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U.N. To Govern Internet?

Falmarian writes "Apparently the rest of the world isn't happy about the US franchise on internet governance. A news.com article discusses the possibility that the U.N. will make a bid for control of such governing functions as assigning TLDs and IPs." From the article: "At issue is who decides key questions like adding new top-level domains, assigning chunks of numeric Internet addresses, and operating the root servers that keep the Net humming. Other suggested responsibilities for this new organization include Internet surveillance, 'consumer protection,' and perhaps even the power to tax domain names to pay for 'universal access.'"

1,197 comments

  1. Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No thanks, I prefer having the internets run by a group with at least a partial background of competency.

    1. Re:Yuk by Slugster · · Score: 5, Funny

      Come on now, be civil. The internet belongs to the world. It's only fair that 60% of the TLD servers are in the world's poorest countries, and they charge $1 and take 15 minutes to do a lookup....

    2. Re:Yuk by dusik · · Score: 1

      What, are we outsourcing the Internet?

    3. Re:Yuk by Rei · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, I mean, it's not like the UN has run or otherwise been deeply involved in FAO, ILO, UNIDO, UNESCO, UNICEF, UNCHS, WHO, UNDTCD, ITU, UPU, WMO, ICAO, WFP, IAEA, IFAD, UNFDAC, the World Bank, UNFPA, UNV, and dozens of other major international organizations...

      Or wait, are you wanting to talk about high profile events that occurred recently, ignoring all of that? If so, bring it on.

      * Weapons of mass destruction inspections? What do you know, they were right!

      * Oil For Food: Widely distorted in the media, the OFF 661 committee did *not* have authority to block contracts on the grounds of suspected kickbacks. Only the members of the Security Council (such as the US government) had that authority. The 661 committee was setup to block banned goods from entering Iraq, something that they did largely successfully.

      What was the scale? Around 3 billion dollars over 10 years was snuck to the Iraqi government through kickbacks (most of the "illegal" money came from oil smuggling, something even further from the jurisdiction of the OFF committee, and something that the US deliberately ignored to retain the support of Turkey and Jordan). For comparison, over 10 billion dollars has gone missing from Iraqi Oil, almost guaranteed to be in private hands in just two years of US occupation.

      In short, unless you believe the silly "Al-Mada" list (a bunch of people who supposedly have been trading in illegal oil - it even makes claims as ridiculous as the Russian Orthodox Church and high ranking Catholics, as well as people who have already been investigated and cleared), you're looking in completely the wrong direction.

      But, anyways, back to the main issue: The UN is more than the "high profile stories" of the last two years. Read up on the various UN agencies that aren't in the news before you comment, please. I would be happy to see the UN manage the internet if they can do as well as they've done with, say, UNICEF.

      --
      "/etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit is a gimp plugin and must be run by the gimp in order to be used."
    4. Re:Yuk by pete6677 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Ask the starving people in Africa how well the UN has managed things. Ask the people of Darfur how the UN has failed to even try to protect them from genocide. But given that the UN lacks any real enforcement powers, I for one am not too worried about them trying to tax the internet.

    5. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      The only reason I'd see the UN take on TLD's is my unending hate for ICANN.

      Then again, I have no reason to believe anything will change with regards to corporations getting special treatment from anyone who takes over.

    6. Re:Yuk by cshark · · Score: 4, Interesting

      This is a tax scheme, plain and simple. Granted the US could tax domain names just as easily, but they haven't yet. The fact that this is one of the first things that the UN brings up gives me pause.

      --

      This signature has Super Cow Powers

    7. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      How many mass murderers has the UN stopped? What did the UN do other than take pictures and bring the world one dollar girls in Africa?

      And now they're already talking about taxing domain names. Oh yes, please let the UN take control of the Internet I'm sure it will run oh so much smoother with incompetent, corrupt political officers running it.

