Introduction Although no official opening date is set, the Internet was an American concept actually put forth by the US Government in the 1960s, giving thousands of public and private computers the ability to communicate through the cyber world. During the first years of the Internet the only ones allowed to use it were the government. In the 1990s the Internet started to become more popular which led to its expansion to businesses and the mass public. About 42.3 percent more people use the Internet today than in 1995 and about 90 percent of classrooms in the United States of America have Internet access (Internet Statistics, Internetworldstats.com, January 28th, 2015). Al Gore the person who created the Internet says he did not invent the Internet, but he and his followers were the ones who made it all happen. The Birth of Cyber Communication In 1965, an M.I.T scientist came up with a way of interchanging information from one computer to another he called this invention “packet switching”. The functions of packet switching were breaking down data into blocks, or packets, before shipping the information to its destination. That way, each packet can take its own route from one place to another. Without the packet switching system, the government’s ability to navigate through the cyber world would have been narrow to simple enemy attacks with other communication systems like the phone line. “Login” In 1969, Arpanet delivered its first message: a “node-to-node” communication from one computer to another (History of the Internet, History.com, January 28th, 2015). The two computers where located in the state of California, one in a research lab at University of California Los Angeles and the other one was located at Stanford University. Each of these devices was about the size of a small house. The message “login” was very simple; but not very efficient, they system crashed the “ packet switching” system which caus