INTERNET, THE

international computer network linking together thousands of individual networks at military and government agencies, educational institutions, nonprofit organizations, industrial and financial corporations of all sizes, and commercial enterprises (called gateways or service providers) that enable individuals to access the network. The most popular features of the Internet include electronic mail (e-mail), discussion groups (called newsgroups or bulletin boards, where users can post messages and look for responses on a system called Usenet), on-line conversations (called chats), adventure and role-playing games, information retrieval, and electronic commerce (e-commerce).

The public information stored in the multitude of computer networks connected to the Internet forms a huge electronic library, but the enormous quantity of data and number of linked computer networks also make it difficult to find where the desired information resides and then to retrieve it. A number of progressively easier-to-use interfaces and tools have been developed to facilitate searching. Among these are search engines, such as Archie, Gopher, and WAIS (Wide Area Information Server), and a number of commercial indexes, which are programs that use a proprietary algorithm to search a large collection of documents for keywords and return a list of documents containing one or more of the keywords. Telnet is a program that allows users of one computer to connect with another, distant computer in a different network. The File Transfer Protocol (FTP) is used to transfer information between computers in different networks. The greatest impetus to the popularization of the Internet came with the introduction of the World Wide Web (WWW), a hypertext system that makes browsing the Internet both fast and intuitive. Most e-commerce occurs over the Web.

Each computer that is directly connected to the Internet is uniquely identified by a 32-bit binary number called its IP address. This address is usually seen as a four-part decimal number, each part equating to 8 bits of the 32-bit address in the decimal range 0–255. Because an address of the form 4.33.222.111 could be difficult to remember, a system of Internet addresses, or domain names, was developed in the 1980s. Reading from left to right, the parts of a domain name go from specific to general. For example, www.irs.ustreas.gov is a World Wide Web site at the Internal Revenue Service, which is part of the U.S. Treasury Dept., which is a government agency. The rightmost part, or top-level domain (or suffix or zone), can be a two-letter abbreviation of the country in which the computer is in operation; more than 250 abbreviations, such as "ca" for Canada and "uk" for United Kingdom, have been assigned. Although such an abbreviation exists for the United States (us), it is more common for a site in the United States to use a specialized top-level domain such as edu (educational institution), gov (government), or mil (military) or one of the four domains designated for open registration worldwide, com (commercial), int (international), net (network), or org (organization). In 2000 seven additional top-level domains (aero, biz, coop, info, museum, name, and pro) were approved for worldwide use. An Internet address is translated into an IP address by a domain-name server, a program running on an Internet-connected computer.

The Internet evolved from a secret feasibility study conceived by the U.S. Dept. of Defense in 1969 to test methods of enabling computer networks to survive military attacks, by means of the dynamic rerouting of messages. As the ARPAnet (Advanced Research Projects Agency network), it began by connecting three networks in California with one in Utah—these communicated with one another by a set of rules called the Internet Protocol (IP). By 1972, when the ARPAnet was revealed to the public, it had grown to include about 50 universities and research organizations with defense contracts, and a year later the first international connections were established with networks in England and Norway. A decade later, the Internet Protocol was enhanced with a set of communication protocols, the Transmission Control Program/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP), that supported both local and wide-area networks. Shortly thereafter, the National Science Foundation (NSF) created the NSFnet to link five supercomputer centers, and this, coupled with TCP/IP, soon supplanted the ARPAnet as the backbone of the Internet. In 1995, however, the NSF decommissioned the NSFnet, and responsibility for the Internet was assumed by the private sector. Fueled by the increasing popularity of personal computers, e-mail, and the World Wide Web (which was introduced in 1991 and saw explosive growth beginning in 1993), the Internet became a significant factor in the stock market and commerce during the second half of the decade. By 2000 it was estimated that the number of adults using the Internet exceeded 100 million in the United States alone.

See B. P. Kehoe, Zen and the Art of the Internet: A Beginner's Guide (4th ed. 1995); B. Pomeroy, ed., Beginnernet: A Beginner's Guide to the Internet and the World Wide Web (1997); L. E. Hughes, Internet E-Mail: Protocols, Standards, and Implementation (1998); J. S. Gonzalez, The 21st Century Internet (1998); D. P. Dern, Internet Business Handbook: The Insider's Internet Guide (1999).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Internet The  - 12846 results

