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Surendrasolanki.blogspot.in
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The Internet Society (ISOC) is the international, umbrella Internetorganization,
founded in 1992. It is a non-governmental organization, made up of more than
100 organizations and thousands of individuals, with an international mission
to foster global cooperation and coordination on Internet technologies, and
serve as a global clearinghouse for Internet related information.
The ISOC was also created in part to provide a legal umbrella for
theIAB and the IETF, which
had been operating almost entirely as self-perpetuating bodies with no legal
standing, in order to provide liability insurance to protect members from suits
by vendors.
The ISOC oversees the other Internet management organizations
described in the following pages, and in some cases provides financial and
other support. It also holds an annual International Networking (INET)
conference, and coordinates Internet related public policy and trade
activities, regional and local chapters, standardization activities, and an
international secretariat.
One of the most important legal activities of the ISOC is a
defense of the free use of the word "Internet", ensuring that it
remains a generic term that is not trademarked or owned by any Individual or
corporation.
The ISOC has an international network of chapters in various
countries, and is open to membership from any interested individual. Members
receive a bimonthly magazine called "OnTheInternet", a monthly
newsletter called "ISOC Forum", and discounts on various products and
services.
The ISOC supports a number of education programs, for example
ThinkQuest, an international contest that provides scholarships for high school
students who develop educational tools for the Web,
run in conjunction with other organizations. It was awarded the rights to
management of the .org domain in October, 2002.
The IAB evolved
from the Internet Configuration Control Board (ICCB) originally established in
1979 by the ARPANET Program Manager Vinton Cerf, and
oversees development of the Internettechnology
standards. In 1983, the ICCB was reorganized around a series of technical task
forces by Cerf's successor, Dr. Barry Leiner, and named the Internet Activities
Board (IAB).
The IAB was supported
throughout the 1980's by the Federal Research Internet Coordinating Committee
(FRICC), an informal group of US Government managers supporting inter-networking
that was absorbed into the Federal Networking Council in 1990.
In June, 1992, the Internet
Activities Board was renamed theInternet Architecture Board by
the Internet
Society at the INET92 conference in Kobe, Japan. The roles and
responsibilities of the IAB are described in RFC
2850, and summarized below:
- Oversight. Provide
oversight of the Internet architecture, protocols, procedures, and
standards.
- RFC management. Provide
editorial management and publication of the Request For Comments documents.
- IESG selection. Appoint the
members of the Internet Engineering Steering Group, and the chair of
the Internet
Engineering Task Force.
- IETF oversight. Responsible
for the IETF's relationships with other standards bodies and related organizations.
- IANA administration. Provide
administration of the Internet
Assigned Numbers Authority, which manages the various Internet
numbers and parameters.
The IAB is composed of 13
members, made up of 12 members nominated by the IETF and approved by the Board
of Trustees of the Internet Society, plus the IETF chair who may vote on all
official actions except approval of Internet Engineering Steering Group members
and IESG appeals. Each member serves for two years, and may serve more than one
term. Interestingly, members of the IAB must serve as individuals, and not as
representatives of a company, agency, or other organization. The process is
further described in IAB and IESG Selection, Confirmation, and Recall
Process: Operation of the Nominating and Recall Committees, RFC
3777.
The Internet Engineering
Task Force (IETF) was created
in 1986 by the Internet Architecture
Board. It consists of Internetadministrators,
designers, vendors, researchers, and individuals interested in the evolution of
the Internet architecture, and is responsible for improvement of the Internet
technology protocols and standards.
The culture of the IETF has always been open and informal, an
influence taken from its predecessor, the Network Working
Group. For example, their voting members are selected according to a
random process to guarentee unbaised selections, as described inPublicly Verifiable Nominations
Committee (NomCom) Random Selection, RFC
3797.
The first IETF meeting was held in January, 1986 in San Diego, and
had 15 attendees. The seventh meeting was hosted by the MITRE corporation in
McLean, Virginia, in July, 1987, and had more than 100 attendees. The
fourteenth meeting was hosted by Stanford University in July, 1989, and led the
Internet Architecture Board to consolidate many task forces into the IETF and
the IRTF. The
first IETF meeting held in Europe was in Amsterdam in July, 1993.