    8. Re:Yuk by Rei · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Ask the starving people in Africa

      They'll usually tell you that they in general blame unfair trade practices. For example, even with their low labor costs, African farms often have a hard time competing with subsidized US and European ag exports. First world nations do a lot of pretty nasty stuff as far as import regulations go (for example, declaring the Vietnamese catfish as not being a catfish, to subsidize the US catfish industry)

      Not that many of their problems aren't their own fault, mind you.

      Ask the people of Darfur how the UN has failed to even try to protect them

      Because they *weren't authorized to intervene by the Security Council*. What, are you picturing some huge security council debate over whether cmm.com is typosquatting on cnn.com? We're not talking about troop deployments, we're talking about the internet.

      --
      "/etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit is a gimp plugin and must be run by the gimp in order to be used."
    9. Re:Yuk by kalidasa · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Ask the people of Darfur how the UN has failed to even try to protect them

      Remember that it took ~3 years for the Bush Amdinistration to decide that "Hey, it is a genocide after all" - and they're not exactly jumping up to do anything about it.

    10. Re:Yuk by sheldon · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Can't really say the US has done better managing things in Iraq than the UN has done anywhere.

    11. Re:Yuk by I+confirm+I'm+not+a · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Ask the starving people in Africa how well the UN has managed things. Ask the people of Darfur how the UN has failed to even try to protect them from genocide. But given that the UN lacks any real enforcement powers, I for one am not too worried about them trying to tax the internet.

      My dad worked in Africa "de-mining". Why not ask Africans whether they'd prefer life without the UN. My experience was many Africans (and this wasn't your Cairo/Jo'burg Africans, this was twenty-years-of-post-colonial-conflict-sponsored-b y Washington-Moscow-London-Paris-Havana-Beijing Africa, by the way) respected the limited work the UN was able to do in extremely difficult circumstances.

      The UN may be shite, but it's better than nothing. And it's a lot better than the League of Nations, which in turn was a lot better than... bugger all international cooperation.

      And regarding Darfur, I've been following this since long before it hit the mainstream media. The UN's been there a long time, dealing with entrenched resistence from the (sovereign) government of Sudan, and from neighbouring states. It's not always possible - or even desirable - to just move into and occupy a country to effect change.

      --
      This is where the serious fun begins.
    12. Re:Yuk by Vile+Slime · · Score: 1

      The World Health Organization?

      Yeah right! An organization tasked with preventing desease around the world refuses to work with Taiwan to stem SARs and other flu-like diseases because of POLITICAL considerations.

      Screw the UN. They would rather have me die of the bird flu than upset the pathetic political whims of the Chinese government.

      --
      ---- Go ahead, mod me down, I'll just post it again and you lose your mod points.
    13. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wasn't it actually US who froze security council's efforts and despite all alarming reports didn't recognize that a homocide is going underway??

    14. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sure it will run oh so much smoother with incompetent, corrupt political officers running it.

      So you're saying at worst it'd be no change? I'm down with that.

    15. Re:Yuk by ebommi · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I have to agree...what has the UN really achieved in the last couple decades that shows even a smiggen of credibility or competence...

      --
      Assumptions are narcotic!
    16. Re:Yuk by CaptainFork · · Score: 1
      Your opinions seem a little biased to me. You seem to either accept claims as gospel or disregard them as patently ludicrous based on little more than your political opinion rather than anything factual.

      As for the UN running the internet, the internet doesn't need central control, so why bother? If you want to influence the 'net, put up a website with your ideas/optinions. That should be sufficient for anyone. No more is needed.

    17. Re:Yuk by SECProto · · Score: 1

      Right, since SARS was such a huge epidemic. They're the ones who create the flu vaccines which you get injected with every year. (personally, I trust my own immune system with being able to fight off any diseases that come to it. sure it can't take every disease, but it can handle the flu.)