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...MARLIN-BENNETT, SERIES EDITOR GOVERNING THE INTERNET The Emergence of an International...Franda, Marcus F. Governing the Internet: the emergence of an international...Acknowledgments ix Introduction: The Internet as a World Enterprise 1...
The Internet The Internet An Ethnographic Approach Daniel Miller and Don Slater...ix 1 Conclusion 1 2 Trinidad and the Internet - An Overview 27 3 Relationships 55...
Cyberpower Cyberspace and the Internet are becoming increasingly important...introduction to the politics of the Internet, covering all the key concepts...power and society as created by the Internet. The author uses examples ranging...
...Cataloguing-in-Publication Data The Internet and society in Latin America and...coordinators viii Introduction The Internet and its impact on Latin American...Bonilla and Gilles Cliche 3 The Internet, culture and education Navigators...
...Corporate Guide to Exploiting the Internet Dick Stroud Dick Stroud 1998...vii 1 What is the Internet? 1 2 The Business Drivers of the Internet 16 3 Who is...
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journal articles on: Internet The  - 19592 results

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...What You Really Need to Know about the Internet (the Essential Guide for Clinicians...What You Really Need to Know About the Internet (The Essential Guide for Clinicians...Company, 2007.272pp. $23.95 (p). The Internet socializes people in new ways...
...Doing, and Being: Sexuality and the Internet. by Michael W. Ross The...particularly apparent is that of the internet. Simon (1996) argued that "all...consensual meanings begin to dissolve. The internet becomes a new form of the expression...
...challenge has arisen in the form of the Internet, and it is a decentralizating juggernaut...latest test. On the face of it, the Internet offers wondrous possibilities for...boundaries. But benefiting from the Internet seems to require the openness of...
...psychologys reaction to sexuality on the internet. by Steven E. Stern...Handel The popularization of the Internet has evoked the concerns of many...the expression of sexuality on the Internet. An on-line survey of Internet...
COUNTERHEGEMONIC DISCOURSES AND THE INTERNET. by Barney Warf , John Grimes...and Marvin 1996). The largest such system is the Internet. Incontestably, the Internet is the worlds largest electronic network, connecting...
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magazine articles on: Internet The  - 21797 results

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Terror on the Internet: The New Arena, the New Challenges...Richard Petraitis ***** Terror on the Internet: The New Arena, The New Challenges...the extraordinarily popular use of the Internet by violent extremist organizations...
The Intelligent Internet the Promise of Smart Computers and E-Commerce...exploiting the commercial potential of the Internet. amp;#91;ILLUSTRATION OMITTED amp...synthesis of computer intelligence and the Internet is rapidly creating a powerful new...
Internet: The Lost Fight. by William F. Buckley...JULY 4 The Supreme Court decision on the Internet and pornography is analytically infuriating...the congressional act the assertion that the Internet is going to do more good than harm. He...
INNOVATION, REGULATION, AND THE INTERNET. by LAWRENCE LESSIG...whether customers get to choose the Internet service provider (ISP) that serves...telephone lines). Innovation on the Internet is in part due to this rule. We...
Free Speech on the Internet. by Jon Wiener At a...media, many people have come to view the Internet - the computer network linking millions...information empires own everything else," the Internet is "anarchic. But also democratic...
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...how to avoid detection when using the internet. Messages can be left using the...access the information stored by the internet service providers? A: Gardai of...see what Ive been looking at on the internet? A: The time, date and location...
...in the way people are accessing the internet means there is an opportunity for...protect the vibrancy and potential of the internet. "The debate relates to whether...undermine the fundamental freedom of the internet," said Mr Robertson. "However future...
The Last Sighting of Runaway...Gone to Meet Penpal from Internet. Byline: RICHARD EDWARDS...someone she contacted in an internet chatroom. Detectives fear...particular concern to the police. Her parents James...very au fait with using the internet and could potentially...
...some $83.5 million for Erols Internet Inc., the regions No. 2 Internet access...acquisitions not only make RCN the leading Internet service provider in the Northeast...package of telephone, cable and Internet services. The Princeton, N.J., company has...
...Knows Best; More Seniors Master the Internet. Byline: Gary Andres, THE WASHINGTON...reconsideration. Senior citizens use of the Internet offers a good example. At a broad...American adults overall say they use the Internet, only 38 percent of seniors 65...
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encyclopedia articles on: Internet The  - 61 results

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INTERNET, THE international computer network...network. The most popular features of the Internet include electronic mail (e-mail...messaging), wikis (websites that anyone on the Internet can edit), adventure and role-playing...
SEARCH ENGINE see Internet, the . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...technology and a graphical interface to the Internet to retrieve information that is...for transmitting Web pages across the Internet. The Universal Resource Locator...a small appliance that accesses the Internet through the telephone line and...
...cellular models provide access to the Internet. The incorporation of microelectronics...video images. With the advent of the Internet , computer programs have been developed...a standard telephone to access the Internet directly though a cable modem or...
...stations. The rapid growth of the Internet presents another set of issues...material and communication on the Internet. The Child Online Protection...challenged for similar reasons. The Childrens Internet Protection Act (2001), which...
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