Title: The Internet
1The Internet
2Overview
- An introduction to HTML
- Dynamic HTML
- Encryption
- Public Key Infrastructure
- Development of the Internet
- Web Browsers
3Top 10 uses of Internet at Work (2000)
- 1. E-mail 73
- 2. Business related research 35
- 3. Academic Research 23
- 4. General browsing/surfing 17
- 5. IT information 11
- 6. Downloading Software 11
- 7. News information 10
- 8. Searching for personal information 9
- 9. Reading Magazines/Newspapers 7
- 10. Sports information 7
4Overall Structure of Internet
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6How does the World Wide Web works?
- User must have a program called "browser" running
on the computer Internet Explorer (IE) or
Netscape - User establishes a connection with an ISP
(Internet Service Provider) via dial-up or LAN
(local area network). - User types in an URL (Uniform Resource Locator)
as the target webpage address in browser's
address field. For example, http//www.csd.uwo.ca/
cs031
7- (4-6 are behind the scene) Through ISPs, the
English URL is translated into a numerical IP
(Internet Protocol) address. Eg130.100.11.3Â - User's browser uses the IP address to establish a
connection via local, regional, and/or national
ISPs, with the target computer (a web server). - The web page that the user wants, HTML page, is
sent back to user's browser. - User's browser interprets HTML commands, and
displays the page with nice format to the user.
HTML pages can have - Formatting information (text formatting, framing,
etc.) - Hyperlinks (user clicks on and browser repeats
steps 3-6) - Multimedia (pictures, audio, video, animations)
8A Simple Example (simple.html)
A very simple web page My name is
Charles Ling Here is a picture of
mine
width150
My favourite thing to do
is
- Adventurous travelling around the
world - Watching good movies
- Reading news
at CNN
For
more info about me, click my href"http//www.csd.uwo.ca/faculty/ling"home
page at UWO.
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10Building Webpages
- Writing html files directly (using notepad or
other text editors) - Using MS Word and save as html
- Using specialized software MS Frontpage,
Dreamwaver, etc. - Adding animations, forms, java, javascript,
database functionality,
11Writing Simple html pages
- Start notepad and writing html code directly
- Save it as an html file (eg, my.html)
- Start browser (eg, Internet Explore)
- Click file open, click browse to locate and
open the html file (eg, my.html). - You will see how the html file is displayed!
12HTML
- HTML HyperText Markup Language
- A language used to define the content of, and the
presentation instructions for, a Web document
13- When a browser presents a Web document, the
browser scans the document and applies the
presentation instructions to the content - Content that does not have presentation
instructions will be presented using default
instructions built into the browser
14- HTML documents must employ a simple format so
anyone can create documents - HTML documents are stored in text (ASCII) files
- This type of document can be created using any
editor that allows you to save the document as a
text file
15- To combine the content and the presentation
instructions in the same file, there must be a
way to distinguish between these two components - In HTML, the presentation instructions are
inserted as tags - Anything that isnt a presentation instruction is
content
16- HTML tags normally occur in pairs
- The pair of tags surround the content to which
they apply - A start tag is indicated with angle brackets
-
- An end tag is indicated with a slash after the
opening angle bracket
17- HTML has a set of predefined tags
- These tags can be used to
- Control how the text in the document is displayed
- Insert images into the document
- Insert links to other documents
18Document Tags
- HTML documents are enclosed within and
tags - Every HTML document will have a head and a body
- The document head is enclosed within the
and tags - The body is enclosed within the and
tags
19- The basic structure of an HTML document is
- The within the is displayed in the
title bar of the browser
20- The of the document contains information
used by the browser - All of the content for the document and the
associated presentation instructions are placed
inside the tags
21Formatting Tags
- HTML contains tag definitions that allow you to
control - Headings
- Style
- Ordered Lists
- Unordered Lists
- Definition Lists
- etc.
