Networked: The Untold Story of the Internet's Infrastructure
MTA
An in-depth look at the physical and protocol layers that built the global internet, from ARPANET to fiber backbones
2nd Edition
"Networked: The Untold Story of the Internet's Infrastructure" details the physical and logical foundation of the internet, tracing its evolution from a research curiosity to a global necessity. The book begins with the origins of packet switching in the ARPANET, explaining how the fundamental principles of breaking data into packets and forwarding them across a network were developed. It then dives into the core technologies that enable modern data movement, including the mechanics of queues and switching, and the crucial TCP/IP protocol suite that solved the scaling problem and became the universal language of the internet. This technical foundation is built upon by the complex systems of routing, from the internal dynamics of OSPF and IS-IS to the inter-domain policy-based routing of BGP that stitches disparate networks together, and the essential naming and addressing systems of DNS and IPv6.
The narrative then shifts to the physical geography of the network, exploring the hidden infrastructure of fiber optic cables, the global web of submarine cables that cross oceans, and the internet exchange points (IXPs) where networks meet and exchange traffic. It examines the economic and political forces that shape this topology, from the peering and transit agreements that form the internet's business model to the policy battles over net neutrality that determine how this infrastructure is governed. The book also covers the critical systems that run on top of this infrastructure, such as Content Delivery Networks (CDNs) that cache content at the edge, the vast data centers and cloud backbones that form the internet's core, and the precise time synchronization protocols like NTP and PTP that keep the global system clocked in unison.
Finally, the book addresses the ongoing challenges of securing and growing the network. It explores the constant threats from DDoS attacks and BGP hijacks, and the architectural shift towards a "Zero Trust" security model. It looks at how engineers design for resilience through redundancy and failover, and how sophisticated monitoring and telemetry provide the visibility needed to manage such a complex system. The future is also on display, from the next-generation protocols like QUIC and HTTP/3 designed for a faster, more secure web, to the revolutionary impact of Low Earth Orbit (LEO) satellite constellations on global access. The book concludes by framing the internet's future as a grand challenge in balancing an insatiable demand for capacity with the urgent need for sustainability and global equity, ensuring the network can serve the next billion users in a just and enduring way.
This book is for network engineers, system administrators, software developers, and tech-savvy policymakers who need to understand the internet beyond their own data center. It is also ideal for students in computer science and information technology, as well as any professional involved in making decisions about digital infrastructure, cloud computing, or network strategy, providing them with a deep, practical understanding of the technologies that underpin our connected world.
January 9, 2026
64,607 words
4 hours 31 minutes
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