many users can be eased by the use of "
mirror" servers or
peer-to-peer networking.
In any of these cases, access to the file may be controlled by user
authentication; the transit of the file over the Internet may be obscured by
encryption and money may change hands before or after access to the file is given. The price can be paid by the remote charging of funds from, for example a
credit card whose details are also passed - hopefully fully encrypted - across the Internet. The origin and authenticity of the file received may be checked by
digital signatures or by
MD5 message digests.
These simple features of the Internet, over a world-wide basis, are changing the basis for the production, sale and distribution of many types of product, wherever they can be reduced to a computer file for transmission. This includes all manner of office documents, publications, software products, music, photography, video, animations, graphics and the other arts. This in turn is causing seismic shifts in each of the existing industries that previously controlled the production and distribution of these products.
Language
The most used language for communication on the Internet is
English, due to the Internet's origins, to the growing role of English as an international language and to the poor capability of early computers to handle characters other than those in the basic western
alphabet.
The Internet has grown enough in recent years such that sufficient native-language facilities for a usable experience are available for the most widely used languages. However, some glitches such as
mojibake still remain.
Cultural awareness
The Internet helps people around the world become aware of other cultures and their worldviews, so that ideally, people will be more sensitive to each other's positions.
== Current and potential problems ==
The Internet, along with its benefits, has a lot of negative publicity associated with it ranging from genuine concerns to tabloid scaremongering.
Child abuse
According to children's charities, the number of annual convictions for
child pornography offences have increased by over 1000% since the Internet was first available to the public in the late
1980s. With the recent growth in
Chat rooms and
instant messaging services in the late
1990s, the potential for a new form of
child abuse has emerged: so-called
grooming. This involves a
paedophile pretending to be a child in a chat room/instant message conversation, to gain the trust of a child before arranging to meet up.
Copyright infringement
Copyright infringement has also been the focus of much media attention, mainly through
peer-to-peer filesharing software, but also through private members-only chatrooms, so-called
warez sites (which openly offer illegal copies of software or the means to
crack copy protection), or even the sale of counterfeit
CDs,
DVDs and
software masquerading as legitimate product. Many ordinary Internet users are less concerned about the actual infringement itself but more about the effect on the Internet as a whole if tighter controls result from the infringement.
Viruses
In the 1980s and early 1990s, when very few people had access to the Internet,
viruses were not a huge problem. They did exist and did cause just as much damage to computers as modern viruses can today, but there was no fast-moving epidemic because there was no means for a virus to directly infect other computers. Before the Internet, the only way for a computer to be infected was through use of a removable disc that was itself infected. As a result, virus infections were mercifully rare.
All that changed with the widespread growth of the Internet. With near-universal Internet access among computer users in developed countries, and the proliferation of high-speed
broadband Internet connections, a virus on one person's computer can infect thousands of other computers. In fact, much of the disruption from virus outbreaks is caused not by the
payload of the virus (e.g. deleting hard drive, shutting down computer every five minutes), but by the Internet
congestion caused by the virus spreading itself.
Security cracking
Main article: Security crackingWhen computers were
stand alone machines (or at most connected to a company's internal network), to steal data from a system an intruder had to physically steal it. The Internet means that data from an insecure site could be stolen by someone working two blocks from the site, or just as easily from another country.
Some of the recent high-profile examples of this were when a working version of the
source code for
Half Life 2 was copied from the developer's computer systems by security crackers and when portions of the
Windows NT codebase were copied from one of the companies that had access to it via the Microsoft
Shared Source initiative. In both cases the Internet was used for dissemination of the leaked code, in particular using
P2P networks.
Dated technology
Very few people outside the technical community are aware of the future problems posed by the Internet's archaic technology. It was originally designed for a small number of research institutions to share research data, and was never intended for the multi-billion user behemoth the modern Internet has become.
One serious problem is that the
IP address (a unique number assigned to each Internet computer, functioning much like a street address in the real world) will run out eventually. Despite an estimated world population of over six billion, there are only a little over four billion different IP address combinations possible under the current system — see
IPv4 address exhaustion for more information. This also doesn't take into account the fact that there is not a 1:1 person to computer ratio in current
computerised countries, where many people will have a
desktop machine at home, a
laptop machine for on the go, another desktop machine at work, and an e-mail
mobile phone, all requiring their own IP address.
This could pose serious problems in the future as more and more nations expand their computer infrastructure (the vast majority of the world's population does not currently use the Internet, that's the so-called
digital divide) and even now efforts are proceeding to find new ways of running the Internet. The new version of the Internet Protocol,
IPv6, which expands the address space of the Internet, is one proposal for how to deal with some of the technical problems caused by the growth of the Internet.
Self-destructive subcultures
The Internet promotes
free speech -- indeed, most societies that engage in media
censorship have had to outlaw it (or severely limit access). Since the early 1990s, it has been widely recognized that the Internet enables broader distribution of ideas that most people find distasteful, for such ideas condone (or justify) the infliction of violence upon innocent non-consenting people. Examples include
racism,
sexism, and
fascism.
However, around
2000, thanks to coverage by the
Atlantic Monthly and other publications, a distinct and equally worrisome issue has emerged. The Internet also allows people who exhibit or wish to practice deviant behavior to find one another easily. Without it they would probably never find willing partners.
