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Media InformationArchived Press ReleasesInternet Society Jonathan B. Postel Service Award for 2001 Presented to Daniel Karrenberg
Stockholm, 5 June 2001 -- Internet Society (ISOC) Chairman Brian Carpenter presented the 2001 Jonathan Postel Service Award to Mr. Daniel Karrenberg, one of the pioneers of the Internet's development in Europe, during the opening ceremony of the 2001 INET Conference. The presentation was witnessed by delegates from around the world gathered at the magnificent Stockholm City Hall, in the same room in which the Nobel Prizes are awarded. In a similar setting and after welcoming speeches by Hans-Göran Olsson, Deputy Lord Mayor of the City of Stockholm, succeeded by Ms. Lynn St. Amour, ISOC President and CEO, and Richard Perlman, ISOC Vice President of Conferences, the award was presented by Mr. Carpenter, with following recognition:
Mr. Karrenberg humbly accepted the award, thanking the Internet community for this recognition and pledging to continue my work guided by the spirit of Jon Postel. About the Jonathan B. Postel Service AwardThe Jonathan B. Postel Service Award was established by the Internet Society to honor a person who has made outstanding contributions in service to the data communications community. It is named for Dr. Jonathan B. Postel to recognize and commemorate the extraordinary stewardship exercised by Jon over the course of a thirty year career in networking. He served as the editor of the RFC series of notes from its inception in 1969 until 1998. He also served as the ARPANET "numbers Czar" and Internet Assigned Numbers Authority over the same period of time. He was a founding member of the Internet Architecture (nee Activities) Board and the first individual member of the Internet Society, where he also served as a Trustee. The Award consists of an engraved crystal globe and US $20,000.00. The Award is presented at the Internet Society's annual INET Conference. The first award was presented posthumously to Jon Postel himself, accepted by his mother, Lois Postel at INET'99. Scott Bradner received the second award during INET 2000. Future awards will be presented in 2002 and every other year thereafter. For additional information on Jon Postel's life and contributions, please visit http://www.isoc.org/postel/. About ISOCThe Internet Society <http://www.isoc.org/> is a non-profit, non-governmental, open membership organization whose worldwide individual and organization members make up a veritable "who's who" of the Internet industry. It provides leadership in technical and operational standards, policy issues, and education. ISOC hosts two annual Internet conferences <http://www.isoc.org/isoc/conferences/>, trains people from all over the world in networking technologies, conducts workshops for educators, and publishes an award-winning magazine, OnTheInternet. ISOC provides an international forum to address the most important economic, political, social, ethical and legal initiatives influencing the evolution of the Internet. This includes facilitating discussions on key policy decisions such as taxation, copyright protection, privacy and confidentiality, and initiatives towards self-governance of the Internet. ISOC created the Internet Societal Task Force as an on-going forum for discussion, debate, and development of position papers, white papers, and statements on Internet related societal issues. ISOC is the organizational home of the International Engineering Task Force, the Internet Architecture Board, the Internet Engineering Steering Group, and the Internet Research Task Force - the standards setting and research arms of the Internet community. These organizations operate in an environment of bottom-up consensus building made possible through the participation of thousands of people from throughout the world. ContactLance Laack |