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Hauben: Role of Government-Science Interface in Development ofInternet |
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - <nettime-l-temp@material.net> is the temporary home of the nettime-l list while desk.nl rebuilds its list-serving machine. please continue to send messages to <nettime-l@desk.nl> and your commands to <majordomo@desk.nl>. nettime-l-temp should be active for approximately 2 weeks (11-28 Jun 99). - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Fri, 11 Jun 1999 20:46:34 -0400 (EDT) From: ronda@umcc.ais.org (Ronda Hauben) To: nettime-l@Desk.nl Subject: Role of Government-Science Interface in Development of Internet On the Need for Research and Support for Research on the Role of Government and of Science in the Development of the Internet I have been finding some interesting material in my efforts to study the role of government in the U.S. in the creation of the Internet. In the process I found that there was an important set of interviews documenting the experiences of the computer scientists who were part of the Information Processing Techniques Office (IPTO) and of those in the research community they helped to create during the 1962-1986 period. This work has set a basis for more serious study and research about the IPTO research community. A recent experience with a Foundation, however, has made it clear that finding a source of support for such research work related to the Internet and the role of government in building the Internet is not going to be easy. This experience has confirmed for me that in a time of neoliberalism, it will be difficult to get support for research into how a successful scientist-government interface creating a new kind of institution within government (rather than the so called "market") has been the basis for a number of the important computer science advances of our times. Such research needs to be done as it helps to unveil the mythology being created about the "market" and its virtues and instead helps to make more widely known what the real experience is that has helped to create the technological and scientific breakthroughs making such an impact on society today. It is interesting to note that in the past it has taken serious efforts of many people and the use of government procedures like Congressional hearings (in the experience in the U.S.) to explore the problems that exist when trying to have a good interface between government and science. The result of such efforts in the U.S. was a very special government entity which came to be known as the ARPA Information Processing Techniques Office or IPTO. My proposal has to do with studying the interface and interrelationship between the ARPA IPTO director and program managers and the IPTO computer science research community that they helped to create and support. I wondered if anyone has suggestions of a Foundation or other mechanism of finding funding to support doing such research. Such work will provide important lessons about how to build the needed government-science institutions that will make it possible for the Internet to continue to grow and flourish. Following is a an excerpt from my proposal. I welcome comments or suggestions on how to further pursue support for this research topic. (Also this topic would benefit from being done in collaboration with researchers in other countries studying the role of government and science in their nations in developing the Internet) From Research Proposal: A Study of the IPTO Computer Science Research Community (1962-1986) A number of books and articles about the Internet and the important computer developments of our time refer to the Information Processing Techniques Office (IPTO) at the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) within the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD). This office of ARPA was created in 1962 and it continued to make important contributions to computer science development in the U.S. and the world until it was ended in 1986. Yet very little is known about the office and its development. Under IPTO's direction computing went from batch processing to interactive computing, graphic capabilities of computers were revolutionized, packet switching was developed into the ARPANET which spread around the U.S., the field of artificial intelligence (AI) led to important breakthroughs in robotics, expert systems and identifying other important capabilities of computers, and the Internet protocol TCP/IP was created and led to an internetwork of networks which spread round the world. These are only a few of the outstanding computer science achievements which occurred under the leadership of this office. Yet there has been little research study and attention paid to the role of this office as an institution within government and to the interactions with the computer science research community that it helped to create and which in turn provided the needed input for its leadership. Very few books or articles even refer to this topic. The one book that has been written "Transforming Computer Technology" by Arthur Norberg and Judy O'Neill (Baltimore, 1996) focuses on the technological accomplishments under this office, rather than on the institutional processes that made these technological accomplishments possible. There are, however, a series of interviews of the IPTO research community done by the Charles Babbage Institute and funded by the IPTO before it was ended. I am interested in studying these interviews to explore what it is possible to learn about the role of the IPTO in supporting and giving leadership to make possible these important computer science breakthroughs. I am interested in the role of government and the role of the computer science research community and the interface between them to make computer science leaps possible. I have done some preliminary research which clarifies the serious considerations given to how to interface scientists and government which was carried out in the 1950's and which prepared the way for the creation of ARPA. I want to explore the additional insight that can be gained from the experience of IPTO in creating an appropriate interface between science and government. Also the ARPANET and then the Internet helped to provide a broader set of input and communication for the IPTO after they were created by this office. I want to look at how the developing network impacted the work at IPTO. There is at least one mailing list archives I have access to which will make it possible to pursue this question.... -------- Thanks for any help with this. Ronda ronda@umcc.ais.org ----------------- Netizens: On the History and Impact of Usenet and the Internet http://www.columbia.edu/~hauben/netbook/ Published by the IEEE Computer Society Press ISBN # 0-8186-7706-6