    18. Re:Yuk by Rei · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How many mass murderers has the UN stopped?

      The UN isn't in the business of overthrowing governments. Neither is ICANN. The UN has, however, moved to stop abuses many times - including the oft American favorite, Gulf War I.

      one dollar girls in Africa

      Several *million* people have been killed in the Congo, and there have likely been equivalent numbers of rapes by various troops involved in the quite brutal conflict. And yet, in this one mission, of 16 worldwide, with 16,000 troops, with everyone accused thusfar already sent home (along with, in many cases, their commanders), the total sent home was 77. The fact is that even with those sexually-exploitave troops, their presence has probably prevented tens of thousands of deaths and rapes. And this is just UN troops in one location.

      --
      "/etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit is a gimp plugin and must be run by the gimp in order to be used."
    19. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      UNICEF is one of the least effecient charities in the world. Look at the tsunami relief efforts to see this - while the US and AUS were on the ground delivering aid, UNICEF was in a 5 star Bankok hotel convening a conference, whose first point of order was arranging for 24 hour room service.

      CCF, CRS, any number of other private charities are vastly more efficient than UNICEF.

    20. Re:Yuk by CaptainFork · · Score: 1, Flamebait
      They'll usually tell you that they in general blame unfair trade practices.

      Actually, it's the despotic dictators who blame trade practices. The starving people blame the despotic dictators.

    21. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a lot of Initialisms...

      *Steps back slowly*

    22. Re:Yuk by caseydk · · Score: 2, Insightful


      Exactly... that and do we really want China, Iran, and Saudi Arabia determining ANYTHING about global Internet usage?

      Thanks, I'll pass.

    23. Re:Yuk by drakaan · · Score: 4, Interesting
      So, the UN says "okay, we have just been given control over the internet's DNS. This is the tax we will charge on your domain name".

      At that point, I start lobbying Slashdot to bring alternic back up to snuff and in use. Screw that.

      I *already* pay a tax for my domain name. It's called a domain name registration fee. The money goes to support those root servers (and to the pockets of the registrars, but hey).

      --
      "Murphy was an optimist" - O'Toole's commentary on Murphy's Law
    24. Re:Yuk by Leiterfluid · · Score: 1

      Actually, the internet belongs to the US. We license the technology to other nations. Like my mom used to say, "I gave you your life, I can take it away!"

    25. Re:Yuk by hcob$ · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Let's see....

      Internet: Development of the DARPA Labs (USA)
      Internet: PHYSICALLY constructed by the US
      WWW: later addon from MIT
      email: created by the US
      ftp: created in the US
      TCP/IP: created in the US

      Feel free to add on. The point of this is that the internet, as it started, was wholly concieved and created by the US. Yes other countries added to and by more people connecting, you get more content. However, the fact remains that the US created it.

      Now, the UN is coming in after this wonderfully useful thing has been constructed out of many years of research, development, and deployment. They are in essence saying, "Wow! This is great work! Even though you invented and developed it, We don't think you're good enough to run it, so w're going to. Oh, you want to run it? Go ahead; we'll just setup our own stuff and hijack everything you've done. Don't like that? Oh, too bad. Have a good day!"

      I can't tell you how much this infuriates me. It's like all our work was for nothing. Honestly, my gut reaction to this is "Go fsck off." This would be the same as all your customers(who aren't paying you anything) say, "ohhhh, this is nice! We'll just take it. bye bye now." GRRRRRRRRRR!!!!!!!!!

      Can't the UN leave the US alone for once? Jeeze, just cause you want to control something that just happens to span countries doesn't mean you are ABLE, or that you SHOULD. Once again I say, "Go fsck yourself, a$$hole."

      --
      Cliff Claven
      K.E.G. Party Chairman
      Founding Leader of: Koncerned for Egalitarin Governance
    26. Re:Yuk by Leiterfluid · · Score: 0

      I can. When the UN was "managing" Saddam Hussein, he still managed to kill millions of people.

