David Farber
Adjunct Professor of Internet Studies
5000 Forbes Avenue
Pittsburgh, PA 15213
Bio
Professor David Farber played a key role in many systems that converged into today's Internet.
His early academic research work, at the Information and Computer Science Department of the University of California at Irvine, was focused on creating the world’s first operational Distributed Computer System.
After moving to the University of Delaware, Farber helped conceive and organize the National Science Foundation's Computer Science Network (CSNet), which made then-experimental networking technology available to academic computer scientists and was instrumental in spreading the technology globally, to both industry and academia. Farber also helped plan and develop NSFNET and National Research & Education Network (NREN), efforts that led to the development of the current commercial Internet. Along with Bob Kahn, he conceived the pioneering Gigabit Testbed activity of the NSF.
He received the 1995 SIGCOMM Award for lifelong contributions to computer communications and Philadelphia's John Scott award for Contributions to Humanity.
He has served on the Board of Trustees of the Internet Society and on the US President's Information Technology Advisory Committee.