The Internet is a global system of interconnected computer
networks that use the standard Internet protocol suite (TCP/IP) to serve several billion users worldwide. It is a network of networks that consists of
millions of private, public, academic, business, and government networks, of
local to global scope, that are linked by a broad array of electronic, wireless
and optical networking technologies. The Internet carries an extensive range of
information resources and services, such as the inter-linked hypertext documents of the World
Wide Web (WWW), the infrastructure to support email,
and peer-to-peer networks.
Internet Globalization
Most traditional
communications media including telephone, music, film, and television are being
reshaped or redefined by the Internet, giving birth to new services such as voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) and Internet Protocol television (IPTV). Newspaper, book and other
print publishing are adapting to website technology,
or are reshaped into blogging and web feeds. The Internet has enabled and
accelerated new forms of human interactions through instant messaging, Internet
forums, and social networking. Online shopping has boomed both for major retail
outlets and smallartisans and traders. Business-to-business and financial services on
the Internet affect supply chains across entire industries.
Internet Globalization
The origins of the
Internet reach back to research commissioned by the United States government in
the 1960s to build robust, fault-tolerant communication via computer networks.
While this work together with work in the United Kingdom and France lead to
important precursor networks, they were not the Internet. There is no consensus
on the exact date when the modern Internet came into being, but sometime in the
early to mid-1980s is considered reasonable.
Internet Globalization
The funding of a new
U.S. backbone by the National Science Foundation in
the 1980s, as well as private funding for other commercial backbones, led to
worldwide participation in the development of new networking technologies, and
the merger of many networks. Though the Internet has been widely used by academia since
the 1980s, the commercialization of what was by the 1990s an
international network resulted in its popularization and incorporation into
virtually every aspect of modern human life. As of June 2012, more than 2.4 billion
people—over a third of the world's human population—have
used the services of the Internet; approximately 100 times more people than
were using it in 1995.[1][2]
Internet Globalization
The Internet has no
centralized governance in either technological implementation or policies for
access and usage; each constituent network sets its own policies. Only the
overreaching definitions of the two principal name spaces in the Internet, the Internet Protocol address space and the Domain Name System, are directed by a maintainer
organization, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN). The technical underpinning
and standardization of the core protocols (IPv4 and IPv6) is an activity of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), a non-profit organization of
loosely affiliated international participants that anyone may associate with by
contributing technical expertise.
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