Randy Bush on Recent ICANN Proposals
Jodrell writes: "Randy Bush, internet architect and co-chair of the IETF's working group on DNS, has some interesting thoughts on the recent proposals to re-organise ICANN. Randy makes some interesting points about the likely result of allowing Government control into the DNSO, and on the current bloated condition of ICANN."
Dubya's techno, glitter-paint, party animal alter-ego.
The only tool you've got against psychosis is experience.
If ICANN is out of control, it will take a little more insight than this rant to figure out why it got to that point. If it truly wields its power badly, there must be a reason. Randy seems to want to restructure it from the ground up instead of excising only those things that ail.
The whole system is not sick, only certain parts. Figure out what those parts are and remedy them. Don't try to reinvent the entire system.
yes, network solutions charged way too much for a domain registration. this article says that the major accomplishments of this organization was that fact that it opened up competition. i honestly think that if a 'UN' type of group controlled it, at cost, it would be much better than the current situation of 20 emails a day asking me if i want a .name domain... (btw, how lame is .name??)
MARIJUANA, SHROOMS, X: ONLINE?! - E
one computer scientist used to do this as a part time job. how much of a mountain can we make of a molehill?
To paraphrase Simon&Garfunkel:
Where have you gone Jon Postel?
The networks turn their lonely eyes to you.
What's that you say, Mrs. Robinson?
Jon Postel has left and gone away...
Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
Without a independent body, is there no fear of dividing the Internet up in the end? Will all countries still be reachable (through DNS)? or only those we (US) like. Will Europe have it's .eu finally? Will it be supported only in Europe?
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You gotta give props to a guy named Randy Bush who can make it all the way through middle school, high school and college and finally on to be the architect of a major internet protocol without going crazy and changing his name.
Reminds me of a manager I once knew named Phat Ho.
PS: I wonder how many people searching for pr0n on the internet type in "randy bush" and get a bunch of RFCs?
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For some reason Icann thought of themselves as some kind of a Napoleon giving out valuable land to lucky and soon to be rich vassals. They should just run their servers and charge what it cost to run them.
Usually I have some point of contention with the article referenced or the opinion given but Randy Bush makes good and absoluitly valid points. He's completely correct. Unfortunately some of his solutions are more wishful thinking than potential implementations.
While it's true that ICANN could run on one or two million dollars, what organiation strives to command a smaller empire. It is the nature of those in authority to seek out greater power and methods of expanding their empire. We need to identify a strategy which ill provide incentive to the ICANN leadership toward downsiing and cost effective operations. While these incentives exist in forproffit businesses at risk of bankrupcy if they fail to operate efficiently, ICAN doesn't have this threat handing over their collective head.
Perhaps a strategy could be devised to create such a threat. This seems like the only way to persuage the jugernaught that is ICANN to amend it's ways.
--CTH
--Got Lists? | Top 95 Star Wars Line
I think it's obvious that it's time to reframe the question of ICANN... from:
their proposal to turn ICANN into The Force in the hopes that with enough of our money and total control over the root, that they may find a mission someday
to
how to reduce it to a useful size and believable function as Randy Bush is proposing.
I think it's time to start taking this seriously. Like to see next year's domain referrals go up $5 a year due to charges passed along to us by any registrar who wants to sell domain names people can connect to? Or $10? Or $100?
Or prices cranked up to the point where only major corporations and governments can afford them? The proposal to expand ICANN is an ambitious one. Ambitious translates to "if this goes through, it's going to cost somebody." WE are the somebody who will wind up paying.
My last comment on ICANN started with the phrase "taxation without representation". The proposed new ICANN doesn't have any public input that ICANN would have to pay attention to.
Tech Public Policy stuff
It's not just the name... It's the name of the cartoon character he voiced-over.
...is that ICANN is there to serve the Internet, not control it.
If ICANN is supposed to have a broader scope of business I think it is approriate to involve the users more. While the ICANN elections are a true joke (just look at the results in Africa) a representation of users and non-users through theirs governments respectively is a good idea in my opinion. This will be like a UN for the Internet, a great tool for handling a new, global medium.
From a democratic point of view, the Lynn proposal is a much better proposal than the one suggested by the At Large Study Committee where domain name holders should be the ones electing ICANN board members. The latter proposal would not solve the current severe problems with ICANN when it comes to accountability, representativity and transparancy. Lynns proposal seems to deal with a few of the mentioned problems.
If ICANN is not supposed to broaden its scope of action, the proposal made by Stuart Lynn might be a way of slightly overdoing the administration of new
top level domain names. If that is the case, I agree with Randy Bush, but I fail to see that ICANN in the long run is supposed to just handle top level domain names.
Just my EURO 0,02.
Regards
Mikael
Pawlo.com
I would encourage anyone who is interested in this matter to become active themselves. There are so many issues related to the internet that encourage active participation by anyone who is interested and has something useful to say. If you can, go to RIPE, ARIN, APNIC or IETF-meetings. These organisations also have active mailinglists where your opinion (if intelligent) is valued.
