Corruption, Lies and Death Threats: The Crazy Story of the Man Who Pretended to Invent Email
- Posted on March 7, 2012 at 11:05am by
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This post originally appeared on Gizmodo by Sam Biddle.

Shiva Ayyadurai (Image: Gizmodo)
Shiva Ayyadurai, pictured above, is a shimmering intellectual. He holds four degrees from MIT (where he lectures), numerous patents, honors and awards. He also says he invented email, and there’s a global conspiracy against him. Guess which one of these statements is true.
In 1978, a precocious 14-year-old from New Jersey invented email. You can see him doing it in the photo at the top right of your screen — the kid glued to his monitor. In that picture, he’s busy showing off his creation — a way for office staff to message each other via computer. As he’s happy to gab to the Washington Post, which recently ran a profile of him, Ayyadurai was a teen wonder who invented the electronic messaging system with which we all communicate, back in 1978. Ayyadurai’s collection of “historical documents” is now to be interred at the Smithsonian, the Post reported, laid gloriously on the pillar of American history alongside artifacts of Occidental Civilzation such as Dizzy Gillespie’s trumpet, Thomas Jefferson’s Bible, and a 1903 Winton, “the first car driven across the United States.” Ayyadurai is about to become more than just a gifted programmer and Professional Smart Man, but a historical figure. All of this leading up to a plum book deal with Norton, proclaiming his place in history as the upstart inventor of email itself.
But why have you never heard of him? Probably because there’s precious little evidence that Ayyadurai came remotely close to inventing email, beyond a few misleading childhood documents and a U.S. Copyright form of dubious weight. This was enough to convince the Washington Post and Smithsonian? Before you could even finish the Post’s ode, Emi Kolawole, the reporter behind the piece, issued a stumbling correction:
A number of readers have accurately pointed out that electronic messaging predates V. A. Shiva Ayyadurai’s work in 1978. However, Ayyadurai holds the copyright to the computer program called “email,“ establishing him as the creator of the ”computer program for [an] electronic mail system” with that name, according to the U.S. Copyright Office.

Newspaper clip detailing Ayyadurai's invention. (Image via Gizmodo)
Well, that’s a rather different claim to fame entirely, isn’t it? After we posted incredulously, Ayyadurai’s PR rep was quick to rally us toward his cause — and the case was urgent. Not only was Ayyadurai desperate to set the record straight, but there was a tale of globalization and woe that explained the detractors. Ayyadurai wasn‘t being accused of lying about inventing email because hadn’t invented it; he was the victim of international character assassination. This goes all the way to the top.
In 2009, Ayyadurai worked for the Indian government, helping to run CSIR, a national R&D incubator tasked with finding homegrown patents and turning them into national high tech moneymakers. According to Ayyadurai, the center, with its billions of dollars to spend, was as corrupt as you’d imagine an R&D incubator in a developing country would be. Dissent was verboten, patents were plagiarized, and the few ideas of worth were rounded up laid fallow. When someone tried to speak up, they were canned. Meanwhile, plush villas, fat salaries and state-provided cars were doled out to scientists within the organization on the dime of the Indian people.
Ayyadurai couldn’t sit idly by while this happened. He admonished his management in a letter he circulated within CSIR, calling for freedom of speech among colleagues. The Indian government clamped down immediately: He was banned from further communiques, promptly fired, evicted from his government housing, and urged to flee the country, lest his life and family be harmed. Phone calls of warning and threat were persistent, he says.
So Ayyadurai did flee, returning to MIT, where he’s generally described by his colleagues as a nut and fraud — the term [...] “loon” [was] tossed around freely by professors who were happy to talk about their coworker but prefer to remain anonymous. “Don’t know him, but [he] didn’t invent email. If he claims to have done so he’s a d***,” said one MIT brain.
Ayyadurai is convinced the Indian government isn’t through with him. He claims that it hired a team of “bloggers” and PR hatchet men to smear him across the Internet. Target number one? His claim to be the father of email.