    27. Re:Yuk by Travoltus · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and consider that these girls were engaging in prostitution to avoid starving to death. There was no good to come of this whatsoever. The UN troops shoulda just gave them money out of good will and to have sex with them made them just as bad as

      eh

      troops from ... other countries (wouldn't wanna name names and thus sound like a troll or a traitor now would I).

      BTW I fail to see what this has to do with their ability to manage the internet... which is more of a remark to the parent post above Rei, not to Rei...

      --
      --- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
    28. Re:Yuk by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yea, you really can say that the US is managing things better.

      From a year ago for example, a large number of leading indicators showed progress in Iraq's infrastructure. Compare that to the Congo or Haiti in which the UN is running peacekeeping operations. While the US has made mistakes on the ground dealing with Iraqi and Afghani Prisoners and civilians, at least widespread allegations of sexual exploitation and abuse of women, boys and girls havn't been happening like they are happening in the Congo.

      "Didier Bourguet, a U.N. official from France, is pictured here in an image found on his hard drive, which was obtained by ABC News. Also on the hard drive were thousands of photos of him having sex with hundreds of young Congolese girls."

      "...only a small percentage of the 11,000 U.N. personnel in Congo were involved." - So it's alright for UN Peacekeepers to molest kids in the Congo, but if a Koran gets wet in Gitmo people riot to death.

      "Men from roughly 50 different countries make up the U.N. forces in Congo, and the United Nations does not conduct background checks. Furthermore, U.N. troops are exempt from prosecution in Congo."

      http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/0319/p01s03-woiq.htm l
      http://abcnews.go.com/2020/UnitedNations/story?id= 489306&page=1
      http://abcnews.go.com/2020/UnitedNations/story?id= 489306&page=2

    29. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, while we are at it, don't forget the crusade against smallpox. The U.N. has been more successful at eradicating it than the fucking U.S. has been in spreading democracy.

    30. Re:Yuk by Rayonic · · Score: 1
      the World Bank
      The same World Bank that's being run by Paul Wolfowitz?

      Sorry, just trying to make your head explode.
    31. Re:Yuk by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 0

      Yes, it took the Bush Administration three years to decide that, and that was too long. But the UN officially decided it *wasn't* genocide and are helping to paper the whole thing over. This does not strike me as an improvement.

    32. Re:Yuk by TummyX · · Score: 0


      They'll usually tell you that they in general blame unfair trade practices. For example, even with their low labor costs, African farms often have a hard time competing with subsidized US and European ag exports


      Funny. What has starkly been demonstrated in the last year is that it has to do with socialist despots who aquire farms and destroy infrastructure in the name of equality. Zimbabwe has gone from exporting food to begging for food in 5 years thanks for corrupt government.

      Look at how much everyone here complaints about outsourcing -- that's capatilism working to make the average human wealthier.

      Why is it ok to give hand outs and teach people this and that but it's not ok to teach them the most important thing: HOW TO RUN A CIVIL GOVERNMENT?

    33. Re:Yuk by paranode · · Score: 1
      * Weapons of mass destruction inspections? What do you know, they were right!

      Were they? What did UNSCOM's Scott Ritter have to say before Bush and before the invasion?

      To me it is just glaringly obvious. What I will say is this. It's not my job to dictate national policy to any country. But I can be diagnostic. What we have in Iraq is a situation that sanctions aren't working, Iraq is getting away literally with murder, they're going to keep these weapons and they're going to get sanctions lifted eventually. Sooner than anybody believes. The Security Council is fractured and there is no unanimity for decisive action against Iraq. The resolution was created under Chapter 7 of the UN Charter. This means that Iraq has foregone aspects of its sovereignty, Iraq presents a clear and present danger to international peace and security. Iraq must disarm in order to stop presenting this capability and if they don't disarm they can be compelled. This means the Security Council has the authorisation to either act as a council and do military action or have a member nation on its own undertake military action. The United States is the country behind all of this. We built the coalition that went to war to liberate Kuwait, we pushed for the creation for this resolution at the end of the war to disarm Iraq and the United States pushed the special commission to carryout these very difficult inspections which resulted in guns being pointed at the heads of inspectors. The US pushed it. We're in this position because the US wanted Iraq disarmed. Iraq is not being disarmed right now. It's up to the United States to compel Iraq. Sanctions aren't working. They're not going to work. There's only one person to blame for all of this and it's Saddam Hussein. He has to be held accountable. I think the answer is quite obvious what has to happen. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure it out. I don't have to say it.