22Heading Tags
- There are six heading levels
- The levels are named H1, H2, H3, H6 where H1 is
the largest and H6 is the smallest - To create a heading, you enclose the text of the
heading inside the opening and closing tags for
the heading level
23Heading Examples
24Physical Style Tags
- Used to control the display of text
- - bold
- - italics
- - underline
- - typewriter type face
25Physical Style Tag Example
26Logical Style Tags
- Examples of logical style tags
- - for emphasis
- - stronger emphasis
- - citation
- - computer code
27Logical Style Tag Example
28Layout Style Tags
- Used to control text layout
- - center the text
- - new paragraph
- break, start a new line - - horizontal rule, draw a line
29Layout Style Tag Example
30Lists
- Lists of data can be defined using
- Ordered List enumerated lists
- Unordered List bulleted lists
- Definition List lists that are made of terms
and their associated definitions
31Ordered List
- Use the
and
tags to start and end an
ordered list - Within the ordered list, the list item (
- ) tag
is used to indicate the items on the list - The VALUE tag can be used to set the value of a
list item - The START parameter is used to control the value
of the first item
32- The TYPE parameter controls what enumeration
scheme is used - The types are
- 1 numbers (default)
- a lower case letters
- A upper case letters
- i small Roman numerals
- I large Roman numerals
33Ordered List
34Ordered List
35Ordered List
36Unordered List
- Use the tags to start and end an
unordered list - Within the unordered list, the list item (
- )
tag is used to identify the items on the list
37- The TYPE parameter can be used to control the
look of the list - The types are
- Disc a solid disc
- Circle a hollow circle
- Square a square symbol
38Unordered List
39Unordered List
40Definition List
- The and tags define the Definition
List - The tag is used to indicate a definition
term - The tag is used to indicate a definition
41Definition List
42URL
- An URL is a Uniform Resource Locator
- An URL contains information about
- The address of a document on the Internet
- The protocol that will be used to access the
document
43Protocols
- HTTP HyperText Transfer Protocol
- Designed to transmit files on the World Wide Web
- FTP File Transfer Protocol
- Designed to transmit files over the Internet
(before the Web developed) - ftp//ftp.csd.uwo.ca
- Email mailtoling_at_csd.uwo.ca
- These protocols are sets of rules that dictate
how files are transmitted between computers
44URL Example
- In the following URL example, the protocol to be
used is HTTP (before the //)
- The document is browse.html and it is located
in the selected folder at the World Wide Web
site for UWO in Canada
45Images
- Images are added to documents using the tag
- A tag is not required
- The SRC parameter is used to indicate the SouRCe
of the image
46Image Formats
- Standard image formats are needed so images can
be - stored
- retrieved
- transmitted over the Web
47- Examples of image formats used on the Web are
- GIF Graphics Interchange Format
- JPG ( JPEG ) Joint Photographic Experts Group
- PNG Portable Network Graphics
- BMP Windows Bitmap
48Graphics Interchange Format
- Uses the Lempel-Ziv Welch (LZW) compression
algorithm - The algorithm searches the image for big blocks
of the same color and then compresses these
blocks - This compression reduces the size of the image
49- The algorithm also uses an indexed color scheme,
in which a custom color palette for the image is
selected using only 256 of the over 16 million
available colors - This format is used when the image does not
contain a wide range of colors or color shades
50Joint Photographic Experts Group
- Images can contain millions of colors
- Uses Lossy compression algorithm
- When the image is compressed it permanently loses
some of its quality - The algorithm looks for similar colors (like a
range of reds) and chooses the same red for very
close shades
51- If the original image had 1,000 shades of red,
the compressed image may have only 500 shades - The human eye cannot detect all the shades so in
general the lose will not be noticed - This format is used when the image contains many
colors and many color shades
52Portable Network Graphics
- Portable Network Graphics format was designed to
replace GIF - Uses loss less compression like GIF
