In July 1971 he returned to Europe and worked as a systems programmer and later as a computer networking specialist at
CERN—the European Organization for Nuclear Research in Geneva, Switzerland. Apart from a sabbatical year in 1977 working at the
Bell Northern Research laboratory in Palo Alto, California, he stayed at CERN until his retirement in 2002.
Between 1985 and 1988 he co-ordinated the introduction at CERN of the
TCP/IP Internet protocols, permitting interconnection of the principal computer systems inside the laboratory before CERN joined the world
Internet in early 1989.[8][9][10][11][12][13]
From 1989 he played a major role in the project “SHIFT” that replaced CERN's mainframe computers by distributed Unix clusters.[14][15][16] Segal was responsible for the system's high performance computer network. By the year 2000, SHIFT had already increased CERN's installed computing power by a factor of a hundred. The SHIFT architecture was then extended to build the
World Wide LHC Computing Grid,[17] used since that time to analyse the massive and still increasing amounts of experimental data taken by the physics experiments around the
Large Hadron Collider at CERN. In 2001 CERN was awarded the Computerworld Honors award for 21st Century Achievement for this innovative application of information technology to the benefit of society.[18][19][20]
Segal's work on TCP/IP and CERN's acceptance of the Internet in 1989, enabled
Tim Berners-Lee to develop the
World Wide Web and its related protocols.[22][23][24] Berners-Lee acknowledged in 2014 Segal as a mentor during the years he developed the Web.[25]
Segal was a founding member of the
Internet Society (ISOC), Geneva chapter, and elected to the ISOC Board of Trustees between 1997 and 2000.[26][27]
Since his retirement, Segal remained active until 2023 as an honorary member of the CERN personnel. He has worked in the developing field of
volunteer computing where the general public is invited to contribute to major scientific computing challenges by volunteering some of their private computing power. Segal co-founded and is still active in CERN's own such project,
LHC@home,[28][29] which has attracted several hundred thousand contributors since its launch in 2004.[30][31][32]
^Segal, Ben (2001),
"A major SHIFT in outlook", CERN Courier, vol. 41, no. 6, pp. 19–20, retrieved 2024-04-28
^Baud, J P; Bunn, J J; Cane, F; Foster, D; Hemmer, F; Jagel, E; Lee, G; Robertson, L; Segal, B; Trannoy, A; Zacharov, I E (1991).
"SHIFT: the scalable heterogeneous integrated facility for HEP computing". Workshop on Detector and Event Simulation in High Energy Physics: Monte Carlo '91, 8–12 Apr 1991, Amsterdam, the Netherlands: 41–56.