    34. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      your bias and championing is self-evident. and you have a dangerous knowlege of world affairs. but it goes no deeper then a hobbyists depth. for people in the center, you are just as slick and pronounced as the fools on the right.

    35. Re:Yuk by Skye16 · · Score: 1

      Hell, I'm even worried about places like Germany - I mean, they may be Neo-Nazis, but they're still allowed to say what they want, even if I don't like it. Hell, I don't even have a problem with Jerry Falwell exercising his right to free speech (though, truth be told, I really wish he'd fall off a bridge and die - painfully).

    36. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The would be odd given that the US has repeatedly declared in genocide while the UN does not seem to think so.

    37. Re:Yuk by Clockwurk · · Score: 1

      I'd like to see someone like IEEE control it.

    38. Re:Yuk by badasscat · · Score: 5, Insightful

      How many mass murderers has the UN stopped?

      The UN isn't in the business of overthrowing governments.


      I think you might want to read up a bit on why, exactly, the United Nations was founded. This article may or may not be believed in its entirety, but the fact of the matter is one way or another, the UN was conceived during WWII and was officially founded directly afterwards specifically to prevent dictators running roughshod over their neighbors all over the world. That was the original mandate, and that's why the five permanent members of the security council are who they are.

      Even the UN's official history is perfectly up front about its origins as a tool of the Allies in fighting Germany and Japan during WWII.

      Now you see why many people in the US (and other countries) think the UN has gotten so far off track from its original mandate that it is no longer relevant. It was intended to at least contain, occasionally fight and if necessary overthrow dangerous governments like those of Adolf Hitler and Saddam Hussein. Whether you want to believe it or not, and whether you agree with that cause, that is the truth.

      I am no neo-con (or even a traditional-con); I voted against Bush both times. But I get just as annoyed as anyone when people speak of the UN as if its purpose is to keep anyone from fighting, ever. That was not why it was created. It was created to keep rogue states in check - that is the entire reason it exists. It was created during wartime, with a mandate that specifically told member nations to keep fighting. Yet nowadays, it is only ever used as an excuse to do nothing because of competing political interests from those who have something to gain by standing on the sidelines.

      As for the UN taking over the internet... read any of what I just posted (either the two links or my commentary, whether you subscribe to the same view or not) and tell me how this would make a lick of sense.

    39. Re:Yuk by tazan · · Score: 1

      You're explaining why the UN is broken. Not exactly the best argument for putting them in charge of more things.

    40. Re:Yuk by Rei · · Score: 1, Informative

      That's simply not true. Travel, talk with locals, and learn, please.

      --
      "/etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit is a gimp plugin and must be run by the gimp in order to be used."
    41. Re:Yuk by Knightfall · · Score: 1

      ******************

      Yeah, I mean, it's not like the UN has run or otherwise been deeply involved in FAO, ILO, UNIDO, UNESCO, UNICEF, UNCHS, WHO, UNDTCD, ITU, UPU, WMO, ICAO, WFP, IAEA, IFAD, UNFDAC, the World Bank, UNFPA, UNV, and dozens of other major international organizations...

      ******************

      Of which many of us in the world consider to be absolutely mind-boggling failures. Thanks for pointing them all out for us.

