The principles behind information-centric networks were first described in the original 17 rules of
Ted Nelson's
Project Xanadu in 1979. In 2002, Brent Baccala submitted an
Internet-Draft differentiating between connection-oriented and data-oriented networking and suggested that the Internet web architecture was rapidly becoming more data-oriented. In 2006, the DONA project at UC Berkeley and ICSI proposed an information-centric network architecture, which improved TRIAD by incorporating security (authenticity) and persistence as first-class primitives in the architecture. On August 30, 2006, PARC Research Fellow
Van Jacobson gave a talk titled "A new way to look at Networking" at Google. The CCN project was officially launched at PARC in 2007. In 2009, PARC announced the CCNx project (Content-Centric Network), publishing the interoperability specifications and an open-source implementation on the Project CCNx website on September 21, 2009. The original CCN design was described in a paper published at the International Conference on Emerging Networking EXperiments and Technologies (CoNEXT) in December 2009. Annual CCNx Community meetings were held in 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2015. The protocol specification for CCNx 1.0 has been made available for comment and discussion. Work on CCNx happens openly in the ICNRG
IRTF research group. == Specification ==