- Provides better resolution and more colors like
JPG - Generates smaller files like GIF
- Is not supported by all versions of browsers
53Windows Bitmap
- Every pixel in the image is represented by a
piece of data - The data represents the color of the pixel
- Bitmap images are very large
- Rarely used on Web pages because of the time
required to download the image
54Image Tag
55Anchors
- Anchor tags ( and ) are used to insert
hyperlinks and bookmarks into HTML documents - A hyperlink is a link to another document on the
World Wide Web - A bookmark is a named location within an HTML
document
56No. 1 use of AnchorsAnchors as Hyperlinks
- An example of a link to the UWO home page
- When the HTML is rendered the document will
contain a link to UWO
57- The Link Item is the text or image that you click
on to activate the link - The HREF parameter is the Hypertext REFerence
parameter - The HREF parameter is used to define the link
destination
58An Image as a Link
59No. 2 useAnchors as Bookmarks(in the same
document)
- An example of the definition of an (invisible)
bookmark using the NAME parameter (normally in a
long html file)
.. .. NAMEConclusions_bookmark Conclusions/h2
60- An example of a link to a bookmark within the
same document (in the same html document) - Note the use of
You can see conclusions markhere Back to
top
61In a long html file (say papers.html)
. You can see conclusions ookmarkhere NAMEConclusions_bookmark Conclusions/h2 You can see conclusions hrefConclusions_bookmarkhere
62No.3 use combining 1 and 2Anchors as
Hyperlinksto bookmark in a different document
- The form of the anchor tags used as a hypertext
link is
Link Item
63- An example of a link to a bookmark within another
html document
Click usions_bookmark here to jump to conclusions
in that document.
- See a real example inhttp//www.csd.uwo.ca/facult
y/ling/cs031/simple.html - If linking to a bookmark in the same document,
the URL is omitted
64Web Page Example 1
- Create a Web page with
- My First Web Page as the title
- Your name as a level 2 heading
- An enumerated list of your three favorite
University courses - An image for the University. Try
http//www.uwo.ca/gifs/uwologo4.gif as the
source URL. If this URL doesnt work, look at
the HTML source for the Universitys home page to
find an URL
65Web Page Example 2
- Create a Web Page with
- A TV show name as a level 1 heading at the top of
the page - A paragraph of text about the show
- Bold the stars names and italicize the night that
the show is broadcast within this text - A horizontal line
- A link to a Web page for the show. Use the name
of the show as the link text - A horizontal line
- A link to the heading at the top of the page,
using Top as the link text
66DHTML
- Dynamic HTML
- Supported by fourth generation and later browsers
(Netscape and IE) - DHTML allows the user to interact with a web page
- The user can enter values and select buttons
67- The user of a DHTML page can enter data and then
have the data sent (posted) to a web site - The computer hosting the web site can then
process the data - DHTML Example 1
- DHTML Example 2
68Encryption
- Encryption involves encoding a message to conceal
the meaning - Consider the name
NORMA JEAN BAKER
- The name has been encrypted as
OPSNB!KFBO!CBLFS
- What is the encryption algorithm?
- How would you decode the message?
69- For encryption to work there must be an algorithm
that is applied to the original message - There must also be a way to decode the encrypted
message to obtain the original message
70- Encryption algorithms use a binary key to
encrypt and decrypt messages - There are two types of encryption algorithms used
to secure Internet transmissions - Symmetric Key Encryption
- Asymmetric (Public) Key Encryption
71Symmetric Key Encryption
- Symmetric Key Encryption can use the same key for
both encryption and decryption - The sender and the receiver must both know the
key - Both must ensure that the key is kept secret
- If the key becomes public then others can decrypt
valid messages and create fake messages
72Key Length
- For Symmetric Key Encryption, the typical key
lengths are 40, 56 and 128 bits - Key length is one measure of encryption strength
- Longer keys provide stronger encryption
- An additional bit in the key doubles the strength
of the key
73Data Encryption Standard
- The Data Encryption Standard (DES) is the U.S.
