Vint Cerf on Internet Governance and Beyond
scebo writes "With the first phase of United Nations World Summit (WSIS) held in Dec of 2003 and the next phase to be held in 2005, there have been extensive debates regarding Internet Governance. Can it be governed? Who should govern it? What is Internet governance? Vint Cerf has offered his own opinion on the subject over at CircleID which attempts to answer some of the key questions raised: 'It has been suggested by some participants in the WSIS discussions that the role of ICANN might be undertaken by the traditional International Telecommunications Union (ITU). While the ITU has served the world as the international forum for the handling of many international issues associated with traditional tele-communications, the Internet has disrupted the neat categorization of various telecommunications media. It is the potential bearer of every form of communication. ICANN has evolved international processes and structures over the last six years to cope with a limited set of issues associated with this rich, complex and rapidly evolving infrastructure. The world needs an effective and well-supported ICANN but the participants in the World Summit on the Information Society and the Working Group on Internet Governance now need to turn their attention to the full panoply of public policy issues that, as discussed above, lie outside the mandate of ICANN. These need a thorough and open airing in this next phase of the World Summit on the Information Society.'"
In the 21st century, he would've added "root-zone Name Servers".
In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
The FBI
The CIA
The NSA
The MPAA
The RIAA
The USA
The world needs an effective and well-supported ICANN
Somehow I think I could live without one.
It had big words. Now I'm sleepy.
And since I'm not a reader. Let's pick a Texas company at random and make them wholly responsible, and we'll give them a blank check. And when we learn about the inevitable graft and pending implosion, we can say, "It's hard work. I'm working hard! I'm going to take half of July off with my normal August vacation. Which is hard."
If they don't get this worked out we might get all our domain's messed up, oh no!
Dashboard Widgets
Fraud, misinformation, harassment, illegal transactions, theft of resources, breaking and entering (hacking into computers), copyright infringement, and many other exact or approximate electronic analogs of improper behavior can be found on the Internet.
And thats just the corporations! Seriously though, it would be great if someone could just set up a few basic rules that everyone could agree to and enforce those and only those. And have a mandate limiting them to that. maybe like a Wyat Erp of the old west?
Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
No way, man. The internet should be free, man. Information wants to be free, man. You want the truth? YOU WANT THE TRUTH? You need the Internet. Cause when you reach over that hill and your inbox is a pile of spam, it's Chinatown baby.
Imagine there's no telco.
It's easy if you try.
No voice mail, no phone lines.
Above us only sky.
Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
Governance is needed to establish and eforce rules so that the general public, ie, society, can operate.
On the internet, these rules are already agreed to. TCP/IP, FTP, HTTP, and other wonderful acronyms.
The things that are illegal online are also illegal irl. If you enforce the general societal rules already on the books, then there is no need for a Internet government.
At least, in my opinion.
no
all of those end in vowels....
What about the USPS. For a bunch of grouchy people who seem to get a lot of rest in while most of the traffic finds its destination, and abhores change like nature does a vacuume, it's hard to do better.
LOL! That was funny..
Oh wait, they're serious?!
The net is a virtual reality.. it certainly has real world effects, but let's not get over-zealous here.. I vote for an unruly cyber-mob over state-controlled media outlet.
JUST SAY NO.
So many words and so little gets actually said.
After seeing legislation such as the Patriot Act and the DMCA, I could never trust the United States to govern the Internet. In fact, I don't think it is governable at all. You'd have to have 100% agreement from all countries in order to govern it. It's almost impossible to get countries to agree on anything at all let alone something that could be as challenging as the Internet. I mean dictators would want to keep out subversive material and free speechers would want the opposite.
Spam, fraud, and theft are all wrongs done by one person to another.
Pornography per se, assuming that the producers and consumers are all consenting adults, should not be grouped in with them as an "abuse" of the Internet.
Sheesh. The UN couldn't manage a two car parade, let alone Internet governance.
