Gordon Crovitz: Who Really Invented the Internet?

7/24/12 The Wall Street Journal

A telling moment in the presidential race came recently when Barack Obama said: 
"If you've got a business, you didn't build that. Somebody else made that 
happen." He justified elevating bureaucrats over entrepreneurs by referring to 
bridges and roads, adding: "The Internet didn't get invented on its own. 
Government research created the Internet so that all companies could make money 
off the Internet."

It's an urban legend that the government launched the Internet. The myth is 
that the Pentagon created the Internet to keep its communications lines up even 
in a nuclear strike. The truth is a more interesting story about how innovation 
happens—and about how hard it is to build successful technology companies even 
once the government gets out of the way.

For many technologists, the idea of the Internet traces to Vannevar Bush, the 
presidential science adviser during World War II who oversaw the development of 
radar and the Manhattan Project. In a 1946 article in The Atlantic titled "As 
We May Think," Bush defined an ambitious peacetime goal for technologists: 
Build what he called a "memex" through which "wholly new forms of encyclopedias 
will appear, ready made with a mesh of associative trails running through them, 
ready to be dropped into the memex and there amplified."

That fired imaginations, and by the 1960s technologists were trying to connect 
separate physical communications networks into one global network—a "world-wide 
web." The federal government was involved, modestly, via the Pentagon's 
Advanced Research Projects Agency Network. Its goal was not maintaining 
communications during a nuclear attack, and it didn't build the Internet. 
Robert Taylor, who ran the ARPA program in the 1960s, sent an email to fellow 
technologists in 2004 setting the record straight: "The creation of the Arpanet 
was not motivated by considerations of war. The Arpanet was not an Internet. An 
Internet is a connection between two or more computer networks."

If the government didn't invent the Internet, who did? Vinton Cerf developed 
the TCP/IP protocol, the Internet's backbone, and Tim Berners-Lee gets credit 
for hyperlinks.

But full credit goes to the company where Mr. Taylor worked after leaving ARPA: 
Xerox. It was at the Xerox PARC labs in Silicon Valley in the 1970s that the 
Ethernet was developed to link different computer networks. Researchers there 
also developed the first personal computer (the Xerox Alto) and the graphical 
user interface that still drives computer usage today.

According to a book about Xerox PARC, "Dealers of Lightning" (by Michael 
Hiltzik), its top researchers realized they couldn't wait for the government to 
connect different networks, so would have to do it themselves. "We have a more 
immediate problem than they do," Robert Metcalfe told his colleague John Shoch 
in 1973. "We have more networks than they do." Mr. Shoch later recalled that 
ARPA staffers "were working under government funding and university contracts. 
They had contract administrators . . . and all that slow, lugubrious behavior 
to contend with."

So having created the Internet, why didn't Xerox become the biggest company in 
the world? The answer explains the disconnect between a government-led view of 
business and how innovation actually happens.

Executives at Xerox headquarters in Rochester, N.Y., were focused on selling 
copiers. From their standpoint, the Ethernet was important only so that people 
in an office could link computers to share a copier. Then, in 1979, Steve Jobs 
negotiated an agreement whereby Xerox's venture-capital division invested $1 
million in Apple, with the requirement that Jobs get a full briefing on all the 
Xerox PARC innovations. "They just had no idea what they had," Jobs later said, 
after launching hugely profitable Apple computers using concepts developed by 
Xerox.

Xerox's copier business was lucrative for decades, but the company eventually 
had years of losses during the digital revolution. Xerox managers can console 
themselves that it's rare for a company to make the transition from one 
technology era to another.

As for the government's role, the Internet was fully privatized in 1995, when a 
remaining piece of the network run by the National Science Foundation was 
closed—just as the commercial Web began to boom. Blogger Brian Carnell wrote in 
1999: "The Internet, in fact, reaffirms the basic free market critique of large 
government. Here for 30 years the government had an immensely useful protocol 
for transferring information, TCP/IP, but it languished. . . . In less than a 
decade, private concerns have taken that protocol and created one of the most 
important technological revolutions of the millennia."

It's important to understand the history of the Internet because it's too often 
wrongly cited to justify big government. It's also important to recognize that 
building great technology businesses requires both innovation and the skills to 
bring innovations to market. As the contrast between Xerox and Apple shows, few 
business leaders succeed in this challenge. Those who do—not the 
government—deserve the credit for making it happen.
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