Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

News for nerds, stuff that matters

ACM to Honor TCP/IP Creators with Turing Award

Posted by Zonk on Wed Feb 16, 2005 10:40 AM
from the i-heart-packets dept.
bth writes "The New York Times reports that Vint Cerf and Robert Kahn will receive the ACM Turing Award. According to the ACM website: The Association for Computing Machinery, has named Vinton G. Cerf and Robert E. Kahn the winners of the 2004 A.M. Turing Award, considered the "Nobel Prize of Computing," for pioneering work on the design and implementation of the Internet's basic communications protocols." Commentary from Groklaw also available.

Related Stories

[+] Developers: Peter Naur Wins 2005 Turing Award 135 comments
An anonymous reader writes "The Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) has named Peter Naur the winner of the 2005 A.M. Turing Award. The award is for Dr. Naur's fundamental contributions to programming language design and the definition of Algol 60, to compiler design, and to the art and practice of computer programming. The Turing Award is considered to be the Nobel Prize of computing, and a well-deserved recognition of Dr. Naur's pioneering contributions to the field."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.

ACM to Honor TCP/IP Creators with Turing Award 25 Comments More | Login /

 Full
 Abbreviated
 Hidden
More | Login
Keybindings Beta
Q W E
A S D
Loading ... Please wait.
  • About time (Score:5, Insightful)

    by shadowknot (853491) * on Wednesday February 16 2005, @10:42AM (#11688937) Homepage
    TCP/IP has played a pivotal role in the revolutionised age of information and communication.
  • Packet switching before them? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 16 2005, @10:46AM (#11688977)
    What about Donald Davies and Paul Baran, the guys who invented packet switching in the 60s? Their work directly led to the development of the first internet protocol, NCP. TCP/IP didn't replace NCP fully until 1981, although we should be glad it did.
    • Re:Packet switching before them? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by the_2nd_coming (444906) on Wednesday February 16 2005, @10:52AM (#11689022) Homepage
      hmm.. did NCP make it posable for the internet?

      that is like saying "what about the guy who first cut open the chest of some one and failed to successfully perform heart surgery?"

      the people that get credit for stuff are not the ones who come up with an under performance. they are the ones that come up with something that out performs even what they thought posable.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:Packet switching before them? (Score:5, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 16 2005, @10:53AM (#11689032)
      Read the article!

      ----

      Most notably, for the last 10 years, Leonard Kleinrock, a computer scientist at the University of California, Los Angeles, has been laying claim to having invented packet switching, the general method of splitting up a message into digital packets, routing the packets individually and reassembling the message on the other end.

      Until Dr. Kleinrock began making his case prominently, two others, Paul Baran and Donald W. Davies, had been widely recognized as packet switching's inventors. Dr. Davies died in 2000.

      In recent years, Lawrence G. Roberts, who in the late 1960's designed the Arpanet, a precursor of the Internet, has been a supporter of Dr. Kleinrock's claim.
      [ Parent ]
  • And the funny thing is... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 16 2005, @10:46AM (#11688980)
    ... if they were starting out now, slashdotters would be cursing their names because its clear that they were trying to foist a proprietary standard over the completely open, free-software friendly, OSI infrastructure, probably with a view to "Embrace and Extend"

    Now a real question : If Baran and Davies had been granted a patent on packet switching networks in 1964, what would the internet look like now?
    • if they were starting out now, slashdotters would be cursing their names because its clear that they were trying to foist a proprietary standard over the completely open, free-software friendly, OSI infrastructure, probably with a view to "Embrace and Exte
  • by the_2nd_coming (444906) on Wednesday February 16 2005, @10:46AM (#11688984) Homepage
    ever!!!!

    but I bet the father of the protocol that sits on top of SMTP to add SPAM protection will.
  • My appreciation for standards (Score:5, Insightful)

    by eseiat (650560) on Wednesday February 16 2005, @10:48AM (#11688995) Homepage
    Computing standards are so incredibly important to the successful distribution of PCs throughout the world and the TCP/IP standard is perhaps one of the most important, considering the vast importance of the internet and network-based communications.

