Network Working Group                          Internet Activities Board
Request for Comments: 1087                                  January 1989


                       Ethics and the Internet

Status of this Memo

  This memo is a statement of policy by the Internet Activities Board
  (IAB) concerning the proper use of the resources of the Internet.
  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Introduction

  At great human and economic cost, resources drawn from the U.S.
  Government, industry and the academic community have been assembled
  into a collection of interconnected networks called the Internet.
  Begun as a vehicle for experimental network research in the mid-
  1970's, the Internet has become an important national infrastructure
  supporting an increasingly widespread, multi-disciplinary community
  of researchers ranging, inter alia, from computer scientists and
  electrical engineers to mathematicians, physicists, medical
  researchers, chemists, astronomers and space scientists.

  As is true of other common infrastructures (e.g., roads, water
  reservoirs and delivery systems, and the power generation and
  distribution network), there is widespread dependence on the Internet
  by its users for the support of day-to-day research activities.

  The reliable operation of the Internet and the responsible use of its
  resources is of common interest and concern for its users, operators
  and sponsors.  Recent events involving the hosts on the Internet and
  in similar network infrastructures underscore the need to reiterate
  the professional responsibility every Internet user bears to
  colleagues and to the sponsors of the system.  Many of the Internet
  resources are provided by the U.S. Government.  Abuse of the system
  thus becomes a Federal matter above and beyond simple professional
  ethics.

IAB Statement of Policy

  The Internet is a national facility whose utility is largely a
  consequence of its wide availability and accessibility.
  Irresponsible use of this critical resource poses an enormous threat
  to its continued availability to the technical community.

  The U.S. Government sponsors of this system have a fiduciary
  responsibility to the public to allocate government resources wisely



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RFC 1087                Ethics and the Internet             January 1989


  and effectively.  Justification for the support of this system
  suffers when highly disruptive abuses occur.  Access to and use of
  the Internet is a privilege and should be treated as such by all
  users of this system.

  The IAB strongly endorses the view of the Division Advisory Panel of
  the National Science Foundation Division of Network, Communications
  Research and Infrastructure which, in paraphrase, characterized as
  unethical and unacceptable any activity which purposely:

     (a) seeks to gain unauthorized access to the resources of the
         Internet,

     (b) disrupts the intended use of the Internet,

     (c) wastes resources (people, capacity, computer) through such
         actions,

     (d) destroys the integrity of computer-based information,

  and/or

     (e) compromises the privacy of users.

  The Internet exists in the general research milieu.  Portions of it
  continue to be used to support research and experimentation on
  networking.  Because experimentation on the Internet has the
  potential to affect all of its components and users, researchers have
  the responsibility to exercise great caution in the conduct of their
  work.  Negligence in the conduct of Internet-wide experiments is both
  irresponsible and unacceptable.

  The IAB plans to take whatever actions it can, in concert with
  Federal agencies and other interested parties, to identify and to set
  up technical and procedural mechanisms to make the Internet more
  resistant to disruption.  Such security, however, may be extremely
  expensive and may be counterproductive if it inhibits the free flow
  of information which makes the Internet so valuable.  In the final
  analysis, the health and well-being of the Internet is the
  responsibility of its users who must, uniformly, guard against abuses
  which disrupt the system and threaten its long-term viability.










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