/48 for each, respectively.) And it feels cool to be able to say that I was able to raise my hand for the vote on some of these issues.
r es ting-people/200202/msg00241.html
I had the pleasure of going to two RIPE meetings and had the joy of seeing the RIPE-community decide the new rules on the distrubution of IPv6 space both for Local Internet Registries as well as Internet eXchange Points. (/32 and
Furthermore, Esther Dyson asks the internet community to get involved into the ICANN debate and to pledge to join ICANN-at-Large. You can find that here:
http://www.interesting-people.org/archives/inte
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It is the nature of those in authority to seek out greater power and methods of expanding their empire ... While these incentives exist in forproffit businesses at risk of bankrupcy if they fail to operate efficiently, ICAN doesn't have this threat handing over their collective head.
For more examples see here and here and here and here.
Nope, no sig
As a previous poster mentioned, organizations don't generally strive to shrink the scope and power of themselves. Especially in heavily bureaucratic organizations. In organizations such as these, often the most protected item is the size of the budget; and the money will get spent one way or another before somebody notices they don't need it and takes it away.
I'm sure that there are people in ICANN that *do* think of themselves as the controlling entity of the internet. In many ways, they are correct.
Why are we allowing ICANN to be legit anyway? They were created by a currupt administration, who only wanted to control, thus ICANN, a offspring of a currupt administration, only wants to control. Why don't we just call our senators and repersentives, and get the political process moving to iradicate ICANN.
Reminds me of a manager I once knew named Phat Ho.
I knew a girl once named Joselin Cox.
Poor girl.
I know I'm going to hell, I'm just trying to get good seats.
I saw "Randy Bush" and thought we were going to have another monica lewinsky story!
Thank God I was wrong...
Randy got it right: these people were meant to serve, and are trying to rule. They will be first against the wall when the revolution comes. Okay -- maybe second, after spammers.
proof, n. A demonstration that a conclusion is implied by certain premises and axioms.
http://www.icann.org/accra/
Nothing like ensuring easy access.
I once knew named Phat Ho
Guy I went to high school with was named Michael Steven Hunt. He preferred to use his middle name.
--
"Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
I do consider the source. When I first me Randy he basicly told me to go fuck myself. It was later in a NANOG BOF where I brought up the problem of small, multihomed e-businesses having problems getting their own address space from ARIN and the problems of getting providers to accept announcements smaller than a /20 that I was able to see that, brash as he is, the guy has a clue and a well working brain. Most of the ideas expresses are thought out and well peer reviewed. It seems that a lot of the Internet "gods" are kind of twisted people. Take Paul Vixie, please. But it is this kind of genuis and free thought working in the core of the internet that has kept it a viable structure. Listen to Randy, and Paul.. most of the time they are right. If you don't like what they say, don't post it on /., subscribe to the nanog mail list and vent there.
-- I have a private email server in my basement.
Certainly not in the US, where the best we can generally hope for is to be able to cast a vote for the lesser of two evils.
Good lord I need to get laid...
Jeez don't piss yourself, man. It was just my .sig. See?
The only tool you've got against psychosis is experience.
One of the at large board members of ICANN, Karl Auerbach was reported as saying that "We've just had the equivalent of the president of the United States abolishing Congress" in response to Stuart Lynn's proposals.
At large board members are chosen by rank and file internet users.
Personally I think this proposal is a threat to the supposed impartiality of ICANN. To allow one third of the board members to be chosen by governments will completely alter the original mandate that ICANN was originally setup.
The BBC Website and the ICCAN Watch website has a much more indepth analysis of the proposed plan.
Just you're average nitpicker.
ICANN tries to pull a coup and just take control. Meanwhile everyone moves their root servers somewhere else and and leaves ICANN holding their big fluffy bag of nothing.
I'm not sure everyone has fully appreciated the value of maintaining a healthy, robust, scalable and available DNS system. Without DNS the Internet effectively grinds to a halt. If you wanted to break the Internet, targetting DNS would probably be the way to go. We really can't afford to let it wither under poor stewardship.
I can't speak to the effectiveness of ICANN. I don't know much about them. All I know is that my own DNS needs are served effectively enough and I've never had trouble. But I do agree that it seems odd that it now take $20M to do what Jon Postel used to do in his spare time (well spare time is over stating the matter...but my point remains).
If you ask me, DNS needs to be reconsidered in light of the possibilities of failure if the root servers fail for some reason. I know there are a lot of them, and there are a lot of caching DNS servers around the world, so one or two root servers failing isn't a big deal. Nonetheless, I think it would be worthwhile to consider a system where centralized root server management would not be a key component.
I don't even know if such a thing is possible. Could we do a peer-to-peer DNS system where servers learn of each other (kind of like routers or Gnutella)? I think something like that might solve this problem. But I don't have the answer. We'd better hope guys like Randy Bush do.
...the guys *name* is actually Mr. Randy Bush?
Curses! Misread the title there for a moment.
Free PC version of ChipWits at http://www.breueronline.de/klaus/chipwits/
You might want to check out this link when deciding the character of the guy stating these opinions. Apparently Bernstein doesn't think very highly of him...
11*43+456^2
That's ok - many of us don't think much of Bernstein.
However opinionated Randy may be most/all of the time - he has garnered a lot of support with this statement from network ops people - usually prefaced with " I don't normally agree with everything Randy says but..."
f
...and I once worked with someone named "Frig Succar".