The Internet’s Forgotten Backbone
Before the World Wide Web, before AOL, and before the term “going online” was common, there was the NSFNET. Launched by the National Science Foundation (NSF) in 1985, its initial goal was modest: connect researchers to five new supercomputing centers
across the United States. This government-funded project, however, quickly evolved into the de facto backbone of the internet in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Managed by a unique partnership between academia (Merit Network at the University of Michigan), industry (IBM and MCI), and government, the NSFNET established a “network of networks” that linked regional academic and research networks together. It was built on the then-novel TCP/IP protocol, a choice that would solidify its dominance and pave the way for the unified global internet we know. Initially operating at a sluggish 56 kilobits per second, it was a victim of its own success, quickly becoming overloaded as demand soared. This set the stage for its first, and most crucial, engineering challenges.
A Masterclass in Public-Private Partnership
The success of the NSFNET wasn’t just technical; it was organizational. The project was a masterclass in collaboration. When the original network proved insufficient, the NSF solicited proposals for a major upgrade. The winning bid came from a consortium of Merit Network, IBM, and MCI, which brought together academic ingenuity, corporate muscle, and telecommunications infrastructure. Key figures like Hans-Werner Braun, then at Merit, became co-principal investigators for the backbone project. He and his team were tasked with managing explosive growth and engineering a system with unprecedented reliability and speed. This public-private partnership became a model for technology transfer, demonstrating how government funding could seed an infrastructure that the private sector would eventually adopt and scale. This collaborative spirit is a direct ancestor of modern open-source projects and industry standards bodies like the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), where competitors work together to solve common problems.
Engineering for Explosive Growth
The core engineering lesson from the NSFNET era is scalability. Traffic on the network was doubling every seven months, a growth rate that demanded constant innovation. The team, including Braun, oversaw radical upgrades, first to T1 (1.5 megabits per second) and then to T3 (45 Mbps)—a nearly 800-fold increase in capacity from the original network. This wasn't just about adding more pipes; it involved developing new routing technologies to manage the increasingly complex web of connections. In fact, the Border Gateway Protocol (BGP), which still directs traffic across the internet's major arteries today, was first developed and deployed in an operational environment on the NSFNET backbone. The challenge of anticipating exponential growth and engineering systems that can scale ahead of demand is now a foundational principle for every cloud provider, social media platform, and large-scale software company. The architects of NSFNET were among the first to grapple with building for internet-scale, a problem modern engineers face daily.
The Deliberate Path to a Commercial Internet
For most of its existence, the NSFNET operated under an "Acceptable Use Policy" (AUP) that strictly limited its use to non-commercial research and education activities. You could collaborate on academic work, but you couldn't advertise or conduct for-profit business. However, the key people behind NSFNET knew this couldn't last. They understood that the network's future lay in the commercial sector. The transition was deliberate. As commercial Internet Service Providers (ISPs) began to emerge, the NSF planned for its own obsolescence. It established Network Access Points (NAPs), which were neutral interconnection points where the old academic backbone could hand off traffic to new commercial networks. On April 30, 1995, the NSFNET backbone was officially decommissioned, having successfully created its own replacement: the commercial internet. This managed transition from a public utility to a privatized, competitive ecosystem offers enduring lessons for policymakers and engineers on how to manage technological shifts and foster innovation.













