The Internet
Explore the pivotal transformation of the internet from an exclusive academic network to the global phenomenon we know today. Host Daniel Cole examines the crucial period between 1989-1995 when policy changes and technological innovations opened the digital world to everyone. Learn about ARPANET's origins connecting four universities, the National Science Foundation's role through NSFNET, and the restrictive Acceptable Use Policy that initially prohibited commercial activity. Discover how Tim Berners-Lee's World Wide Web invention at CERN in 1989 revolutionized information sharing, and why 1995 marked the true watershed moment when commercial restrictions were lifted. The episode covers the explosive growth of Internet Service Providers, the birth of the dot-com era with companies like Amazon, and the massive infrastructure changes needed to support millions of new users. From 45 million users in 1996 to over 400 million by 2000, this transformation democratized information access and created entirely new industries. Daniel explores both the opportunities and challenges this transition created, from security concerns to economic disruption, showing how four crucial years laid the foundation for our modern digital society and the internet economy we depend on today.
8 episodios
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