Sovam Teleport Sovam Teleport is a Russian telecommunications company that was founded in 1990. The company was established as a joint venture of the San Francisco Moscow Teleport (SFMT) network and the
All-Russian Research Institute of Automated Application Systems (ВНИИПАС). with the support of the US government. Californian modem node of SFMT was permanently connected to VNIIPAS/IIASA trans-country copper digital line existing since 1978 and established by future VNIIPAS director Oleg Smirnov. It was a non-profit project with a goal to expand the Internet to the USSR. In 1986, the project changed its status and became a commercial enterprise, with financing from
George Soros added in 1988. The All-Russian Research Institute of Automated Application Systems provided a data transmission network with some countries in Eastern Europe, as well as Cuba, Mongolia, and Vietnam, almost all of the data traffic was scientific and technical information, and in 1983 organized a non-state email network. By the beginning of the 1990s, almost half of the VNII traffic amounted to operational data from electronic mail systems. The
New York Times newspaper on February 19, 1989 on its first page published article "New Satellite Channel Opens Computer Link to the Soviets" by
John Markoff that highlighted VNIIPAS/IIASA/Sovam network development with adding of
Tymnet and
Sprint satellite nodes at
Central Telegraph. The company's first network was built on the
X.25 protocol in 1990. In 1992, Sovam Teleport began to build a
UUCP mail and terminal access system through American servers. Johnson & Johnson, Coca-Cola, DuPont, Estee Lauder, Time magazine, and France Presse were among the first corporate clients of the company. Since 1992, the British company Cable & Wireless, which has its own fiber-optic channels in Europe, has become the third co-founder of the company. On June 4, 1992, the company was re-registered as a limited liability partnership, and all three co-founders - Cable & Wireless, All-Russian Research Institute of Automated Application Systems and SFMT - received almost equal shares. On July 28, 1993, a communications center in Tashkent began servicing customers. The provider domain sovam.com, which opened on February 24, 1994, became the first public Internet site in Russia. Sovam Teleport in early 1990s became a first
SWIFT network provider for emerging Russian banks (over x.25). In 1995 Sovam Teleport launched
Russia Online (ROL) public
dial-up ISP.
DEMOS-based network After invading Afghanistan, the Soviet Union found itself under sanctions (already being limited by
CoCom). However, a group of developers made a Russian version of the Unix operating system, secretly brought from America, and called it
DEMOS. Some Unix developers, working at the
Kurchatov Nuclear Energy Research Institute created a network that used DEMOS, namely
RELCOM. The main feature of this network was that it was a fully horizontal network, i.e. each networked computer could directly communicate with other computers on the network. Many labs took part in joint experiments, so rapid communication was very much needed. Therefore, the first network users were mainly Soviet research institutes, so they could exchange scientific information more rapidly.
Cityline (
Livejournal),
Anton Nossik, and
Edward Shenderovich met with representatives of the Russian internet community, including
Anton Nossik,
Galina Timchenko and
Ivan Zassoursky. Cityline was one of the first internet providers in Russia that aimed to counter ROL's monopoly at public
dial-up market. It was founded in 1996 by Emelyan Zakharov,
Demian Kudryavtsev,
Egor Shuppe, Dmitriy Bosov and Rafael Filinov. The realization of the fact that the Internet was not appealing for Russian users without content led to content-oriented services. Cityline approached
Anton Nosik, a journalist, and Anton would later create content for them. It led to a portal named 'Vechernii Internet' (Вечерний Интернет), where Anton Nosik published his articles. In addition, the very first Russian web designer was Artemy Lebedev, who designed websites for Cityline. One of the most popular websites on the Russian internet was Anekdot.ru, a website dedicated to humour and stories. Anekdot.ru was founded by astrophysicist Dmitrii Verner. ==Search engines==