Look, that's true. As Steve Jobs (I think) said "You don't get rich giving people what they want. You get rich giving them something they didn't know they wanted until you showed it to them". Still, no company in the world would have come up with the internet, or the billion and ten spin offs from the cold war military/space industries without the government funding from the DOD and NASA. I love the free market, but its not a cult. Sometimes non-profit oriented investment directed at something like national security (in this case energy independence) can jump start the private sector in ways that would never have been possible otherwise.
FQ13
PS Let me put it to you this way.
"How many Libertarians does it take to screw in a light bulb"?
"None. The invisible hand will do it for them".

You talk as if the internet was a .gov planned program. It was not. Yes, the earliest infrastructure was heavily based on DoD infrastructure, specifically the DARPA computers. But it was market-driven - the DARPA geeks wanted to communicate more easily with each other, and trends in the computer hobbyest world were beginning to move into more enhanced communications other than single user BBS'.
The actual telecomm protocols were worked out in DARPA by people desperately trying to hide the work from their own management, as it wasn't considered to be true "work". The folks at CERN then picked up the banner and ran with it into what we know as the Internet today with the IPv4 addressing protocol and TCP/IP, etc.
True, CERN is a .gov funded entity, but is more like the tollway commissions - funded but not run by .gov. Besides, they picked up what the geeks at DARPA started on their own and enhanced it to a more commercially viable state.