governments standard for data encryption - Uses the Data Encryption Algorithm (DEA) to
encrypt/decrypt the message - An improvement on the Lucifer algorithm developed
by IBM in the early 1970s - Uses a 56 bit key
74Triple DES
- Uses a key three times as long as Standard DES
- 168 bit key
- Used for banks and other organizations that
transmit highly sensitive data
75Public Key Encryption
- Asymmetric Key Encryption
- Uses a pair of keys, one public and one private
- Key length is a least 512 bits
- The public key is published so any sender can
obtain it - The private key is kept secret
76- Messages encrypted using the public key can only
be decrypted by using the private key - There reverse is also true, messages encrypted
using the private key can only be decrypted using
the public key - This is one way to generate a digital certificate
(to sign a message)
77- Rhonda wants to send an email to Rick
- Rhonda finds Ricks Public Key through a Public
Key directory - She encrypts the message using Ricks Public Key
and sends the message - Rick uses his Private Key to decrypt the message
(his Public Key will NOT decrypt the message) - For Rick to respond, he must use Rhondas Public
Key to encrypt the message
78Encryption Strength
- The strength of an encryption depends on the
algorithm used and the length of the key - The algorithms used in most implementations of
Public Key Encryption are patented by RSA Data
Security Inc.
79RSA Algorithms
- The RSA Public Key Cryptosystem was developed in
1977 by - Ronald Rivest
- Adi Shamir
- Leonard Adleman
- They have created a number of 128 bit key
algorithms - For example, RC2 and RC4
80Code Breaking
- For Symmetric Key Encryption, the typical key
lengths are 40, 56 and 128 bits - Tests have been conducted to determine how long
it will take to break messages encoded using
various key lengths
81- The 128 bit encryption has not been broken yet!
- The sun will burn out first is a frequent
estimate of how long it will take!
82US vs International Security
- Under current U.S. policy, software manufacturers
can only sell 40 bit key encryption systems
overseas - Some exceptions can use 56 bit keys
- International banks
83- In the U.S., 128 bit keys are recommended to
ensure secure communications - Why would the U.S. want to restrict key length in
software used in other countries?
84Public Key Infrastructure
- A Public Key Infrastructure is an encryption and
digital certificate delivery system which makes
secure electronic transactions possible - The X.509 Standard
85- PKI uses Digital Certificates
- A digital signature
- Digital Certificates carry the same legal weight
as a written signature - Provides a way for others to verify your identity
- Uses Public Key Encryption
86- A Digital Certificate relates you to a set of
public and private keys - Digital Certificates are used to provide secure
transactions through the Secure Sockets Layer
Protocol (SSL)
87SSL Protocol
- Developed by Netscape
- Goal is to provide secure and reliable
communication between applications - For example, between a Web application (your
browser) and a Web site
88- Public Key Encryption is used by each application
to establish the identity of the other
application - Symmetric Encryption is used for data encryption
89- Public Key Encryption is used to exchange the key
used by the Symmetric Encryption of the data - The reliability of the message is ensured by
including a Message Authentication Code (MAC) as
part of the data
90- SSL takes the message to be transmitted and
- fragments the data into manageable blocks
- optionally, compresses the data
- performs a message integrity check
- encrypts the data
- transmits the result
91- Received data is
- decrypted
- verified
- decompressed
- reassembled
- delivered to the client
92Digital Trust
- Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) manages all
aspects of Digital Trust - In the digital world, trust requires
- Privacy
- Integrity
- Non-repudiation
- Authentication
93Privacy
- To ensure privacy, messages are encrypted
- Encryption ensures that the message cannot be
read in transit or by anyone except the recipient
94Integrity
- Verify the integrity of the message
- Ensure that the message that is received is
exactly what was sent
95Non-repudiation
- The sender cannot deny or repudiate a valid
message - For example, when a stock broker receives an
order for stock trades, the client cannot later
claim that they didnt send the message
96Authentication
- Verify that the sender is who they claim to be
97The Internet
- Networks of networks
- Tens of thousands of computer networks
- Reaches 100s of millions of people
- How did the Internet develop?