    Congratulations to some truly innovative pioneers.

  • They haven't received one yet? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by KiltedKnight (171132) on Wednesday February 16 2005, @10:49AM (#11689002) Homepage Journal
    It's about *bleep*ing time.

    You'd have thought they would've received this during the dot-com boom or before that.

  • I won that (Score:4, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 16 2005, @10:50AM (#11689008)
    At least I think I did. I was communicating with the award via a teletype and hed to guess whether it was a real award or a computer simulation of one.
  • It's suprising (Score:5, Insightful)

    by sdm39 (859661) on Wednesday February 16 2005, @10:55AM (#11689059)
    It's suprising the people who architect some of the finest PC ideas are not recognized more by the media. Everyone knows who Bill Gates is, but when you ask someone who were some of the people behind TCP/IP or C++ or anything besides windows, they have no idea.
  • Nice to see (Score:5, Interesting)

    by dj_whitebread (171775) * on Wednesday February 16 2005, @11:02AM (#11689124) Homepage
    The Turing award is slowly starting to recognize people who have designed, built, and deployed systems. Up until recently, it had been given solely to people in theory.
  • TCP part (Score:3, Funny)

    by mboverload (657893) on Wednesday February 16 2005, @11:11AM (#11689215) Journal
    We all know /IP is just leeching off TCPs success!
  • Not exactly a perfect invention (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 16 2005, @11:14AM (#11689245)
    Seriously though ... award them for creating the TCP layer, which breaks down massively under (non-congestion related) packet loss? Award them for creating IP, which trivially allows source address forgery in yet another DDoS against my IRC server?
    I'm not saying what they did was all bad ... in fact it was essential for the Internet today, and they deserve praise, but what they did was far from an optimal implementation. Considering all the mad fanboying going on here, I just felt I had to post this.
  • Great read (Score:3, Insightful)

    by mboverload (657893) on Wednesday February 16 2005, @11:17AM (#11689282) Journal
    I suggest people read this article, a great description of the TCP/IP stack. One of the best Wikipedia entries anywhere.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TCP/IP#Layers_in_the_ TCP.2FIP_stack [wikipedia.org]

  • What about Van Jacobson? (Score:3, Informative)

    by GnoMoreGnuPuns (649356) on Wednesday February 16 2005, @11:37AM (#11689512) Journal
    Jacobson introduced congestion control to TCP after the threat of catestrophic congestion meltdown was imminent. This is arguably the aspect of TCP that made it viable as a global Internet protocol. It suprises me that this would be overlooked by the award.
  • Size does not matter (Score:5, Insightful)

    by SpaghettiPattern (609814) on Wednesday February 16 2005, @11:45AM (#11689606)
    Kahn and Cerf deserve credit they are getting but not based on the mere fact that the whole world uses TCP/IP. I mean to say that if you'd reason merely by size then good ole Bill would be a candidate for the Turing award. The reasons why IP has become the default network protocol should be stated more clearly.

    IMHO the genius of Kahn and Cerf lies in the fact that they "thought deeply of simple things" almost exactly like Thompson and Ritchie did with Unix. For me, the transmission error handling and the routing are simply beautiful.

    If a packet is lost, IP and UDP simply don't care and neither should the underlying layers do (forget about x.25 for a moment.) Try explaining this apparently frivolous approach to an IBM SNA guy -or even to most non networking CS people. Hell, IBM even built quality of service stuff in their Tokenring stuff. Nice to have, if you can switch it OFF. If a packet or frame is lost: too bad, TCP will take care of it, anything else should stop whining about it.

    The fact that part of the routing is done by IP on any node is also marvelous. It made the protocol usable in small networks without having to buy or explicitly set-up a router. You know, equipment used to be horribly expensive. Ever studied SNA or OSI?

    There would be loads of jobs for us techies in supporting the Internet if it were made up SNA, OSI or NetBIOS. But who'd want them?