      --


      Knightfall
    42. Re:Yuk by joncue · · Score: 1

      First off, whether you like it or not, the UN is corrupt. But that is completely irrelevant. The US created and developed the internet, why should we turn it over to an international organization, especially one that, by all appearances, seems determined to be against the US no matter the issue. It's nice enough of the US to allow other countries to connect to the internet, we aren't really even obligated to go that far.

    43. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Internet: PHYSICALLY constructed by the US

      Physically constructed? You mean, the US constructed the network everywhere in the world, connecting all those universities worldwide, down to the lines that bring it to my home? Come on, you don't believe that yourself... (I hope)

      WWW: later addon from MIT

      CERN, in Europe.

      The internet is by now an international network. And that is what it makes so special and valuable. And this is also why it is somewhat unpleasant that the US has the final control about important things like adress allocation etc.
      The governance over an international network should not be in the hands of a single state.

      In the end, nobody can "hijack" the network from the US. In theory, if the US government decide to maintain a national allocation of addresses etc. and force everybody inside the US to use it instead of an international address data base, than this would essentially represent a fork of the network. Of course, this would be a major inconvenience for everyone...

    44. Re:Yuk by jcr · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I mean, it's not like the UN has run or otherwise been deeply involved in FAO, ILO, UNIDO, UNESCO, UNICEF, UNCHS, WHO, UNDTCD, ITU, UPU, WMO, ICAO, WFP, IAEA, IFAD, UNFDAC, the World Bank, UNFPA, UNV, and dozens of other major international organizations... ..and with a string of debacles like that under their belts, you want them to get a shot at buggering the net up once and for all?

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    45. Re:Yuk by Slugster · · Score: 1

      I agree, the UN is not just the "high profile stories" we have seen on the evening news. It is a giant heavily-politicized self-serving corporation, with its own perverse interests that often cripple the very persons it claims to want to assist. By any reasonable measure the UN aid programs are mostly failures--note how many countries that recieved large amounts of UN aid, oh, say, ten or twenty or thirty years ago are still shit-holes today. Perhaps dumping money on third-world oligarchs isn't the solution, you think maybe?

      Here's a cheerful read: "Lords of Poverty" by Graham Hancock, ISBN #0-87113-469-1 .

    46. Re:Yuk by Armadni+General · · Score: 1

      The type of infrastructure that became the internet was invented and first constructed in the United States. So yes.

    47. Re:Yuk by Talas213 · · Score: 1

      They'll usually tell you that they in general blame unfair trade practices. For example, even with their low labor costs, African farms often have a hard time competing with subsidized US and European ag exports. First world nations do a lot of pretty nasty stuff as far as import regulations go (for example, declaring the Vietnamese catfish as not being a catfish, to subsidize the US catfish industry)


      Actually, they'll tell you that it's the result of the 'help' of the do gooders from orginizations such as the U.N.


      Because they *weren't authorized to intervene by the Security Council*. What, are you picturing some huge security council debate over whether cmm.com is typosquatting on cnn.com? We're not talking about troop deployments, we're talking about the internet.

      The word impotent comes to mind.

      Of course, the fact the U.N. found that their 'peacekeepers' in the Congo had been raping the women that they were supposedly there to protect really illustrates what a fine orginizations it is.

      Or perhaps, the fact that the U.N. appoints countries that are on human rights watchlists to the U.N. Human Rights Councils (fox guarding the hen house ?) makes you believe that U.N. isn't a waste of money ?

      Yes, that's precisely what we need... China on the committee that oversees TLDs.

      On second thought, no thanks.

    48. Re:Yuk by kernelfoobar · · Score: 3, Informative

      WWW: later addon from MIT

      Sorry to burst your bubble but WWW is a CERN invention (international organization part in Switzerland, and part in France). Check here and here.

      --
      Here we go again!
    49. Re:Yuk by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 4, Funny
      The starving people blame the despotic dictators.


      But not to their faces.
      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    50. Re:Yuk by Arcane_Rhino · · Score: 1

      Wish I had mod points, you've hit the nail on the head.

