Jump to content

Dave Crocker

From ICANNWiki
Country: USA
Email: dcrocker[at]bbiw.net
Website:

   [dcrocker.net dcrocker.net]

LinkedIn:    [Dave Crocker Dave Crocker]

David H. Crocker is a Senior Advisor at Messaging Anti-Abuse Working Group and Participant at IETF. He is also self employed working under the company name Brandenburg InternetWorking. He designs network-based applications businesses and system architectures.[1]

From 1989 to 1991, he worked as the Manager of Network Systems Laboratory, Digital Equipment Corp. Prior to which, he was the Vice President of Engineering at The Wollongong Group, Inc. He has also held the position of Development Manager at Ungermann-Bass, Inc. and has worked as the Director of System Development at MCI Digital Information Services Corp. He started his career working as the Co-Principal Investigator, Electrical Engineering at University of Delaware.[2]

Internet Industry[edit | edit source]

He has been the Area director for the IETF from 1989-1993.

He participated in the effort to standardize facsimile over Internet and electronic data interchange over the Internet.

He Chaired the Silicon Valley–Public Access Link, of which he is still a board member.

Meetings[edit | edit source]

Mr. Crocker actively participates in Meetings in the Internet Industry. He has Chaired and Presented at Several conferences which include:

  • N+I Interop
  • Electronic Messaging Association
  • APRICOT
  • RIPE
  • EMail World
  • Unix Expo

He has also taught several classes on Internet, TCP/IP and Open Systems Networking.

Email[edit | edit source]

Mr. Crocker is often reffered as one of the Inventors and Designer of E-mail. He developed MS, based on the design of MSG, which was the first modern Email sender program. MS was designed for UNIX operating system. Its idea was initiated by Steve Walker, who was then the Program Manager at DAPRA. While Dave Farber managed the overall work for the program, Mr. Crocker designed the functional specifications and Steve Tepper and Bill Crosby did the programming.

In 1977, Mr. Crocker, John Vittal, Kenneth Pogran, and Austin Henderson worked together on a DARPA initiative that was meant to collect various email data formats into a single, coherent specification. The result of there work was RFC 733. In 1982, Dave revised RFC 733 and made RFC 822, which was the first standard to describe the syntax of domain name.

Publications[edit | edit source]

Author of book chapters, magazine articles, presentations and specifications on open systems networking, standards, electronic mail and electronic commerce.

Awards and Honors[edit | edit source]

In 2004, he got the IEEE Internet Award.[3]