RFC 1120 (rfc1120) - Page 2 of 11
Internet Activities Board
Alternative Format: Original Text Document
RFC 1120 The IAB September 1989
1979, it was necessary to form an informal committee to guide the
technical evolution of the protocol suite. This group was called the
Internet Configuration Control Board (ICCB) and was established by
Dr. Vinton Cerf who was then the DARPA program manager for the
effort. Dr. David C. Clark of the Lab for Computer Science at
Massachusetts Institute of Technology was named the chairman of this
committee.
In January, 1983, the Defense Communications Agency, then responsible
for the operation of the ARPANET, declared the TCP/IP protocol suite
to be standard for the ARPANET and all systems on the network
converted from the earlier Network Control Program (NCP) to TCP/IP.
Late that year, the ICCB was reorganized by Dr. Barry Leiner, Cerf's
successor at DARPA, around a series of task forces considering
different technical aspects of internetting. The re-organized group
was named the Internet Activities Board.
As the Internet expanded, it drew support from U.S. Government
organizations including DARPA, the National Science Foundation (NSF),
the Department of Energy (DOE) and the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (NASA). Key managers in these organizations,
responsible for computer networking research and development, formed
an informal Federal Research Internet Coordinating Committee (FRICC)
to coordinate U.S. Government support for and development and use of
the Internet system. The FRICC sponsors most of the U.S. research on
internetting, including support for the Internet Activities Board and
its subsidiary organizations.
At the international level, a Coordinating Committee for
Intercontinental Research Networks (CCIRN) has been formed which
includes the U.S. FRICC and its counterparts in North America and
Europe. The CCIRN provides a forum for cooperative planning among
the principal North American and European research networking bodies.
2. Internet Activities Board
The Internet Activities Board (IAB) is the coordinating committee for
Internet design, engineering and management. The Internet is a
collection of over a thousand packet switched networks located
principally in the U.S., but also includes systems in many other
parts of the world, all interlinked and operating using the protocols
of the TCP/IP protocol suite. The IAB is an independent committee of
researchers and professionals with a technical interest in the health
and evolution of the Internet system. Membership changes with time
to adjust to the current realities of the research interests of the
participants, the needs of the Internet system and the concerns of
the U.S. Government, university and industrial sponsors of the
elements of the Internet.
Cerf