    Would Metcalf deserve the same honor as Kahn and Cerf but then for inventing Ethernet? I'd say yes.
  • by ddkilzer (79953) on Wednesday February 16 2005, @12:21PM (#11690028)
    "The 2005 Turing Award goes to Vinton G. Cerf and Robert E. KAAAAAAAAAAAAAHN!!!!!"
  • by gorbachev (512743) on Wednesday February 16 2005, @02:04PM (#11691325) Homepage
    http://www.spamhaus.org/news.lasso?article=158

    For a man that was so instrumental in creating the underlying technology the Internet is based on, he sure has come a long way since then.

    He works for MCI, the only US network that refuses to terminate spammers, spamware peddlers and bulletproof hosting facilities. Vint Cerf is claiming they can't do that, because of 1st Amendment issues. For someone as smart as him, he sure can be clueless; 1st Amendment does not apply to anyone but the US Government.

    This is what Steve Linford of spamhaus.org wrote on SPAM-L yesterday about Vint Cerf's role, among other things, in all this:


    MCI, right up to Vint Cerf, are insisting that Send Safe is just ordinary software with no illegal features, and that it "could" be used for spamming only in the way a crowbar could be used for breaking and entering, or an innocent tobacco pipe could used for smoking dope. Our reply to these analogies is that if you sell pipes specifically designed for use with marijuana, with features only for marijuana use, and the pipe is designed to contact the pusher and download the marijuana into it's bowl, and designed to hijack innocent people (proxies) to pass the marijuana smoke through before inhaling to implicate them, while anonymising the smoker from the police by rotating the smoker's name, and even comes packaged with lists of innocent people pre-infected to be used for this purpose, you can bet you're going to jail.

    I reminded Vint Cerf of his "spam is bad for the net" quote displayed on the CAUCE site, and asked for his help in getting the MCI spamware issue solved. He said he'd look into it, but got back to me saying the 1st Amendment made MCI not terminate spamware vendors no matter how illegal... so I gave him a link to the LINX BCP document and quoted the LINX text to him, he replied that the LINX BCP document was "probably illegal" in the USA (and hence MCI was ignoring it). Basically, MCI is trying every excuse under the sun to keep Send Safe and the many spam gangs they're servicing.

    MCI says Send Safe is not the MCI customer, their customer 'MTI' is an "ISP" who is in turn reselling to Send Safe and it's therefore out of
    their control. They know perfectly well (and are lying to the press that they don't) that ROKSO-listed MTI is Rusty Campbell's (DesktopServer) spamware outfit, not an ISP by any stretch of imagination, and that ISPs don't normally have only 6 IPs, and that the Send Safe website is directly on the end of the MCI line, one IP away from Rusty's router.

    John St. Clair and the rest of the 'abuse' droids at MCI have known perfectly well for over a year that MTI's sole business is spamming and that the sole things hosted on Rusty Campbell's web server at 65.210.168.34 are 25 web sites, which are:

    1 0-BULKEMAIL.COM.
    2 ADOGWITHOUTWARNING.COM.
    3 AMAZING-BULK-EMAIL.COM.
    4 AMAZINGBULKEMAIL.COM.
    5 BULK-EMAIL-WORLDWIDE.COM.
    6 BULKEMAILREVIEW.COM.
    7 BULKEMAILREVIEWS.COM.
    8 DESKTOP-SERVER.COM.
    9 DESKTOPSERVER.BIZ.
    10 DESKTOPSERVER.COM.
    11 DESKTOPSERVERPRO.COM.
    12 DESKTOPSERVERSALES.COM.
    13 DESKTOPSERVERSHOP.COM.
    14 EASYBIZ.COM.
    15 EMAILBROADCASTER.COM.
    16 EMAILEMAILEMAIL.COM.
    17 EMAILTOOLS.COM.
    18 MONEYFUN.COM.
    19 MTICD.COM.
    20 MTIDEALER.COM.
    21 MTIHELP.COM.
    22 MTILAB.NET.
    23 MTISOFTWARE.COM.
    24 SEND-SAFE.COM.
    25 THEINTERNETBIZ.COM.

    MCI says these are all normal customers of the "ISP" Rusty Campbell who just happens to be the author of DesktopServer and to MCI it's all good paying business and nobody's going to stop them, least of all those darn anti-spammers.

