Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

John Klensin

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Residence
  
Cambridge, MA

Name
  
John Klensin

Doctoral advisor
  
Aaron Fleisher

Institutions
  
MIT, MCI, AT&T

Citizenship
  
US


John Klensin internethalloffameorgsitesdefaultfilesinducte

Alma mater
  
SB 1966, PhD 1979 Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Thesis
  
An evaluation of some geometric methods for automatic exploration of multivariate data. (1979)

Fields
  
Political Science, Computer Science

Institution
  
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MCI Inc.

Global IGF 2016: John Klensin on Actions for Best Future


John C. Klensin is a political scientist and computer science professional who is active in Internet-related issues.

Contents

John Klensin Meet John Klensin Internet Historys Jack of All Trades WIRED

Career

His career includes 30 years as a principal research scientist at MIT, including a period as INFOODS Project Coordinator for the United Nations University, distinguished engineering fellow at MCI WorldCom, and Internet architecture vice president at AT&T; he is now an independent consultant.

The Cambridge Project

Klensin was involved in The Cambridge Project, a social science data management cooperation project taking place at MIT, Harvard and other universities from 1969 to 1977. As a part of this program, John Klensin led the development of the Consistent System targeted for use by Social Scientists. The Consistent System ran on top of the Multics operating system.

Internet

His involvement with Internet protocols began in 1969, when he worked on the File Transfer Protocol.

In 1992, Randy Bush and John Klensin created the Network Startup Resource Center, helping dozens of countries to establish connections with FidoNet, UseNet, and when possible Internet.

IETF

Klensin is the author or co-editor of over 40 RFCs, and has served as IETF Applications Area director 1993-1995, Internet Architecture Board member 1996-2002, and its chair 2000-2002. He again served on the Board from 2009-2011.

The RFCs written or edited by Klensin include SMTP (including RFC 4409 and RFC 5321), IDNA (including RFC 5890 and RFC 6055), Unicode (including RFC 5137 and RFC 5198), and other fields including CRAM-MD5 (RFC 2195) and IETF policies (RFC 3933). In March 2011 8BITMIME (RFC 6152) was published as Internet standard STD 71, in November 2011 Mail submission (RFC 6409) was published as STD 72.

His i18n work also included an April Fools' Day RFC in collaboration with Harald Alvestrand (RFC 5242) and MIME in collaboration with Ned Freed (RFC 4289 among others). As of 2011, he is a member of the RFC Independent Submissions Editorial Board. He is working on several Internet drafts.

Awards and honours

  • 2003 - INCITS Merit Award.
  • 2007 - inducted as a Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery.
  • 2012 - inducted into the Internet Hall of Fame by the Internet Society.
  • References

    John Klensin Wikipedia