On the phone, Ayyadurai comes off as kind, a man of nervous tact. But it also absolutely feels like trying to sell you something that’s just not sticking — a sort of mainframe Willy Loman. At publications he’s duped into letting him opine unfettered, he‘s email’s inventor, through and through. He also owns dozens of immodest domains to that point—InventorOfEmail.com, DrEmail.com, EmailInventor.com — you get the point. No? Well Ayyadura has literally 100 more sites (103 in total) dedicated to making sure you do.
But press Ayyadurai, and he gets desperate, as his entire faux-fame rests upon semantic tricks, falsehoods and a misinformation campaign.
Shiva Ayyadurai didn’t invent email — he created “EMAIL,” an electronic mail system implemented at the University of Medicine and Dentistry in Newark, New Jersey. It’s doubtful he realized it as a little teen, but laying claim to the name of a product that’s the generic term for a universal technology gives you acres of weasel room. But creating a type of airplane named AIRPLANE doesn’t make you Wilbur Wright.
The actual pioneers of email were breaking new ground more than a decade before Ayyadurai concocted his dental memo system. Electronic mail predates Ayyadurai’s ability to spell, let alone code. Ray Tomlinson is best known for having sent the first text letter between two computers on ARPANET in ‘71—y’know, an email. He also picked out the @ sign. A modest career. And despite Ayyadurai’s insistence that, at the very least, he was the first to make use of the To/From/CC/BCC/etc fields we still use in Gmail today, this too is a personal fantasy. Tomlinson, who began working on early inter-computer messaging when Ayyadurai was a year old, explained to us how he became well-versed with these linchpins of modern email years before Ayyadurai drew them up on his own:
[We] had most of the headers needed to deliver the message (to:, cc:, etc.) as well as identifying the sender (from:) and when the message was sent (date:) and what the message was about. I chose the Latin word “re” meaning “about” for this. This apparently too obscure and was replaced with “subject:”. However, “re:” is still use in the subject field to refer to the subject of the message to which the message is a reply. RFC 561 documents the headers as of 1973. Before that the standard was de facto. You could include any header you wanted in a message, but you had better use to:, cc:, etc. if you wanted the receiving program to understand.
These email underpinnings were further cemented in 1977′s RFC 733, a foundational document of what became the internet itself — a full year before Ayyadurai’s EMAIL project.
It was rough around the edges, but it was email. The work of Tomlinson and his peers was limited, but so too was the Internet — and both exploded together. But ask Ayyadurai, and he dismisses it all — these messages weren’t email, but “messages” and nothing more, relegated to some inferior class of communications that he compares to everyday “text messaging and morse code.” It was all just sloppy streams of letters until he made EMAIL — and only then did the system behind Gmail, BlackBerry and every computer on the planet see light.
But Ayyadurai‘s claim that he revolutionized how those messages are sent isn’t uncontested either. Dave Crocker, another eminent figure in the history of actual email, calls Ayyadurai’s posturing “theatrical,” rattling off a fat list of email clients — MSG, SNDMSG, HERMES, MS — that did pretty much what EMAIL did, years and years before Ayyadurai started coding. “For a 14 year old his work was impressive,” Crocker told us over the phone. “What he’s saying about it now as a much older adult is also impressive — but in a very different way.”
It’s possible Ayyadurai was the first to come up with the term “EMAIL.” That alone would be a feat. “In 1971, we called them ‘messages,’” explains Tomlinson, a man so accomplished he can casually mention such things. But even that claim is tenuous, as Crocker points to a scholarly journal titled “EMMS; Electronic Mail and Message Systems.” It was published a year before Ayyadurai did anything. “Newsletters for a topic don’t usually start before the topic has been invented,” says Crocker.
