Reinventing The Internet
Who is he? Internet pioneer Robert E. Kahn is chairman, CEO and president of the Corporation for National Research Initiatives, a nonprofit organization established to "provide leadership and funding for research and development of the National Information Infrastructure."
August 27, 2001 12:00 PM ETComputerworld -
Robert E. Kahn co-invented TCP/IP and managed the development of the Arpanet - the forerunner of the Internet - at the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency in the early 1970s. For those accomplishments, President Clinton awarded him a National Medal of Technology in 1997.
Now, as president of the nonprofit Corporation for National Research Initiatives in Reston, Va., Kahn is deep into a "reinvention of the Internet one layer up." He has developed a framework for interoperability of heterogeneous information systems that aims to make digital information a "first-class citizen" on the Internet.
Kahn's architecture contains "digital objects" - data of any type, plus a long-lived identifier called a handle. The objects can reside in any kind of storage system, or repository, accessed by a Repository Access Protocol, which enforces rights and permissions to the data within. Kahn recently told Computerworld's Gary H. Anthes how taking a look at the past can guide us into the future.
In congressional testimony three years ago, you urged the federal government to help the U.S. maintain leadership in e-commerce. How's that going? We've made small progress, compared to what's possible. We've had very little recognition at the federal level about the importance of pilot projects. For example, one project could be in authentication of information. When you get something off the Net, there's no way to know if it's accurate, and there's no one party to provide the standard for that. The government could establish a way to verify information going to the public, and whatever they do might then be a good template for the private sector as well.
Is the Arpanet a model for government/industry cooperation? The model I always thought was the right one - what we put in for the Internet from Day 1 - was something that started with total government control. We - I, and then [TCP/IP co-inventor] Vint Cerf and I - ran everything for a while, and over the years, we devolved little by little to the private sector, to the point today that government has very little role to play.
But the government-sponsored standards for openness and interoperability built into the Arpanet live on in the Internet today, right? Yes, but more and more, we are seeing the need for generalized standards for doing the critical functions [like authentication] that everyone wants to do. But most organizations want to create their own and see if they can create a monopoly.
Like Microsoft? People focus on Microsoft and say, "What do we do about
Legislation/Regulation
Additional Resources



White Papers & Webcasts
Oracle Accelerate - Not Just Smart but Timely
Download Now!
Data in Action: Making the Planet Smarter
Register Now
Why BI is Ripe - Now! - For Businesses of Any Size
Download Now!
The Workday User Experience Video
Watch Workday's Creative Director, Scott Lietzke, discuss the business-centered design philosophy at Workday.
Rapid Implementation: The New Age of ERP
Download Now!
Business Process Framework Demo
Learn about Configurable Business Processes and Calculated Fields. Watch Now!
Manager Experience Demo
Go beyond self-service solutions to perform more effectively. Watch Now.