"I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey
I am of the belief that if there is any internet governance, it should restrict itself to functions that affect the actual interoperation of the networks involved. Enforcing individual geopolitical issues should be left to that country to do so as it sees fit.
The job of such a governing agency, if one existed, would be limited to policing and correcting traffic flow issues and mandating the use of egress filters at an ISP level in order to block spoofed packets from the ISP's lusers.
Not much funding would be needed for such a minimalistic organization, making the "who the heck would pay for this" issue much smaller.
If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
That said, this whole scenario is about as likely as Kerry actually winning Ohio and becoming president. The US will never cede control of DARPA's "baby" in the interest of "national security" and "national pride." Look at all the problems with trying to divest control from the US government- Verisign/Net Sol and ICANN come to mind. A UN body might work, but I don't see that happening.
He meant to say phrenology. The rampant growth of internet phrenology might well bring down the whole thing. Its all a big bullshit rip-off if you ask me.
A sorry hump chaperonage, Vint!
So we can endlessly argue over what constitutes "abuse" and use the power of politics to create many new and useful internet laws that do not solve a single problem and take all of our internet money and create the bureaucracy needed to asses the internet property tax.
"It is the potential bearer of every form of communication"
I get the feeling this refers to access and content, not protocol. There is something inherently evil in the concept that communication must be governed.
The internet represents global free press and a global means for people to assemble. The calls for 'protection from bits' is a smokescreen. We should all be thinking, 'who behind that screen will benefit from governance?' I doubt it's a friendly fat wizard.
Now I'm the grandest Tiger in the Jungle!
Just basing the servers in principalities such as this will cover most of the ground most users want. Anonymity and privacy...
I've noticed that everyone who is for abortion has already been born - Ronald Reagan
Unless of course you're a young woman who's been raped and wants an abortion. Need more government there. Oh, and hot man-on-man monogamy needs more government too. Did I forget steam cell research? Yes, I did. Need more government there as well.
Speak truth to power.
IMHO the only people who are likely to seriously believe we need any form of online government would be those wonderful types who already think offline world federalism would be a great idea. Interesting that the idea is coming up in a UN world summit...Kofi and friends seem to want jurisdiction over how many bowel movements a person can have per 24 hour period.
;)
In an ideal world anywayz, governments exist primarily to co-ordinate resources, (and historically, utilities) and to smack anyone caught abusing said resources. ("Gee Bill, what are we going to do tomorrow night?" "The same thing we do every night, Steve...")
The only real area where resource scarcity is an online issue is with DNS AFAIK, and I had thought that name allocation was the primary reason for ICANN's existence. Then of course there's the IETF, but the reason why they can't really be called a government is because they're actually useful.
So to me the bottom line is...in the areas where we need people co-ordinating traffic and resources, we seem to pretty much already have them. I don't really see how allowing the Conspiracy<tm> to gets its grubby paws on the net would really help anyone.
I stopped reading halfway down where Mr. Cerf made reference to:
That's ridiculous. If we treat porn as, by definition, an abuse of the net then the floodgates open for all sorts of draconian content control. As legal experience in the U.S. has shown, the word "pornography" can be stretched far too broadly far too easily.
Leave the porn alone, Vinnie. You don't know what you're messin' with. Set up an effective way to police porn on the net and about a zillion geeks are gonna be gunnin' for ya.
Not to mention that pesky ol' "freedom of speech" thing.
While I could be wrong, I seem to recal pronography existing prior to the Internet.
"Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
I hate responding to a troll, but:
1) Step on our civil liberties? Seems as though your beloved Kerry voted for the PATRIOT act as well.
2) Drive it downward? You think Clinton was driving it up, when they stopped the MS anti-trust legislation, as well as just riding the speculation on the dot-com bubble? And isn't the point of a company to make money?
3) Yes. So the solution is... more taxes and more government meddling? The democrats keep expanding federal gov't, and just throwing the money at civil service projects with dubious returns.
4) Lie to the public. Like that hasn't ever happened before in politics. Welcome to never.
5) Get a clue.