It’s also possible the idea of copying decades-old paper standbys like “blind carbon copy” occurred to Ayyadurai independently of ARPA’s work, and that he put it together in a friendly software package. But that’s about as much as Ayyadurai has on his side, PR team and media credulity notwithstanding. The fact is that the labors of people like Tomlinson and Crocker are the monkey to your Gmail’s Homo sapiens, explains Tomlinson: “Email has evolved — FTP is no longer used to transport email. Additional media may be used instead of plain text. Messages are stored in a myriad of ways — Gmail stores messages in databases on huge server farms, messages on my end are stored in files on an IMAP server, etc., but the essence, even the at-sign, remains the same.” That explanation? The words of an “elite group of people who think they own innovation,” according to Ayyadurai.
Except they have history on their side. They need no aggrandizement, no TIME article, no need to take the Washington Post on a ride, no baseless Smithsonian tribute (the museum declined to comment on Ayyadurai’s false apotheosis). They’ve done their work. But anyone who cares about the history of the astoundingly clever and complex things we use daily might suffer from Ayyadurai’s ego campaign. Ayyadurai is free to self-promote — and he’s doing a hell of a job — but when he delves into revisionism, it‘s a rare ego trip we shouldn’t let slide.
Editor’s Note: Some language in Gizmodo’s original posting has been redacted.




















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Teabunny
Posted on April 11, 2012 at 11:45amEventually Jefferson’s physical separation from Maria and the hopelessness of a relationship with her cooled his ardor. After returning to America in 1789, his letters to her grew less frequent; partly due to the fact that he was increasingly preoccupied by his position as President George Washington’s secretary of state. She, however, continued to write to him and vented her frustration at his growing aloofness. In his last letters, he spoke more of his scientific studies than of his love and desire for her, finally admitting that his love for her had been relegated to fond memories of when their relationship had been “pure.”
Report Post »MrObvious
Posted on March 7, 2012 at 9:44pmI invented a unique asynchronous, error and loss tolerant file transfer protocol, with sequence compression, in the early 80s. Looking back at it, I suppose I could have applied for a patent. Who knows. Mostly it was just a way to make what we had to work with, work, the way we needed, when other options weren’t readily available. I’ve created messaging systems too. Also created a database, a GUI, a memory management system that didn’t leak, and many more things that didn’t exist in the environments, I was asked to work in, at the times they were needed to meet the challenges set before me.
So what.
I know, I’m not alone.
As programmers, we were given an environment to work in and a challenge to meet; and, we would use the tools given us, to meet that challenge.
These days, we mostly download and/or buy assorted chunks to speed our work; as, re-inventing from scratch takes longer; and, faster results are expected.
Still, sometimes the pieces we need, don’t exist yet.
Report Post »It’s at those times we all become inventors again.
I don’t know about the rest out there; but, invention is my favorite part of the job, followed closely by playing with new stuff.
ignoramus
Posted on March 7, 2012 at 5:29pmI am like the 2000 year old man. I invented a lot of stuff, but did not do it at a university. I didn‘t do it to get rich or famous and I didn’t actually become rich or famous. When text reshuffles itself to fit in the window when size or dimensions are changed, I wrote that in assembler code in 1965 before there was Windows, internet or smart phones. I called it JEST (justified electronically set text) I also created Micro Fiche which was how genealogical, bank records and Social Security files were retrieved before Google, and data base terminals were thought of.
Report Post »Philo Farnsworth a distant cousin was my hero for inventing TV. Make fun of me if you wish.
Oh, and I’m a Mormon as was Philo.
ignoramus
Posted on March 7, 2012 at 6:09pmAfterthought…Acronyms were vogue in my days, 3, 4 and 5. One product was START. I had many pages of acronyms in order to keep track of who owned which. Had anyone registered that one they would be rich or Microsoft would have something else in the lower left corner of their product. As resident 2000 year old man, I knew Bill Gates, Steve Wozniac and Steve Jobs years before Windows and they were not Mormons and I was not active Mormon, but I am now. Just sayin’
Report Post »I’m also a webber and blogger. See meetmitt.net for a sample.
Larry E
Posted on March 7, 2012 at 3:45pmNow my heart is really shattered! My hero Algore didn’t invent the internet and e-mail. Oh, what a shock. I think that Al should sue!
