Founded | 1996 |
---|---|
Geographic location |
Europe United States |
Based in | Worldwide |
Average users | 40,000 - 80,000 |
Average channels | 20,000 - 40,000 |
Average servers | 40 |
Content/subject | Public/Unrestricted |
IRCnet is one of the largest IRC networks with more than 60,000 users using it daily. An early 2005 record had approximately 123,110 users simultaneously connected to the network.
Initially, most IRC servers formed a single IRC network, to which new servers could join without restriction, but this was soon abused by people who set up servers to sabotage other users, channels, or servers. In August 1990, the server eris.berkeley.edu
remained the only one to allow anyone to connect to the servers.
A group of IRC server operators, with the support of Jarkko Oikarinen, introduced a new "Q-line" into their server configurations, to "quarantine" themselves away from eris by disconnecting from any subset of the IRC network as soon as they saw eris there.
For a few days, the entire IRC network suffered frequent netsplits, but eventually the majority of servers added the Q-line and effectively created a new separate IRC net called EFnet (Eris-Free Network); the remaining servers who stayed connected to eris (and thus were no longer able to connect to EFnet servers) were called A-net (Anarchy Network). A-net soon vanished, leaving EFnet as the only IRC network.
Continuing problems with performance and abuse eventually led to the rise of another major IRC network, Undernet, which split off in October 1992.
Between May and July 1996 IRCnet was formed as a European fork of EFnet, when a number of operator disagreements resulted in a group of European admins declaring their independence. The reasons for the "Great Split" as it came to be called, included:
Many IRCnet servers state that IRC is a privilege, not a right. That defines the characteristics of network usage ‒ users are normally not permitted to run bots and should avoid abusive behaviour.
Servers are generally open to users from their geographic location and do not allow outside connections, however there are few open exceptions allowing access to users not covered by any local server.
Strict rules are operated for shell providers regulating, limiting or banning their connections.
IRCnet operates few if any network services to service nicknames or channels. It does implement reop -channelmode that allows channel operators to set hostmasks for users to be automatically "reopped" by the server. This mode is called +R with capital R and in fact supersedes the RFC2811 +r (lower-case r) channel mode, available only on !-channels and settable (not resettable) only by their creators.