    Amazingly, in 2003 we had kicked Send-safe.com off 4 Chinese "bullet-proof hosts" before they found safe haven at MCI in the US. MCI makes even the worst Chinese network look clean.

    Steve Linford
    The Spamhaus Project
    http://www.spamhaus.org
    • Re:This is a travesty (Score:5, Informative)

      by gowen (141411) <gwowen@gmail.com> on Wednesday February 16 2005, @10:49AM (#11689004) Homepage Journal
      I am taking the liberty of sending to you both a brief summary of Al Gore's Internet involvement, prepared by Bob Kahn and me. As you know, there have been a seemingly unending series of jokes chiding the vice president for his assertion that he "took the initiative in creating the Internet."

      Bob and I believe that the vice president deserves significant credit for his early recognition of the importance of what has become the Internet.
      Vint Cerf [classroom.com] on Al Gore's important role in the creation of the internet (Link leads to full statement).
      [ Parent ]
      • Re:This is a travesty (Score:4, Informative)

        by OwnedByTwoCats (124103) on Wednesday February 16 2005, @10:57AM (#11689080)
        Darn. Preview didn't show it formatted that badly. Take 2.

        http://www.interesting-people.org/archives/interes ting-people/200009/msg00052.html

        Al Gore and the Internet

        By Robert Kahn and Vinton Cerf Al Gore was the first political leader to recognize the importance of the Internet and to promote and support its development.

        No one person or even small group of persons exclusively "invented" the Internet. It is the result of many years of ongoing collaboration among people in government and the university community. But as the two people who designed the basic architecture and the core protocols that make the Internet work, we would like to acknowledge VP Gore's contributions as a Congressman, Senator and as Vice President. No other elected official, to our knowledge, has made a greater contribution over a longer period of time.

        Last year the Vice President made a straightforward statement on his role. He said: "During my service in the United States Congress I took the initiative in creating the Internet." We don't think, as some people have argued, that Gore intended to claim he "invented" the Internet. Moreover, there is no question in our minds that while serving as Senator, Gore's initiatives had a significant and beneficial effect on the still-evolving Internet. The fact of the matter is that Gore was talking about and promoting the Internet long before most people were listening. We feel it is timely to offer our perspective.

        As far back as the 1970s Congressman Gore promoted the idea of high speed telecommunications as an engine for both economic growth and the improvement of our educational system. He was the first elected official to grasp the potential of computer communications to have a broader impact than just improving the conduct of science and scholarship. Though easily forgotten, now, at the time this was an unproven and controversial concept. Our work on the Internet started in 1973 and was based on even earlier work that took place in the mid-late 1960s. But the Internet, as we know it today, was not deployed until 1983. When the Internet was still in the early stages of its deployment, Congressman Gore provided intellectual leadership by helping create the vision of the potential benefits of high speed computing and communication. As an example, he sponsored hearings on how advanced technologies might be put to use in areas like coordinating the response of government agencies to natural disasters and other crises.

        As a Senator in the 1980s Gore urged government agencies to consolidate what at the time were several dozen different and unconnected networks into an "Interagency Network." Working in a bi-partisan manner with officials in Ronald Reagan and George Bush's administrations, Gore secured the passage of the High Performance Computing and Communications Act in 1991. This "Gore Act" supported the National Research and Education Network (NREN) initiative that became one of the major vehicles for the spread of the Internet beyond the field of computer science.

        As Vice President Gore promoted building the Internet both up and out, as well as releasing the Internet from the control of the government agencies that spawned it. He served as the major administration proponent for continued investment in advanced computing and networking and private sector initiatives such as Net Day. He was and is a strong proponent of extending access to the network to schools and libraries. Today, approximately 95% of our nation's schools are on the Internet. Gore provided much-needed political support for the speedy privatization of the Internet when the time arrived for it to become a commercially-driven operation.

        There are many factors that have contributed to the Internet's rapid growth since the later 1980s, not the least of which has been political support for its privatization and continued support for research in advanced networking technology. No one in public life has been more intelle

        [ Parent ]