Open Internet Standards

A man with headphones sits at a table, working on a laptop.

Open
Internet Standards

The Internet is fundamentally based on the existence of open, non-proprietary standards. They are key to allowing devices, services, and applications to work together across a wide and dispersed network of networks.

You can trace the origins of standards back to the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). The resulting protocols spawned the invention and development of a wealth new applications and protocols.

Some of the core groups behind the development of the standards are:

These organizations are all open, transparent, and rely on a bottom-up consensus-building process to develop standards. They help make sure open standards have freely accessible specifications, are unencumbered, have open development and are continuously evolving.

The IETF also makes sure these standards are available online at no charge, thus facilitating adoption of them.

What We Do

What We Do

The Internet Society provides a corporate home for the administrative entity that supports the IETF, the IAB, and the IRTF, and supports the work of these groups through a variety of programs. Read more about the IETF and our related work.

How You Can Take a Part

How You Can Take a Part

You can also have your say in the development of Internet Standards by participating in the IETF. Its activities are open to anyone around the world. While the IETF conducts all of its official business online, there are three meetings per year you can join in person or virtually.

Mapping Terrestrial Fibre Optic Infrastructure

Mapping Terrestrial Fibre Optic Infrastructure

The availability of adequate data on existing telecom infrastructure, particularly fiber optic infrastructure, can support decisions for more targeted and cost-efficient infrastructure investments by the private and public sectors. 

The Open Fiber Data Standard (OFDS) addresses the challenge of inadequate data on fiber optic infrastructure by proposing a solution that aims to establish a global open standard for fiber optic infrastructure data.

red cables entering the router

Latest Updates

Latest Updates

Everything You Need to Know about Network Time Security

This article was first published on Netnod’s Blog. It is reposted here with permission of Netnod. A lot of the …

IPv6 Buzz Podcast Dives into Open Standards Everywhere

What are the challenges with applications supporting IPv6? What do people, particularly those working in enterprises, need to know about …

Listen to the Hedge Podcast 39 to Learn about the Open Standards Everywhere Project

What is our Open Standards Everywhere (OSE) project all about? How did it get started? What are the project goals? …

On This 8th World IPv6 Launchiversary, Help Us Get More Websites Available Over IPv6

Eight years ago, on June 6, 2012, thousands of companies and organizations came together as part of World IPv6 Launch …

GPS World Webinar: Protecting Critical Infrastructure with Resilient Timing & Synchronization

Karen O’Donoghue, Director, Internet Trust and Technology, Internet Society joined a panel of experts to discuss how resilient timing and …

Virtual Webinar: Workshop on Synchronization and Timing Systems

ATIS’ Virtual Workshop on Synchronization and Timing Systems (vWSTS) took place in May in place of the face-to-face WSTS 2020 …

The Road to Deployment: Network Time Security

The presentation by Karen ‘O’Donoghue at LACNIC 33 …

LACNIC Technical Forum

The LACNIC Technical Forum includes top-level technical presentations on issues such as cybersecurity, IPv6, DNS, the Internet of Things, interconnection, …

IETF 107 Starts Today as a Virtual Meeting

Later today, the 107th meeting of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) will begin its working group sessions in an …

Leading image copyright:
© Richard Stonehouse