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'''Richard Lamb''' has over 30 years of engineering, business, and policy experience in the Internet arena. Currently responsible for [[DNSSEC]] efforts at [[ICANN]], he was the technical and policy architect for the Internet’s DNSSEC root key deployment <ref>IEEE Professional Achievement Award "For leadership in developing Internet security policy related to global PKI and DNSSEC"</ref> and regularly teaches and speaks on DNSSEC and other [[ICT]] topics. Prior to this he was Director of Global IT policy at US Department of State where he focused on helping policy makers understand various technologies. Before this, he founded a number of small networking start-ups the last acquired by [[Microsoft]] and continues to collaborate with start-ups on innovative solutions and has a number of patents. His years in the networking field have included implementation of a wide range of protocols from the bottom-up including UUCP (author of UUPC/DCP), MEP2, BiSync, SNA/SDLC, X.25, DECNET, Q.921/931, H.323, IPX, NATs, and TCP/IP/DNS. Rick received his doctorate from MIT. <ref>[http://www.linkedin.com/pub/rick-lamb linkedin]</ref>
'''Richard Lamb''' has over 30 years of engineering, business, and policy experience <ref>IEEE-USA Executive Fellow</ref> in the Internet arena. Currently responsible for [[DNSSEC]] efforts at [[ICANN]], he was the technical and policy architect for the Internet’s DNSSEC root key deployment <ref>IEEE Professional Achievement Award "For leadership in developing Internet security policy related to global PKI and DNSSEC"</ref> and regularly teaches and speaks on DNSSEC and other [[ICT]] topics. Prior to this he was Director of Global IT policy at US Department of State where he focused on helping policy makers understand various technologies. Before this, he founded a number of small networking start-ups the last acquired by [[Microsoft]] and continues to collaborate with start-ups on innovative solutions and has a number of patents. His years in the networking field have included implementation of a wide range of protocols from the bottom-up including UUCP (author of UUPC/DCP), MEP2, BiSync, SNA/SDLC, X.25, DECNET, Q.921/931, H.323, IPX, NATs, and TCP/IP/DNS. Rick received his doctorate from MIT. <ref>[http://www.linkedin.com/pub/rick-lamb linkedin]</ref>


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 02:33, 25 January 2015

Country: USA
Email: richard.lamb [at] icann.org
Currently ICANN Staff

Richard Lamb has over 30 years of engineering, business, and policy experience [1] in the Internet arena. Currently responsible for DNSSEC efforts at ICANN, he was the technical and policy architect for the Internet’s DNSSEC root key deployment [2] and regularly teaches and speaks on DNSSEC and other ICT topics. Prior to this he was Director of Global IT policy at US Department of State where he focused on helping policy makers understand various technologies. Before this, he founded a number of small networking start-ups the last acquired by Microsoft and continues to collaborate with start-ups on innovative solutions and has a number of patents. His years in the networking field have included implementation of a wide range of protocols from the bottom-up including UUCP (author of UUPC/DCP), MEP2, BiSync, SNA/SDLC, X.25, DECNET, Q.921/931, H.323, IPX, NATs, and TCP/IP/DNS. Rick received his doctorate from MIT. [3]

References[edit | edit source]

  1. IEEE-USA Executive Fellow
  2. IEEE Professional Achievement Award "For leadership in developing Internet security policy related to global PKI and DNSSEC"
  3. linkedin