History of the Internet Domain Name
When the first computers began connecting to each other over Wide Area
Networks (WAN's), like the ARPANET in the 1960's, a form of identification
was needed to properly access the various systems. At first the networks
were composed of only a few computer systems associated with the U.S.
Department of Defence and other institutions. As the number of connections
grew, a more effective system was needed to regulate and maintain the
domain paths throughout the network.
In 1972 the U.S. Defence Information Systems Agency created the Internet
Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA). IANA was responsible for assigning unique
'addresses' to each computer connected to the Internet. By 1973, the Internet
Protocol or IP addressing system became the standard by which all networked
computers could be located.
The new Internet continued to grow throughout the 70's with the creation
of electronic mail (e-mail) and newsgroups.
Problem? Name it.
Greater numbers of users networking with each other created a demand for
a more simple and easy-to-remember system than the bulky and often
confusing IP system of long, cumbersome strings of numbers. This demand
was answered by researchers and technicians at the University of Wisconsin
who developed the first 'name server' in 1984. With the new name server,
users were no longer required to know the exact path to other systems.
And thus the birth of the current addressing system in use today.
A year later the Domain Name System was implemented and the initial
top-level domain names, including .com, .net, and .org, were introduced.
Suddenly 121.245.078.2 became 'company.com'.
The World Wide Web, InterNIC, and the public domain
In 1990, the Internet exploded into commercial society and was followed a
year later by the release of the World Wide Web by originator Tim Berners-Lee
and CERN. The same year the first commercial service provider began operating
and domain registration officially entered the public domain.
Initially the registration of domain names was free, subsidized by the
National Science Foundation through IANA, but by 1992 a new organization
was needed to specifically handle the exponential increase in flow to the
Internet. IANA and the NSF jointly created InterNIC, a quasi-governmental
body mandated to organize and maintain the growing DNS registry and services.
Overwhelming growth forced the NSF to stop subsidizing domain registrations
in 1995. InterNIC, due to budget demands, began imposing a $100.00 fee for
each two-year registration. The next wave in the evolution of the DNS occurred
in 1998 when the U.S. Department of Commerce published the 'White Paper'.
This document outlined the transition of management of domain name systems
to private organizations, allowing for increased competition.
ICANN and the spirit of the Internet
That same year, the Internet
Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers was
formed. This non-profit, private sector corporation formed by
a broad coalition of the Internet's business, technical, and academic
interests worldwide is recognized as the "global consensus entity to
coordinate the technical management of the Internet's domain name system,
the allocation of IP address space, the assignment of protocol parameters,
and the management of the root server system."
One of ICANN's primary concerns is to foster a greater spirit of
competition within the domain registration industry. Where before there
was only a single entity offering registration services, ICANN has now
accredited a number of other companies to add to the global domain name
database. This is called the Shared Registration System.
Names, names, and more names
Today there is an estimated 19 million domain names registered, with forty
thousand more registered every day. The Internet continues its unprecedented
growth into the stratosphere and there is really no end in sight.
This growth only serves to underline the benefits of moving registration
from government control to private sector control, benefits that are
embedded within the spirit of the Internet itself: accessibility, freedom,
competition.
Related information
SnapNames' State of the Domain reports
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