The IETF studies operational and technical problems with the
Internet, specifies protocols and architectural solutions, and makes
recommendations to its steering committee, the Internet Engineering Steering
Group (IESG). Most of the work done by the IETF is
performed by several working groups, each interested in a particular Internet
topic and led by a working group chair. Working groups often document their
work in one or more Request For Comments,
which sometimes go on to become standards that help define how the Internet
works.
The IETF also facilitates technology transfer from the Internet Research
Task Force, and provides a forum for the exchange of information
between Internet vendors, users, researchers, contractors, and managers.
With the continued increase in the scale and technical complexity
of the Internet, the IETF went through some growing pains adjusting to the
similar increase in their own responsibilities and challenges. In conformance
with their open culture, their members conducted a searching self-examination
in 2002 and 2003 as documented in The IETF in the Large:
Administration and Execution, RFC
3716, and IETF Problem Statement, RFC
3774. Recommendations of a working group to address the issues were
described in IETF Problem Resolution Process, RFC
3844.
The mission of the Internet Research Task
Force (IRTF) is to conduct
research into the long term future of the Internet.
The IRTF is guided by the Internet Research Steering Group, and is composed of
a number of small research groups that work on the development of the Internet
protocols, applications, architecture, and technology. Befitting its long term
focus, it is composed of members that serve for extended periods, but as
individuals, and not as representatives of organizations.
The role of the IRTF is not to set Internet standards, but to take
the long view of the future of the Internet, to research this future within its
various research groups, and document the results in journals, white papers,
and at conferences. Any technologies created as a result are brought to the Internet Engineering
Task Force working
groups.
The chair of the IRTF is appointed by the Internet Architecture
Board. The Internet Research Steering Group is composed of the chairs of the
IRTF research groups.
The Internet Research Steering Group (IRSG) manages the IRTF
research groups, and holds workshops focused on various Internet research
areas.
The Internet Corporation
for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) manages the domain name system and
allocation of IP
addresses.
Up until 1998, the
technical infrastructure of the Internet had
been run by US Government agencies, such as DARPA and
the National
Science Foundation. However, as the Internet began to grow into a world
wide resource, the US Government began to look for a way to transfer these
administration functions to the private sector. To achieve this goal, it signed
a Memorandum of Understanding between the U.S. Department of Commerce and the
Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers on November 25, 1998.
ICANN describes their goal
as being to "preserve the central coordinating functions of the global
Internet for the public good." The ICANN has responsibility for the
assignment of Internet protocol parameters, oversight of the domain name
system, allocation of IP addresses, and management of the root server system.
ICANN is comprised of three
Supporting Organizations (SO's):
- The Address Supporting Organization (ASO) manages
the IP address space and its allocation to various organizations. The ASO
is supported by three existing Regional Internet Registries, APNIC, ARIN,
and RIPE
NCC.
- The Country Code Names Supporting
Organization (CCNSO)
is a policy development body responsible for developing consensus
positions and recommending global policies relating to country-code
top-level domain
names.
- The Generic Names Supporting
Organization (GSO) advises the ICANN Board with
respect to policy issues relating to the Domain Name System.
Each of these support
organizations has the responsibility to name three Directors to the ICANN
Board.
The following committees
also support ICANN:
- The Governmental Advisory
Committee (GAC)
provides advice to ICANN from governments on issues of public policy, such
as where there may be interaction between ICANN's policies and national
laws or international agreements.
- The ICANN At-Large Advisory
Committee (ALAC) is responsible for providing advice
to ICANN on issues that affect the interests of individual Internet users
-- the "At-Large" community.
The IANA also
supports the ICANN in managing the assignment of Internet protocol parameters
required to enable the Internet to operate in practice, and is supported by
various organizations including the Internet Engineering Task Force, World Wide Web Consortium, International
Telecommunications Union, and European Telecommunications Standards Institute.
The ICANN information page page provides more
information on the structure and responsibilities of the organization. The ICANNWatchorganization is an independent organization
monitoring ICANN activities.