[ih] New Republic Article - "How We Misremember the Internet’s Origins"

Clem Cole clemc at ccc.com
Fri Nov 1 10:13:45 PDT 2019


Oh how sad...  We need the 'Delts' to stand up to Dean Wormer and start to
scream 'BJ.'

How it tries to link hippie movement with technology is high tech is very
stretched, IMHO.  I fear this is the sort of thing that people looking for
excuses and ways to attack with be attracted.  I way to much reminds me of
way the evangelicals often attack science et al.  Seems almost like FOX
News.

On Fri, Nov 1, 2019 at 8:43 AM Karl Auerbach <karl at cavebear.com> wrote:

> This got forwarded to me this morning:
> How We Misremember the Internet’s Origins
>
> https://newrepublic.com/article/155532/misremember-internets-origins
>
> This article seems very screedy to me.  Yeah we all knew that ARPA was a
> branch of the US Dept of Defense.  And we all knew that in at least some
> minds (especially the group I worked for, the Joint Chiefs of Staff)
> survivable communications during nuclear war were a concern.
>
> What rubs me wrong is how this article seems to try to paint people
> working on network ideas as somehow evil, somehow linked to the bad things
> such as the treatment of California indigenous peoples by the Spanish
> missionaries of the 18th century.
>
> OK, yeah, it is true that some some, and I emphasize only some, of the
> motivations for the ARPAnet tributary stream that eventually merged with
> others to for The Internet, were military and not the most politically
> correct in today's world.
>
> But there were a lot of other forces, motivations, and ideas at work.
>
> For example, pretty soon after I worked with the JCS I also started to get
> ideas coming out of Dave Farber's DCS project.  The idea of restructuring
> entire computers and operating systems around networks was something
> revolutionary to me.  And we see that idea now fruiting in the web of APIs
> now available on the net to build applications.  AWS and Google Map APIs
> are, to my mind, a direct result of Farber's DCS.
>
> The article fails to acknowledge those streams as well as the engendering
> of social networking via things like bulletin boards and Usenet.  And to
> me, that removes the foundation of credibility from the article.
>
>     --karl--
> --
> Internet-history mailing list
> Internet-history at elists.isoc.org
> https://elists.isoc.org/mailman/listinfo/internet-history
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://elists.isoc.org/pipermail/internet-history/attachments/20191101/2562a56c/attachment.htm>
-------------- next part --------------
-- 
Internet-history mailing list
Internet-history at elists.isoc.org
https://elists.isoc.org/mailman/listinfo/internet-history


More information about the Internet-history mailing list