98- Started with ARPANET, an experimental project of
the U.S. Department of Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency (DARPA) in 1969 - The original purpose was to explore experimental
networking technologies for the military
99- How large is the Internet?
- Nobody knows for sure!
- According to the Internet Society (ISOC), a
professional organization of Internet developers,
influencers, and users, the Internet reaches more
than 170 countries
100Internet Growth
101- One of the reasons the Internet has been so
successful is the commitment of its developers to
producing open standards - The specifications or rules that computers need
to communicate are publicly and freely available
published so that everyone can obtain them
102TCP/IP
- The standards that the Internet uses are known as
TCP/IP - Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol
suite - Without open standards, only computers from the
same vendor could talk to one another
103- Computers and networks that conform to the same
communications standards are able to
interoperate, regardless of the manufacturer - All of the networks and computers act as peers in
the exchange of information and communication
104Packets
- Communication on the Internet revolves around the
concept of a packet, a basic building block - All information and communications transmitted on
the Internet are broken into packets, each of
which is considered to be an independent entity
105- The packets are individually routed from network
to network until they reach their destination,
where they are reassembled and presented to the
user
106- This method of networking is very flexible and
robust - It allows diverse computers and systems to
communicate by means of network software, not
proprietary hardware
107- If a network goes down (breaks down), then the
packets can be rerouted through other parts of
the network of networks - This dynamic alternate routing of information
creates a very persistent means of communication
108Internet Development
- There have been three generations of Internet
development - They characterize the evolution of the Internet
109First Generation
- There were three main First Generation Tools
- Electronic mail
- Remote logon
- File transfer
- These tools are still available on all parts of
the Internet
110Electronic Mail
- Uses Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP)
- Standardized in 1983
- Originally designed to transmit plain text
- Printable characters
- NOT binary files, graphics or sound
111- Current systems use Multipurpose Internet Mail
Extensions (MIME) - MIME allows the email system to transport
- Plain text, binary files, graphics and sound
- MIME encodes and decodes complex messages into a
simpler form that SMTP can transport
112- Characteristics of email programs
- Composition
- Response
- Read
- Delete
- Organize
- Filter
113Email Address
- An email address consists of a local part and a
host part - For example,
csdept_at_csd.uwo.ca
114csdept_at_csd.uwo.ca
- The local part is a user name, mailbox, login
name or user id - csdept
- The host part is the name of an email server on
the Internet - csd.uwo.ca
115POP and IMAP
- Protocols like the Post Office Protocol (POP) and
the Internet Message Access Protocol (IMAP) are
used to transmit email from - your computer to your email server
- your email server to your computer
116Simple Mail Transfer Protocol
- The Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP) is used
to transmit email between email servers
117- To send an email
- Construct the message on your computer
- When you click on Send, the message is moved
using POP or IMAP to your email server - The email server uses the host part of the
address to determine where to send the message
118- When the message arrives at the destination email
server, it is stored and the recipient is
notified of its arrival - When the recipient wants to read the message, it
is moved using POP or IMAP to their computer
119Remote Logon
- Allows you to logon to a computer over the
Internet - A utility that handles remote logon is Telnet
- To remotely connect to a computer, you must know
the address of the computer - For example, mccarthy.csd.uwo.ca
120- On most host computers, you must have an account
on the computer - Some host computers allow you to logon as
Anonymous or Guest with your email address as
the password - Anonymous logon
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122File Transfer
- The File Transfer Protocol (FTP)
- Used to copy (download) files over the Internet
123- FTP was designed to copy plain text files
- HTTP was designed to transmit text files,
graphics, sound, etc. - FTP is faster than HTTP because FTP doesn't
perform as many checks on the data during the
download process
124- FTP allows you to
- connect to another computer
- list the files in a folder on the other computer
- copy files back and forth between the two
computers - Anonymous FTP allows you to logon as Anonymous
or Guest with your email address as the password
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126Second Generation
- The Second Generation saw large increases in
- The amount of data being made public
- The number of Internet users
- There was an increasing need for tools that would
aid users in finding resources
127Tools
- The first tool was Gopher
- Developed at the University of Minnesota, where
the mascot is a Golden Gopher!
