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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: jhild who wrote (73440)11/13/2000 10:15:07 PM
From: marcos  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769667
 
Gore and 'inventing the internet' - he never said that, but he did help big when help was most needed -

"Several of the people who could claim to have "invented" the
Internet, or key pieces of its protocols -- in particular, Vinton
Cerf and Robert Kahn -- are out there on the Net today
defending Gore, asserting that he was the politician in
Washington who took the "initiative" to support the Net in its
early days.
"

[...]

"... what you'll hear from Phillip Hallam-Baker, a former
member of the CERN Web development team that created the
basic structure of the World Wide Web. Hallam-Baker calls
the campaign to tar Gore as a delusional Internet inventor "a
calculated piece of political propaganda to deny Gore credit
for what is probably his biggest achievement."


"In the early days of the Web," says Hallam-Baker, who was
there, "he was a believer, not after the fact when our success
was already established -- he gave us help when it counted. He
got us the funding to set up at MIT after we got kicked out of
CERN for being too successful. He also personally saw to it
that the entire federal government set up Web sites. Before the
White House site went online, he would show the prototype to
each agency director who came into his office. At the end he
would click on the link to their agency site. If it returned 'Not
Found' the said director got a powerful message that he better
have a Web site before he next saw the veep."

That sounds like a pretty good description of the kind of
"initiative" Gore claimed credit for in the first place. So the next
time you hear an "Al Gore, Internet inventor" joke, think about
the strange twisted path a politician's words can take in other
people's hands -- and be glad we can use the Internet to try to
straighten it out.
"

salon.com
salon.com