Thanks for playing this round of "You're a fucking dumbass, but at least you have free speech". Better luck next time.
" Drive the economy downward for the sake of letting big companies make even more money"
I've never understood this. If the economy is down, how can companies make money? You're like the lefties here in Montreal who paint condo-owners as being rich on the backs of the poor with examples of a 'rich' guy owning a restaurant and 'exploiting' the minimum wage employees without doing any work!
Well, if it's that easy, why don't THEY start a restaurant?
And how can you become rich by exploiting POOR people?? THEY'RE POOR! WHERE can the money COME FROM??!??
Uncle Sam controls the root servers, and it's not giving them up. End of story.
not traffic cops. just keep the infrastructure working guys. when somebody breaks a law using the roadways, the same cops go after them that would chase the crook who walked away from the bank. The blurring of borders is a byproduct of transportaion as much as of information flow. That blurring is a problem for the cops...they need to reach the level of agreement that the worlds telco's and backbones already achieve and stay the heck out of technology questions.
SLASHDOT: news for people who can't concentrate on work or have no life at all and got tired of yelling back at the TV.
If the economy is down, how can companies make money?
Economics is a broad subject, and not one of which I am well trained, but... In hard times, large corporations always seem to weather it better than smaller corporations. A down economy translates into less opportunity for a competitor to come from behind and snipe your customers. When the hard times become better, large corporations usually come out better as well.
When the economy is down, the wealthiest few do not suffer, and their wealth is safer than during good times when their investments may decline due to a competitive market.
But anyway, I'm still not an economist so take with the appropriate grain(s) of salt.
Education is a better safeguard of liberty than a standing army.
Edward Everett (1794 - 1865)
I know it's bad form but here goes anyway... What we need is an internet declaration of independence, FROM GOVERNMENT.
Now I'm the grandest Tiger in the Jungle!
I guess someone in a particular, large building in NYC reads slashdot. Flamebait indeed.
Why should the internet have a international government? Does the international phone system?
If the nation of chad wants to block web access to foo, let them implement the filters to do so, on computers that reside under their national boundries.
Do YOU look forward to the day when you get a cease and decist order from the UN, or uniTelcomgov, or whatever, because something you put on your webpage is offensive to someone in Tehran? Maybe you won't get a cease and desist. Maybe your ISP will be threatened to have their "internet supplier" permit revoked if they don't take said content down immediatley?
If you don't think that's a likely scenario, you're not thinking the issue through. There are any number of regimes that would be pleased as punch to go about blocking access to information by making you take it offline, rather than have to worry about firewalls, filters, and stopping proxies. Doing stuff is hard. Complaining about it to a central authority is easy.
But hey, in the name of getting rid of junk mail, lets all cede our national and individual sovereignity to foreign bodies!
"Inattention makes clowns of us all" -Bean
Pornography per se, assuming that the producers and consumers are all consenting adults, should not be grouped in with them as an "abuse" of the Internet.
Well, pornography does constitute a form of abuse, but it is generally from the viewer directing it unto himself.
Isn't that Medieval French for "twenty deer"?
I don't know about you, but I never feel abused after looking at some pron.
If the model(s), photographer, and viewer are all consenting people of legal age, then, there's no abuse whatsoever.
Pornography ... should not be grouped in with them as an "abuse" of the Internet.
Yes, it fact it is part of the reason the internet is popular. If it weren't for the infringing of pop music and hollywood, all traffic would be pr0n. (OK couple of percent email and http software downloads, plus some small percentage of "informational" web sites (pr0n reviews and such)). Doesn't everyone remember the first pr0n search you did. "HOLY F**K, that's a lot of naked pictures. And all I got to do is pretend the internet is useful??? Hell ya!"
Isn't there a saying that no medium will be popular w/o porn (think cable and VCRs). I would bet that the second guy after Guttenberg printed porn, not the bible. I'd look it up, but it might slow down this damn interesting mpeg file I'm downloading.