Report Post »Dave In Arizona
Posted on March 7, 2012 at 2:49pmMust be related to Al Gore.
Report Post »A. James
Posted on March 7, 2012 at 1:55pmWait, this doesn’t look like Al??
Report Post »marcus_arealius
Posted on March 7, 2012 at 1:48pmAnyone who knows what VNET was, make your comments. Oh, and I invented electricity, er.. maybe it was running water, I forget.. it was a very long time ago.
Report Post »COFemale
Posted on March 7, 2012 at 12:44pmWow him and Al Gore can be buddies, I mean, after all Al Gore invented the Internet, right?
He may have created an application that allowed him to send email, but he did not invent the concept of email. It was BBN who won the RFP fo create the Internet, which was finalized in 1969. Email came shortly there after as this story indicates by Ray Tomlinson. Having said this, I do believe some of the BBN members were at or from MIT in the early 70′s and it is possible in 78 this guy ran across previous published papers and took it upon himself in solving a problem not realizing it was already solved. We also know that some that have a very high IQ are just one brick away from being Schizo, like Russel Crowe in A Beautiful Mind.
Report Post »Miyegombo Bayartsogt
Posted on March 7, 2012 at 12:03pmThe BS piles up so fast in this story you need wings to stay outta it.
Report Post »elihu
Posted on March 7, 2012 at 11:58amGeeeezzzz! And all this time I thought this guy partnered up with Al Gore when Al invented the Internet. Boy, don’t believe everthing you hear…
Report Post »SpankDaMonkey
Posted on March 7, 2012 at 11:45am.
Report Post »So thats the guy who ruined my kids handwriting………
Nemo13
Posted on March 7, 2012 at 11:44amI thought Al Gore was looking for proof of ManBearPig? Haha.. Who cares who invented email? it’s an obvious invention “Hmmm… I would like to send a message to that other computer….” Wow… would would have ever thought of such an amazing idea?! (YAWN)
Report Post »DaveOregon
Posted on March 7, 2012 at 11:31amIf they guy is this delusional – why is he at MIT? Does this not make anything he is teaching suspect?? He lacks credibility – thus anything he states lacks credibility too.
Report Post »lukerw
Posted on March 7, 2012 at 12:30pmEver watch… “the Big Bang Theory”? — The are alike the Sane, Cool, guys… compared to the Nutty Weirdoes… actually found on University Staffs & Faculties!
Report Post »chips1
Posted on March 7, 2012 at 11:23amMog had two round rocks. It was Gog that put an axle between them, so actually Mog invented the wheel. Sound about right?
Report Post »lukerw
Posted on March 7, 2012 at 11:22amIn the late 60′s… working on the ILLIAC IV with Burroughs and the Government… we sent Messages to each other… held in Computer Mail Boxes. We did not call it EMAIL… and this continued on under ARPANET… which became the InterNet!
Report Post »CatB
Posted on March 7, 2012 at 11:14amAnd ALGORE invented the internet (not) .. why isn’t he being targeted?
Report Post »Chuck Stein
Posted on March 7, 2012 at 11:26amIt is often mentioned, but this story is about a DIFFERENT fraudster.
Report Post »pamela kay
Posted on March 7, 2012 at 3:06pmCrap CATB, you beat me to the punch with this one.I agree.
Report Post »Razorhunters
Posted on March 7, 2012 at 11:13amYouTube Restricts Video Of Engineer Proving How Useless TSA Scanners Are
Report Post »http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=olEoc_1ZkfA&feature=player_embedded
AJAYW
Posted on March 7, 2012 at 11:10amMy what a suprise I thought that Al Gore ( Billy boy Clintons Whore ) invented it.
Report Post »CatB
Posted on March 7, 2012 at 11:16amNope that was the whole “internet” ;-)
Report Post »AJAYW
Posted on March 7, 2012 at 11:24am@CatB
Report Post »Yes you are right,