People today rely on the Internet for almost anything and everything. When the first computer was built in the 1950s, it wasn’t expected to get as far as it has today. The first ideas about the Internet came about because of many intelligent people, but who originally sparked the idea was a man named Leonard Kleinrock. He published a paper titled “Information Flowin Large Communication Nets.” From there, many others added and modified this idea of flowing information now known as the Internet. The first meeting between the Network Working Group and the Stanford Research Institute took place in 1968 where they talked about how they can solve the problems of having people from each group be able to communicate. In December of 1968, Thomas Marill, Lawrence Roberts, and Barry Wessler got together and generated the final type of the Interface Message Processor specifications. Then Bolt Beranek and Newman sealed the deal to design and construct the Interface Message Processor sub network. UCLA then got involved and told the general public about the new idea of the Internet. Clearly the Internet has flourished juristically since then. People are online 24/7 and post their entire life on their social media sites. Through online social media a new identity has been formed. This is known as online identity. Online identity is essentially a social identity that an Internet user creates in online communities to boost social image. Social media and online identities have both positive and negative effects to their users. Online systems have changed the way we live because we don’t live in the moment anymore. Online social media sites such as Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter are the reason why people are glued to our phone at all times. People are constantly checking what other people are doing and thinking. They are looking at their social media sites around the clock, making sure they don’t miss a single post or picture. It’s funny