Of course some people, like Cerf, might try to do real things, like communicate, with this network of autonomous networks. Thanks for letting us pretend, though.
"This here InterWEB is making me sore."
I'm curious as to how comparing other people's policies is proof that something is or is not happening.
Whether or not your civil liberties are being stepped on has NOTHING to do with Kerry's voting record. The quality of the alternative has no bearing on the reality of the current situation.
Look outside the box.
That's a big if. It's a big internet, and I'm confident that the circumstances you describe are not always true.
In addition, there's more to it than that. Are the model(s) being paid a living wage? Are they doing this because desperate circumstances make it their only option? Despite being of legal age, are they all capable of making an informed decision? Did one party get bamboozled into signing an unfair contract? Does Vint Cerf believe that all pornography is unfair exploitation of the model(s) -- that pornography is actually more valuable than the going market rate?
Why does EVERYONE feel like EVERYTHING has to be regulated and governed!? Sure there is spam, sure there are preditors, sure it's full of stolen movies and music, and you can't forget the porn....but so is life!! And we already regulate the hell out of it and that doesn't even work too well. So tax payers should pay for this governance why? It will do nothen but restrict our freedom. Increase cost to run a website, a ebusiness, pretty much to do anything. I feel this is just another attempt by rich business men to hog tie the internet for their pure profit. They dont want competition and they dont want people sharing information on that dasterdly deeds them and the politicians do. If we govern the internet and regulate it too much it's not going to be the internet we know and love. and yes, I realize this topic is more deeper then I have touched on...but I have better things to do then research it all up. So keep that in mind when you respond. I know how you /.`ers get...
Has this become so mundane that slashdot has only ~70 comments on it ?!?!
"However beautiful the strategy, you should occasionally look at the results" - Winston Churchill
He's such an exaggerator and liar...I heard from Rush that he gave an interview and claimed to have "Invented the Internet..." Yeah, and I invented the paperclip!
Does Vint Cerf believe that all pornography is unfair exploitation of the model(s) -- that pornography is actually more valuable than the going market rate?
Well, Marx would probably say so -- the worker is worth the value of their labour, after all. If the producers and distributors are pocketing 95% of the money, that's probably a good sign to the performers involved to get out from the situation and set up their own company and negotiate these things themselves. I imagine the porn industry is pretty poorly unionised, though... there's always another 18yo Southern blonde with emotional problems waiting outside.
P.S. To you, Faggot, understand that it isn't the President's fault that your boyfriend's condom broke - Why are you fucking someone with HIV? In the end, this has to do with YOU not the fucking President. And no matter how much you try to distract yourself, it is still most likely that you have the infection. Just stay away from the playgrounds for God's sake. And the public pools. Can you manage to do at least that?
Gee, kids get left out of everything these days.
I said this before.
"The Internet should be for the People, by the People, and of the People. There has to be a better solution than having the U.N. get involved."
"The Internet should be for the People, by the People, and of the People. There has to be a better solution than having the U.N. get involved."
Why is this unique to porn? A large amount of the physical goods sold on the internet are manufactured by people making below a living wage, because 'it is their only option'. What makes it acceptable on say, Amazon.com, but not on a porn site?
The Internet has flourished precisely because it was not under governmental control.
It should remain so.
Now, some would argue that lack of governmental control has led to things like spam, online kiddie porn, libel, etc., that governments need to control.
I would argue that some of these things (e.g., spam) have a technological solution, and others (e.g., kiddie porn) are already illegal in the "real" world.
Questions of jurisdiction can be handled similarly to those of the telephone or TV.
There are two overriding reasons that governments want to control the Internet: censorship and taxation.
We should resist governmental control of the Internet (or of most things, for that matter) as much as we can.
Those who sacrifice security to condemn liberty deserve to repeat history or something. - Benjamin Santayana
Actually I'm surprised that more people have not sounded off on this here. It seems all this is not yet hitting people's radar. Personally I think governmental-corporate control of the internet is a pretty f-ing scary idea.
media girl