The Government's Private Superhighway
Before there was the internet as we know it, there was the NSFNET. Launched by the National Science Foundation (NSF) in the mid-1980s, its primary purpose was to connect researchers at universities with a handful of national supercomputing centers. Think
of it as a high-speed digital highway built for a very specific, non-commercial purpose. At its core was a strict rule: the Acceptable Use Policy (AUP). This policy explicitly forbade the use of the network's backbone for "for-profit activities" or extensive personal business. If your work wasn't in service of research or education, you weren't supposed to be on it. For years, this meant commercial enterprises had to create their own separate, less-connected networks, slowing the internet's potential growth.
The Commercialization Conundrum
By the early 1990s, the NSFNET was a victim of its own success. Traffic was growing exponentially, doubling every seven months as more universities and regional networks connected. The pressure from the private sector to get on this taxpayer-funded backbone was immense. The debate was fierce: Should the internet remain a pristine tool for academics, or should it be opened up to the messy, unpredictable world of commerce? One of the biggest controversies involved a company called Advanced Network and Services (ANS), a nonprofit created by NSFNET's partners IBM and MCI, along with Merit Network, to manage the network's rapidly expanding infrastructure. In 1991, ANS created a for-profit subsidiary, ANS CO+RE, to sell access to commercial clients over the same physical backbone used for the NSFNET. Competitors cried foul, arguing that ANS had an unfair, government-subsidized advantage. This move forced the issue and accelerated the push toward full privatization.
The Alternate Path Not Taken
This is the moment where the internet as we know it could have veered in a completely different direction. Had the ANS controversy been resolved differently, we might have ended up with a single, semi-private entity controlling the internet's core—a regulated utility, perhaps, instead of a competitive marketplace. Another path was laid out in the High-Performance Computing Act of 1991, which proposed a federally controlled National Research and Education Network (NREN). This would have kept the internet's backbone under government stewardship for years, potentially allowing for more top-down planning around issues like security and user protection. But the momentum of private enterprise was too strong. The industry contractors, sensing a massive business opportunity, rushed ahead with their own commercial plans, effectively making the NREN proposal obsolete before it could be fully implemented.
The Great Switch-Off of 1995
Instead of a single government network or a single private monopoly, the NSF chose a third, more radical option: managed obsolescence. Recognizing that private companies were ready to take over, the NSF orchestrated a plan to decommission the NSFNET backbone. In its place, it funded the creation of several Network Access Points (NAPs) across the country—neutral zones where different commercial networks could connect and exchange traffic. On April 30, 1995, the switch was officially flipped. The NSFNET was retired, and its traffic was permanently shifted to a new, fully commercialized internet backbone run by competing providers like Sprint, MFS, and Pacific Bell. The government gracefully bowed out of the business of running the internet, setting the stage for the explosive dot-com boom and the digital world we inhabit today.















