Internet architecture, Internet exchange points began as
Network Access Points or
NAPs, a key component of
Al Gore's
National Information Infrastructure (NII) plan, which defined the transition from the US Government-paid-for
NSFNET era (when Internet access was government sponsored and commercial traffic was prohibited) to the commercial Internet of today. The four Network Access Points (NAPs) were defined as transitional data communications facilities at which Network Service Providers (NSPs) would exchange traffic, in replacement of the publicly financed
NSFNET Internet backbone. The
National Science Foundation let contracts supporting the four NAPs, one to
MFS Datanet for the preexisting
MAE-East in Washington, D.C., and three others to
Sprint,
Ameritech, and
Pacific Bell, for new facilities of various designs and technologies, in New York (actually
Pennsauken, New Jersey), Chicago, and California, respectively. As a transitional strategy, they were effective, providing a bridge from the Internet's beginnings as a government-funded academic experiment, to the modern Internet of many private-sector competitors collaborating to form a network-of-networks, transporting Internet bandwidth from its points-of-production at Internet exchange points to its sites-of-consumption at users' locations. This transition was particularly timely, coming hard on the heels of the
ANS CO+RE controversy, which had disturbed the nascent industry, led to congressional hearings, resulted in a law allowing NSF to promote and use networks that carry commercial traffic, prompted a review of the administration of NSFNET by the NSF's Inspector General (no serious problems were found), and caused commercial operators to realize that they needed to be able to communicate with each other independent of third parties or at neutral exchange points. Although the three telco-operated NAPs faded into obscurity relatively quickly after the expiration of the federal subsidies,
MAE-East, thrived for fifteen more years, and its west-coast counterpart
MAE-West continued for more than twenty years. Today, the phrase "Network Access Point" is of historical interest only, since the four transitional NAPs disappeared long ago, replaced by hundreds of modern Internet exchange points, though in Spanish-speaking
Latin America, the phrase lives on to a small degree, among those who conflate the NAPs with IXPs. ==Function==