A Pivotal Year: Japan in 1995

The Birth and Evolution of the Internet in Japan

Economy Society

Murai Jun [Profile]

A leading figure of computer science, often called the father of Japan’s Internet, elucidates the development and spread of the Internet in Japan and discusses what the future might hold.

Japan’s First ISP

Commercialization was the next stage in the Internet’s evolution. However, University volunteers were limited in what they could do to develop Internet businesses. In 1990 in the United States, Rick Adams, a systems manager at the US Center for Seismic Studies, launched AlterNet, the world’s first Internet service provider. While Adams encouraged me to start an Internet business, the idea of starting and growing a business was an alien concept amid the research being done at Japanese universities at that time.

I was, however, facing a practical problem. Organizations desiring to connect to the Internet were growing rapidly to the point of exceeding the capacity of WIDE, the academic research system. The situation called for starting an Internet business. In 1992, my colleagues and I helped pool the money of a number of contributors, raising ¥10 million in capital, the minimum amount needed then to start a company.

We submitted an application to the Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications to be approved as a telecommunications carrier, but the ministry was slow to act. The application form included a section for recording evidence that the telecommunications carrier business could be performed. Here I wrote passionately about my past experience in experimental computer networks and our capacities as a specialist organization. I learned later that what was sought was a balance statement for a bank deposit account. What the ministry wanted to see in the interest of protecting users was evidence that there were enough funds to maintain the business even if revenues were zero.

This was a time when the Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications imagined telecommunications carriers joining the market dominated by NTT to be large companies like DDI Corporation, which was founded by Toyota Motor and 24 other companies. The ministry took no interest in business ventures like ours. In overcoming this difficult period we founded the Internet Initiative Japan (IIJ) in 1992, Japan’s first commercial Internet service provider.

Internet Use Spreads Rapidly Through Windows 95

In the early 1990s, ISPs began providing Internet service in Japan and the United States. Companies could now gain Internet access by paying a suitable fee. Internet use then spread to individuals following the launch of Windows 95.

By the second half of the 1990s, nearly all university researchers in the United States involved in Internet development, such as software development at UC Berkeley, had started businesses. As a result, Japan began to assume a central role in basic and leading-edge research. For example, Japan took the lead in technological innovations related to the internationalization of browsers and email to facilitate the use of languages other than English as well as in the development of IPv6, the next-generation Internet protocol.

In 1999, at a moment when I was full of confidence that Japan would drive the development of Internet technology, Takenaka Heizō, a colleague and economist at the Shōnan Fujisawa Campus, asked me why Japan was so far behind in the Internet.

I wondered at first how little he must know about the situation. However, Takenaka explained: “Government services and companies do not use the Internet in Japan. This is impeding Japan’s economic competitiveness, and the nation is relinquishing its presence on the global stage.” Takenaka’s remarks reminded me that the United States already offered an incentive plan to file taxes through the Internet and that online banking was enabling US financial institutions to move faster and more efficiently.

While the commercialization of the Internet began nearly at the same time in Japan and the United States, Japan fell far behind in its application. Already from the time of PC communications, personal computers were being used in the United States to provide government services and to pursue business opportunities. In contrast, there was zero interest in Japan regarding the potential of the Internet other than among university researchers and computer-related companies. I even found the prevalence of an attitude of wanting to reject the Internet.

Promoting the Computerization of Government Services

When I became aware of this situation, I began to visit the prime minister’s official residence, politicians, and government offices to share my concerns. In 2000, an IT Strategic Headquarters was established by the Mori Yoshirō cabinet. I myself, Takenaka, and other experts participated as members (in 2001 Takenaka was appointed minister of state for economic and fiscal policy under Koizumi Junichirō to promote structural reform).

The deliberations of the IT Strategic Headquarters led to the establishment of an e-Japan strategy in September 2000, and the IT Basic Act was enacted in November, taking effect in January 2001. The objectives of this act included the establishment of a super high-speed network, the promotion of electronic commercial transactions, and the computerization of government services.

Despite having established IT policies, progress was slow in adopting information technology in government services. One reason was the prominent legal stipulation that procedures occur in person and use documents and seals. Another example was the requirement that teachers instruct students in person, meaning that distance learning was not possible.

To deal with this situation, all government agencies searched through the laws under their jurisdiction to identify those that required in-person procedures and the use of documents and seals. This process identified about 9,000 such locations. Each of these laws was revised to include a statement that equivalent electronic procedures would suffice. The revision of the Commercial Code yielded immediate results. The code had restricted the location of board of directors meetings. Now it became possible to participate in board meetings at a distance through electronic means. It also became possible for schools to provide distance learning.

To this day, however, government offices prefer paper-based procedures, and small- and medium-sized enterprises have been slow to adopt information technology. In short, although Japan has made great strides in Internet technology and although the required infrastructure is in place, the nation has lagged behind the United States by failing to make full use of the Internet.

Future Shape of Global Networks

What are the future issues that need addressing in relation to the Internet? In considering this question, it will be necessary to think about coexistence between a borderless global society created by the Internet and an international community divided by national borders. How will an international community separated by borders maintain and develop the global society of the Internet?

As highlighted by the way it is capitalized, there is only one Internet in the world. In other words, the Internet means a network connecting everything together in the world. The ideal is all people being able to access this network. Now the Internet of things is drawing attention where all objects are connected together.

With the Internet of things, all the world’s automobiles will be connected to the same network. What can be accomplished with such a network? Naturally, automobiles will be able to exchange data directly with each other to avoid collisions. Data on exhaust volume and other environmental impacts can be collected. There will be a need to carefully consider how to utilize a global network bringing access to such data.

Finally, an issue that has raised great concern of late is Internet security. This issue boils down to the question of how to provide reliable services. What is needed is quality control and reliability, which are areas where Japan should have something to offer. At the present moment, however, Japan is not exerting these strengths in relation to the Internet.

Sometime in the future, every service of global society will be made available in some form through the Internet. We will be moving toward an age where greater value is placed on quality control and highly reliable services. Japan has an important responsibility to fulfill. It should lead the way in enhancing the quality of services in these aspects.

(Banner photo: Windows 95 goes on sale in Japan on November 23, 1995. ©Fujifotos / Aflo)

Related Tags

IT Internet Koizumi Junichiro NTT TCP/IP Windows 95 UNIX provider AT&T Bell Labs

Murai JunView article list

Professor of the Faculty of Environment and Information Studies, Keiō University, where he also earned a degree in engineering in 1979 and PhD in Computer Science in 1987. Born in 1955.  Founded JUNET, Japan’s first inter-university computer network in 1984. Founded the WIDE Project, a Japanese Internet research consortium in 1988, and promoted the establishment and the spread of the Internet. Guided the early Internet toward a Japanese and multilingual environment.  Publications include Intānetto (The Internet), Intānetto shinsedai (The New Internet Generation), and Intānetto no kiso (Internet Fundamentals).

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