Most of these subcultures do not champion self-destructive or mutually destructive behavior between consenting partners, but some do. Websites exist that explicitly promote
anorexia,
apotemnophilia,
necrophilia, and
suicide. While these "fringe" elements would be easily recognized as deviant by intelligent adults, many people fear that children (or
mentally ill persons) visiting such sites would lack the maturity necessary to make that discrimination.
In rare cases, people have used the Internet to find willing partners for deviant activity, but with disasterous or fatal results. Recently, for example, a
German named
Armin Meiwes (the "German cannibal") made an online arrangement with
Bernd Jürgen Armando Brandes to kill and eat him. Meiwes was later convicted of
manslaughter.
== Internet access ==
Common methods of home access include
dial-up, which is the slowest, landline
broadband (over coaxial cable, fiber optic or copper wires) and
satellite.
Public places to use the Internet include
libraries and
Internet cafes, where computers with Internet connections are available. There are also Internet access points in public places like airport halls, sometimes just for brief use while standing. Various terms are used, such as "public Internet kiosk", "public access terminal", "Web
payphone".
Wi-Fi provides wireless access to computer networks, and therefore can do so to the Internet itself.
Hotspots providing such access include
Wifi-cafes, where a would-be user needs to bring their own wireless-enabled devices such as a
notebook or
PDA. These services may be free to all, free to customers only, or fee-based. A hotspot need not be limited to a confined location. Whole campuses and parks have been enabled, even an entire downtown area.
Grassroots efforts have led to
wireless community networks.
Apart from Wi-Fi, there have been experiments with proprietary mobile wireless networks like
Ricochet, various high-speed data services over cellular or mobile phone networks, and fixed wireless services. These services have not enjoyed widespread success due to their high cost of deployment, which is passed on to users in high usage fees.
Broadband access over power lines was approved in 2004 in the United States in the face of stiff resistance from the amateur radio community. The problem with modulating a carrier signal over power lines is that an above-ground power line can act as a giant antenna and completely jam long-distance radio frequencies used by amateurs, seafarers and others.
Countries where Internet access is a commodity used by a majority of the population include
Iceland,
Sweden,
Denmark,
The Netherlands and
Norway. The use of the Internet around the world has been growing rapidly over the last decade, although the growth rate seems to have slowed somewhat after 2000. The phase of rapid growth is ending in industrialized countries, as usage becomes ubiquitous there, but the spread continues in
Africa,
Latin America, the
Caribbean and the
Middle East.
The expansion of the availability of Internet access is a way to bridge the so-called
digital divide.
== See also ==
{{wikiquote}}
-
List of Internet topics-
Art on the Internet-
Bogon filtering-
Catenet-
Central_ad_server-
Cybersex-
Dark web-
Democracy on the Internet-
Dynamics of the Internet-
Extranet-
File Sharing-
Flaming-
Friendship on the Internet-
Hacktivism or
Hacker culture-
International Freedom of Expression eXchange - monitors Internet censorship around the world
-
Humor on the Internet-
ICANN-
Internet Archive-
Intranet-
NANOG-
Netiquette-
Minitel, a
French predecessor to the Internet
-
Network Mapping-
Open Directory Project-
Slang on the Internet-
Trolls and trolling-
Web browser-
Web hosting-
WebQuest== External links - General ==
-
The Internet Society (ISOC)-
Internet Mapping Project-
Web content by language (old)- Access and usage statistics: [http://cyberatlas.internet.com/big_picture/geographics/article/0,,5911_151151,00.html], [http://cyberatlas.internet.com/big_picture/traffic_patterns/article/0,,5931_3099471,00.html], [http://news.earthweb.com/stats/print.php/3096031], [http://banners.noticiasdot.com/termometro/boletines/docs/consultoras/idate/2003/idate_244.pdf] (pdf)
-
Access at home, by native language-
Internet World Usage Statistics-
Internet Directory @ dmoz== External links - Articles ==
-
World of Ends, What the Internet Is and How to Stop Mistaking It for Something Else by Doc Searls and David Weinberger-
John Walker: The Digital Imprimatur-
addressingtheworld.info - website accompanying a book (ISBN 0742528103) on the history of DNS
-
How Stuff Works explanation of the Infrastructure of the Internet-
"It's Just the 'internet' Now" - Wired.com article by Tony Long-
The Internet as a new mass medium External links - History
-
The Internet Society History Page-
How the Internet Came to Be-
Hobbes' Internet Timeline v7.0-
History of the Internet links-
RFC 801, planning the TCP/IP switchover-
Internet Archive - A searchable database of old cached versions of websites dating back to 1996
Category:CommunicationCategory:Digital media category:Digital Revolutionaf:Internetar:إنترنتbg:Интернетbe:Інтэрнэтbs:Internetca:Internetcs:Internetda:Internetde:Internetet:Internetel:Διαδίκτυοes:Interneteo:Interretofa:اینترنتfr:Internetfy:Ynternetga:Idirlíongl:Internetko:인터넷hr:Internetid:Internetia:Internetit:Internethe:אינטרנטku:Înternetlt:Internetashu:Internetkn:ಅ೦ತರ್ಜಾಲms:Internetnl:Internet
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