Formation | 1994 |
---|---|
Founder | |
Type | Network Engineering |
Legal status | 501(c)(3) organization |
Focus | DNS, Internet |
Location | |
Area served | Worldwide |
Products | BIND, DHCP, Kea |
Key people | Jeff Osborn (President) |
Employees | 35 |
Website | www |
Formerly called | Internet Software Consortium |
ASN |
Internet Systems Consortium, Inc., also known as ISC, is an American non-profit corporation that supports the infrastructure of the universal, self-organizing Internet by developing and maintaining core production-quality software, protocols, and operations.[1][2] ISC has developed several key Internet technologies that enable the global Internet, including: BIND, ISC DHCP and Kea. Other software projects no longer in active development include OpenReg and ISC AFTR (an implementation of an IPv4/IPv6 transition protocol based on Dual-Stack Lite).
ISC operates one of the 13 global authoritative DNS root servers, F-Root.[3][4]
Over the years a number of additional software systems were operated under ISC (for example: INN and Lynx) to better support the Internet's infrastructure. ISC also expanded their operational activities to include Internet hosting facilities for other open-source projects such as NetBSD, XFree86, kernel.org, secondary name-service (SNS) for more than 50 top-level domains, and a DNS OARC (Operations, Analysis and Research Center) for monitoring and reporting of the Internet's DNS.
ISC is actively involved in the community design process; it authors and participates in the development of the IETF standards, including the production of managed open-source software used as a reference implementation of the DNS.[5]
ISC is primarily funded by the sale of technical support contracts for its open source software.[6]