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{{Short description|Service to play, discuss, and view chess over the internet}}
{{For|chess on the internet broadly|Internet chess server}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2024}}
The '''American Internet Chess Server''', commonly known as '''Internet Chess Server''' ('''ICS''') was a [[telnet]]-based [[Online chess|chess server]] which allowed users to play live chess over the internet.
== History ==
In the 1970s, one could play correspondence chess in a [[PLATO System]] program called "chess3". Several users used chess3 regularly; often a particular user would make several moves per day, sometimes with several games simultaneously in progress. In theory one could use chess3 to play a complete game of chess in one sitting, but chess3 was not usually used this way. PLATO was not connected to Internet predecessor [[ARPANET]] in any way that allowed mass use by the public, and consequently, chess3 was and still is relatively unknown to the public. In the eighties, chess [[play-by-mail game|play by email]] was still fairly novel. Latency with email was less significant than with traditional [[correspondence chess]] via paper letters. Often one could complete a dozen moves in a week. As network technology improved, public, widespread use of a centralised server for live play became a possibility.{{cn|date=March 2025}}
Michael Moore, of the [[University of Utah]], and Richard Nash recognized the potential of an
In late
On
A handful of programmers who had worked on the original ICS became unhappy with what they saw as the commoditization of their project. They formed the [[Free Internet Chess Server]] (FICS), and continued to allow everyone to have access to all features for free. In 1996, [[John Fanning (businessman)|John Fanning]], uncle of [[Napster]] founder [[Shawn Fanning]], started
== Protocol and access ==
The [[ICS protocol]] is a simple, [[text-based]] variant of the [[
In addition to standalone clients, many servers also offer
▲The ICS protocol is a simple, [[text-based]] variant of the [[telnet]] protocol. It is sparsely [[Documentation|documented]] and not standardized, although a few [[reference implementation]]s and several [[Client (computing)|clients]] exist.
▲In addition to standalone clients, many servers also offer [[Java platform|Java]] interfaces that can be used directly from a [[Web browser]]. These are popular with [[Newbie|new users]] and users of [[public]] [[computer]]s.
== See also ==
* [[List of internet chess platforms]]
* [[Chess engine]]
* [[Computer chess]]
* [[Correspondence chess server]]
== References ==
{{Reflist}}
== External links ==
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20100313150500/http://members.cox.net/cpetroff/FICS/ History of the Internet Chess Server 1992–1995], Chris Petroff
{{Chess|state=collapsed}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Internet Chess Server}}
[[Category:Chess]]▼
[[Category:Internet chess servers| ]]
▲[[Category:Chess websites]]
[[Category:Internet protocols]]
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