For decades, Internet pioneer David J. Farber, who died on February 7, aged 91, maintained the Interesting People email list. When he began, it was an unusual choice, as few academics then reached out in such a public way.
Often called the grandfather of the Internet because he invented technologies and taught students whose work became crucial to its development, Farber’s long and distinguished career, which others recount in better detail, included stints at many respected US institutions – Bell Labs, RAND, the University of Delaware, Carnegie Mellon, the University of Pennsylvania – and a presence on too many technical organizations and projects to count. He was a regular at conferences, and Ione of those, in 1998, is where I met him in person.
Among the obits lauding his professional career: Stevens,Institute of Technology, where he earned his first degree (“he created the future”); the Internet Hall of Fame (“a mentor to many generations”); the Electronic Frontier Foundation, where he was a board member; the Japan Times, Tools on Fire, the New York Times (“gregarious”).
“Gregarious” was crucial to building the Internet, as Times writer Peter Wayner writes. Until 2020 the mailing list, whose membership Wayner estimates at 25,000, was really how I knew him. Farber liked to collect information and knowledge in all forms, including human, though I thought of the list less as interesting *people* than alerts to interesting information. However, the sources of that forwarded information were often surprising. Farber seemed to know *everyone*.
In 2020, covid’s arrival led Farber to create a new platform, a weekly Zoom call, which he of course publicized on his mailing list. Over the last nearly six years, many of these calls featured invited speakers, who might cover any topic from medical privacy to quantum computing to Hong Kong real estate to Brexit. Many regulars were his old friends; many others, like me, were newcomers. He was welcoming to all and eager to ask questions.
He was particularly interested in hearing from Asian speakers since he had moved, at 83, to Japan in 2018 to take up a post at Keio University. The move to a new country and culture seems to have given him a berth in a place where his age was respected and his accomplishments were revered. In the last week of January, he wound up what turns out to be his final semester by sending in the final grades for his class of 37 students. He was a teacher and communicator to the last. R.I.P.
Illustration: Dave Farber on a Zoom call, drawn by his friend of 70-plus years, John De Pillis (used by permission).