nanog mailing list archives

Re: Did Internet Founders Actually Anticipate Paid, Prioritized Traffic?


From: Steven Bellovin <smb () cs columbia edu>
Date: Sun, 19 Sep 2010 21:54:05 -0400


On Sep 17, 2010, at 5:20 46PM, Bill Stewart wrote:

Sorry, fat-fingered something when I was trying to edit.

On Fri, Sep 17, 2010 at 2:12 PM, Bill Stewart <nonobvious () gmail com> wrote:
On Tue, Sep 14, 2010 at 6:51 PM, Steven Bellovin <smb () cs columbia edu> wrote:
No, they bought AT&T, which [...]  But yes, SBC is the controlling piece of the new AT&T.
         Most of the wide-area ISP network is the old AT&T, while
much of the consumer broadband grew out of the SBC DSL side.

Yup.


As for the two /8s -- not quite.  Back in the 1980s, AT&T got 12/8.  We soon learned that we couldn't make good use 
of it, since multiple levels of subnetting didn't exist.  We offered it back to Postel in exchange for 135/8 -- 
i.e., the equivalent in class B space -- but Postel said to keep 12/8 since no one else could use it, either.  This 
was all long before addresses were tight.  When AT&T decided to go into the ISP business, circa 1995, 12/8 was 
still lying around, unused except for a security experiment I was running.*    However, a good chunk of 135/8 went 
to Lucent (now Alcatel-Lucent) in 1996, though I don't know how much.

        The AT&T bits kept some fraction of 135; I don't know how
much without dredging through ARIN Whois, but at least 135.63/16 is on
my desktop.

I know -- that's why I wrote "a good chunk", but I sure don't know who got what.  (FYI, I'm still a very part-time AT&T 
employee.)

        If I remember correctly, which is unlikely at this point,
12/8 was the Murray Hill Cray's Hyperchannel network, which I'd heard
didn't know how to do subnetting except on classful boundaries, so it
could happily handle 16M hosts on its Class A, and in fact only had
two or three.

Good point.  I don't remember what time frame that was true, though.  I'm certain about why Mark Horton got 12/8 and 
135/8, but I don't remember the years, either.


                --Steve Bellovin, http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~smb







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