ZD_3_06

ZD_3_06 — Internet Architecture and Protocols

Verified (Tier 1)
Confidence: 1/5 Section: ZD Updated: March 10, 2026
Source Count: 0 | Weighted Score: 0 | Source Confidence: [1/5] | Primary Tier: 1–2 | Last Updated: March 10, 2026
Keywords: internet, TCP/IP, protocol, packet switching, ARPANET, HTTP, DNS, routing, BGP, network layer, OSI model, World Wide Web, RFC, end-to-end principle, network neutrality
Category Tags: computer science, networking, internet, telecommunications, protocols
Cross-References: ZD_3_03 — Distributed Systems Consensus · ZD_4_01 — Cryptography · ZD_1_02 — Information Theory · S_1_01 — Future Technology Overview

QUICK SUMMARY

The Internet — a global network of interconnected networks — is arguably the most transformative technology of the late 20th century, connecting >5 billion users worldwide. Its architecture reflects deliberate design choices with deep technical and social implications. The Internet's origins trace to ARPANET (1969, funded by DARPA), which connected four university computers and pioneered packet switching — breaking data into discrete packets routed independently across the network, unlike circuit-switched telephone networks. Paul Baran (RAND, 1964) and Donald Davies (NPL, 1965) independently conceived packet switching. The TCP/IP protocol suite (Cerf & Kahn, 1974) established the foundational communication protocols: IP (Internet Protocol) handles addressing and routing of packets; TCP (Transmission Control Protocol) provides reliable, ordered, connection-oriented delivery; UDP offers unreliable but fast delivery. The layered model separates concerns: physical, data link, network (IP), transport (TCP/UDP), and application layers (HTTP, SMTP, DNS). The end-to-end principle (Saltzer, Reed & Clark, 1984) — keep the network core simple and push complexity to endpoints — is a fundamental design philosophy that enabled innovation at the edges without requiring changes to network infrastructure. The Domain Name System (Mockapetris, 1983) provides hierarchical, distributed name resolution (human-readable names to IP addresses). BGP (Border Gateway Protocol) enables routing between autonomous systems (ISPs, organizations) — it is the "glue" holding the Internet together, yet relies largely on trust (no built-in authentication), creating vulnerability to route hijacking. Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web (1989–1991, CERN) — combining hypertext (HTML), a transfer protocol (HTTP), and universal addressing (URLs) to create the information layer that transformed the Internet from an academic tool into a global platform. The Web has evolved through phases: static pages (Web 1.0), user-generated content and social media (Web 2.0), and proposed decentralized/semantic extensions (Web 3.0, though the latter's definition is contested). TLS/SSL encryption (based on public-key cryptography) provides security for web transactions, email, and other Internet communications.


1. VERIFIED CLAIMS (Tier 1 — Peer-Reviewed / Scholarly Consensus)

1.1 TCP/IP Architecture

1.2 End-to-End Principle

1.3 DNS Scalability


2. CREDIBLE CLAIMS (Tier 2 — Academic / Debated but Supported)

2.1 BGP Vulnerability

2.2 Network Neutrality


3. SPECULATIVE CLAIMS (Tier 3 — Possible but Unverified)

3.1 Post-IP Internet Architectures


4. DUBIOUS CLAIMS (Tier 4 — No Credible Source / Contradicted by Evidence)

4.1 The Internet Is Indestructible

Counter-Arguments


IMAGES

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BIBLIOGRAPHY


CROSS-REFERENCE INDEX

Related DocConnection
ZD_3_03 — Distributed SystemsNetwork distributed systems
ZD_4_01 — CryptographyTLS/SSL security
ZD_1_02 — Information TheoryData transmission
S_1_01 — Future TechnologyInternet evolution

Last Updated: March 10, 2026


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