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Should Al Gore take credit for helping create the Internet?

Results so far:

No
74% 105 votes Total: 142 votes
Yes
26% 37 votes

No

by Joseph Whalen

Created on: February 13, 2008

The conceptual idea for the internet sprouted one fateful day in October of 1957. When amateur radio operators tuned their state of the art ham radios to 20.005 and 40.002 MHz to listen to the beeps of a little basketball sized object orbiting the planet. When the Soviet Union placed Sputnik I, the first artificial satellite into orbit and demonstrated their superior rocket technology, the United States government understood just how vulnerable it was.

Almost immediately after the shiny little satellite broadcast its first signals the United States was already planning the creation of the Advanced Research Projects Agency or ARPA. The purpose of this agency was to ensure the technology of the United States military was kept ahead of that of the Soviet Union. Their efforts yielded what has become recognized as the predecessor of the Internet, ARPANET. This was the first packet switched network, the principle technology the Internet is based on today.

The fundamental concepts and technology for the Internet were developed during the 1960's and 1970's as part of the ARPA and eventually DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Project Agency). Scientists and innovators such as J.C.R. Licklider, Lawrence Roberts and Paul Baran were the fathers of the technology that became today's Internet. As the network began to grow new innovators such as Vinton Cerf, Robert Kahn, Yogen Dalal and Carl Sunshine, co-creators of the TCP protocols that even now govern the Internet added their contributions. When the network opened up to commercial interests starting in 1989 new innovations were introduced by still more famous contributors such as Tim Berners-Lee with the creation of the World Wide Web Project.

It is the likes of the great minds mentioned here that we think of when we think of the creators of the Internet. There is no one creator of the Internet; instead it is a conglomeration of contributors, scientists and inventors who gave us what we now know as the Internet. As far as Al Gore's "contributions" to the Internet, they pale in comparison to the giants who we recognize as the true creators of the Internet. While Al Gore's political sponsorship of projects related to the growth of the internet are well documented, that hardly qualifies him to take any more credit for the Internet than a graduate student at UCLA working under Licklider during the early ARPANET days. Did they both contribute to the effort? Certainly, one can hardly deny that. Were their contributions vital to the creation of the Internet? Given the gravity of the two and their limited contributions it's not likely either the graduate student or Gore could be credited as a major contributor to the Internet.

While it is largely true that the statements that tie Al Gore to the creation of the internet were at best misquoted, to continue the faade that he had more than a tertiary contribution is an insult to those who were the true creators of the Internet. While these claims make for interesting press packets and fodder on the lecture circuit, beyond these mediums it holds little water. Al Gore simply did not contribute anything approaching significance to the creation of the Internet.

Learn more about this author, Joseph Whalen.
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Yes

by Nikolaus Federmann

Created on: June 16, 2007

Former Vice President Al Gore had his head in the idea of the Internet back when personal computers were in their infancy. Unfortunately, a statement he made in 1999 became classic comedic fodder, which seems to overshadow his contributions to the early development of the Internet.

During his interview with Wolf Blitzer, Al Gore stated, "I took the initiative in creating the Internet. I took the initiative in moving forward a whole range of initiatives..." The first thing to note is that Al Gore did not claim to be the Internet's inventor-nor is he its creator. It would be foolish for anyone to make such a claim. He was simply spouting about "initiatives", and failed to clarify his context. If he had stated, "I participated in the development of the Internet,"-which he actually did-that entire interview would have been long forgotten.

"I invented the Internet" was exploited in late night talk show monologues-a misquote that passed from comedian to comedian. You can hear people on the street misquoting Al Gore today, and still getting laughs.

In reality, Al Gore had been talking about linking supercomputers all across the country back in the 1980s. He deserves credit for his groundbreaking work in the early development of the Internet. According to the Wikipedia, as a senator he "created and introduced" the High Performance Computing and Communication Act of 1991-also known as the Gore Bill. That same year, he wrote an article for Scientific American titled, "An Infrastructure For The Global Village" from which the phrase "information superhighway" came.

The Gore Bill led to the National Research and Education Network and National Information Infrastructure. From there the Internet began to take shape and gain momentum quickly.

Without the legislation that Gore solicited early on, the Internet may not have advanced to the point where it is today.

Learn more about this author, Nikolaus Federmann.
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