128- Gopher was a hierarchical system of menus
- The top level menu contained general categories
- The information became more specific as you
drilled down - Looked a lot like Yahoo!
129Veronica
- Very Easy Rodent-Oriented Net-wide Index to
Computerized Archives - The University of Nevada
- Gopher allowed you to search through the
categories looking for interesting resources - But it was a manual search
- Veronica allowed the user to submit keywords and
the utility did a search of gopher space
130Archie
- Archie is derived from the word archive
- Developed at the McGill University School of
Computer Science - Maintained a database of all the names of files
stored at known public FTP sites - Helped find files at FTP sites
131Network News - USENET
- USENET is a network within the Internet
- Divided into newsgroups
- Each newsgroup is devoted to a topic
- To read or post to a newsgroup you need a news
reader application
132Newsgroups
- More than 80,000 newsgroups
- Newsgroups are divided into hierarchies
- alt 10,159 alternate groups
- microsoft 991 groups
- bionet 94 groups
- biz 48 groups
- Newsgroups are added daily so these numbers are
out of date!
133Third Generation
- The World Wide Web
- Tools
- Browsers
- Search engines
- Directories
134World Wide Web
- Originally developed by the European Laboratory
for Particle Physics (also known as CERN) by Tim
Berners-Lee of Switzerland - He developed a system to link together scholarly
references - The links from one document to another are
imagined to form a web!
135- The World Wide Web is a browsing and searching
system - Built on the concept of hypertext and hypermedia
136- The Web is a continuous distributed information
construction project - Tens of thousands of people are adding knowledge
to it daily by bringing up their own servers or
posting documents on existing servers
137Browsers
- A browser is application software
- Browsers use HTML documents as their input
- The HTML tags in the document are applied to the
content and the result is displayed in the browser
138Mosaic
- The first popular graphical browser
- It was developed at the National Center for
Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) in Champaign,
Illinois by Marc Andreessen - Allows a user to click on text, graphics, buttons
or icons that link to other resources
139Netscape
- Developed by Netscape Communications Corporation
- The company was founded in April of 1994 by Marc
Andreessen, creator of the NCSA Mosaic software
and Dr. James H. Clark, the founder of Silicon
Graphics, Inc.
140- Microsofts Web browser is Internet Explorer
- All browsers have the same basic functionality,
they just have a slightly different look and
feel
141Browser Functionality
- Typical functionality
- Display HTML documents
- Create bookmarks
- Send and read email
- Read news
- Display and create the source HTML for documents
- Debug script on DHTML pages
142Search Engines
- One of the most difficult tasks for a Web browser
is to make it easy for the user to find resources - Search engines allow users to do keyword searches
- These searches are actually database searches
- Search engines keep databases that match keywords
to document URLs
143Directories
- The top level of directories indicate general
categories - As the user drills down into a category, they are
presented with more specific categories
144- Consider WebCrawler and Google
- These two are typical World Web Web tools
- They both provide basic and advanced search
capabilities as well as directories
145Advanced Searches
- Each search engine has its own syntax for
describing a search - Most engines AND together keywords
- The document must have all of the keywords
- The search engine should also support OR, NOT and
exact phrases
146- Check out the WebCrawler and Google advanced
search pages for examples of typical advanced
search strategies
147- You can submit a page to be included in searches
and directories - WebCrawler
- Google
- Search engine databases also get information
about documents from programs called robots that
explore the Web looking for documents to add to
their database