1: | How is the Internet managed and administered? |
A1: | The Internet backbone, through which Internet traffic flows, is owned by private companies. The Internet itself is governed by its members with the ultimate authority resting with the Internet Society (ISOC), a voluntary organization promoting information exchange worldwide using Internet technology. Technical management of the Internet is the responsibility of the Internet Architecture Board (IAB), appointed by the ISOC, which gives the go-ahead for standards and allocates resources such as addresses. Net users can influence opinion and initiate changes through the subgroup Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), another volunteer organization that discusses operational and technical problems that anyone can join. Other organizations also have an influence. |
2: | What is a Level 2 or Tier 2 provider? |
A2: | To form a rational image of the Internet, the following arbitrary levels were created and often overlap:
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3: | Who gives out Internet addresses and domain names? |
A3: | Addresses and names are managed by a central authority, the InterNIC, to ensure global uniqueness in the assignment of names and addresses. The InterNIC delegates portions of the address and name space to other international NICs and Internet Service Providers for further delegation to customers of those ISPs. |
4: | Is the Internet secure? |
A4: | On a broad level, the Internet itself is not secure. On an individual basis, however, Internet access is as secure as each customer makes it. Internet users need to implement security options such as encryption and firewalls to protect data and internal networks. |
5: | What is the FIX and CIX? FIX is the Federal Internet Exchange. There are two FIX points: FIX-East at the University of Maryland in College Park, MD and FIX-West at the NASA Ames Research Center at Moffet Field, CA (between Sunnyvale and Mountain View). CIX is the Commercial Internet Exchange. The CIX router is still operational in Santa Clara, CA and in Herndon, Virginia. The FIX and CIX NAPs are overshadowed today by the MAEs, but they are still functional, serving more as historical legacy NAPs than as current influences. |