This section needs additional citations for. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Globo receiver software. Find sources: – ( January 2014) () Introduction of the Internet [ ] Linking of Yugoslavia into global electronic networks began at the end of the 1980s. The (EARN) was functioning in Europe at that time. In 1988 the Faculty of Natural Sciences and Mathematics in, proposed that Yugoslav universities join the EARN. The became a node of the EARN in 1989, when the first international connection of the academic network between and became active.
The capacity of this link initially was 4800 and it was later doubled to 9600 bit/s. The project of developing the academic network functioned within the project of developing the system of scientific-technological information (SNTIJ) and was managed by the and the institute Jožef Štefan from.
These institutions took on the responsibility of organising the first domain register between 1990 and 1991. 1990s [ ] The development of the Internet in Serbia faced with very difficult circumstances, during the breakup of Yugoslavia. In the middle of 1992 the imposed all-inclusive sanctions against the newly formed. The sanctions did not exclude telecommunications and all such government-funded projects came under the sanctions. It was not long before the only Yugoslav Internet link, connecting the Yugoslav academic network to EARN, was shut down. The sanctions prevented foreign companies from doing any kind of business with Yugoslav firms, so it was impossible to establish any commercial Internet links with Yugoslavia.
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Before November 1995 the only way to access the Internet from Yugoslavia was by using an extremely expensive and slow packet network or by directly dialing ISPs abroad. These methods were used only by a few of the largest Yugoslav companies and by the academic network.
After the was signed in the middle of November 1995 ending the, some of the UN sanctions against Yugoslavia were lifted, opening the possibility of decent Internet access. On 14 December 1995, Belgrade's Radio formed an Internet division which became known as Opennet. A 128 kbit/s leased phone line link between Radio B92 and the ISP in Amsterdam was sponsored by the Fund for an Open Society. Opennet became the first Yugoslav ISP to offer affordable public Internet access, e-mail accounts, and Web space. Like Radio B92, Opennet strongly supported the Internet as a means of free expression and promoting tolerance and open communication. The honored Opennet's director Drazen Pantic as the EFF Pioneer for 1999, in recognition of his continued promotion of these values and of his contribution to the development of civil society in Yugoslavia. Opennet was also the first Yugoslav ISP to offer public Internet access in three computer centers, known as 'Opennet classrooms', in Belgrade.