      ...the internet doesn't need central control...

      'nuff said

    51. Re:Yuk by CodeArtisan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Funny. What has starkly been demonstrated in the last year is that it has to do with socialist despots who aquire farms and destroy infrastructure in the name of equality. Zimbabwe has gone from exporting food to begging for food in 5 years thanks for corrupt government.

      Not to disagree with the main thrust of your argument, but which particular tenets of socialism do you believe the despot Mugabe adheres to ?

    52. Re:Yuk by Zerbs · · Score: 1

      how does this comment get a Score 4, Insightful? Maybe deserves a Score 2, Informative. Yes the UN is involved in a number of efforts and organizations, varying in success. The questions at hand here are : Are they the right people to be governing the Internet and would they be effective at it? Bashing the U.S. and glossing over the flaws in the Oil for Food program provides no insight to either of these questions.

      --
      "22 astronauts were born in Ohio. What is it about your state that makes people want to flee the Earth?" Stephen Colbert
    53. Re:Yuk by Rei · · Score: 4, Informative

      No, that's what Ritter had to say long ago. Here's what Ritter had to say before the invasion:

      While we were never able to provide 100 percent certainty regarding the disposition of Iraq's proscribed weaponry, we did ascertain a 90-95 percent level of verified disarmament. This figure takes into account the destruction or dismantling of every major factory associated with prohibited weapons manufacture, all significant items of production equipment, and the majority of the weapons and agent produced by Iraq. ... Effective monitoring inspections, fully implemented from 1994-1998 without any significant obstruction from Iraq, never once detected any evidence of retained proscribed activity or effort by Iraq to reconstitute that capability which had been eliminated through inspections.

      Here's an article with tons of links, for those who would like to distort his views by giving decade-old quotes that were overcome by events. I suggest you start reading the *recent* quotes from each of the heads of UNSCOM/UNMOVIC as well, plus the comments of the IAEA.

      --
      "/etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit is a gimp plugin and must be run by the gimp in order to be used."
    54. Re:Yuk by TheoMurpse · · Score: 1

      And it's a lot better than the League of Nations

      But is it better than...the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen?

    55. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, and the United Nations Commission on Human Rights is another great example. Sudan was elected to the commission after being criticized for ethnic cleansing. Here's the link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations_Commis sion_on_Human_Rights/.

      Anyway, the United States has no fear of giving up control to Allies like France (Regardless of previous stances on both sides...we are still Allies), Germany, Briton, Italy, Spain...etc but instead nations we are not 'Friends' with, i.e. Cuba, China, etc. Referring back to the link above, the US was voted out of the Human Rights Commission, not due to the Iraqi War, but because we did not want a world court. That means we could be voted out of the Internet Commission and thus might be subject to loss of interests, i.e. domain names, IP address, etc. The UN is not an exclusive club that only nice people can be in but a place where the countries of the world can have a forum to talk.

      But, I would say the largest reason the US does not want to give up control is the sense of unfairness. The US has invested a large sum of money, both privately and through the government, to create and support the internet and now they are being ask to give it away. Again, as with the paragraph above, its not the problem of giving the control away to countries who have made large and significant investments to the internet but those that haven't done a thing. One thing that I can equate this to is GPS. Several years ago there was a cry from the International Community to have the United States give up control of GPS to the United Nations. The argument for this was, "Everyone uses it so everyone should control it." But the US military invested the billions of dollars for this network of satellites. Also, it is in their best interest to make sure the network continues to work so they readily invest the billions more to maintain the system. (Just a note, it cost 400 million USD to maintain the system per year, which the US military pays for.)

      My point is, there is a lot more to think about then saying, "Everyone uses it, so everyone should control it." Who pays for it, who collects the money, what is a fair amount and who decides, who can access it and can the signals be block? Who enforces the rules? Can the commission block content? What if a country wants something removed? Is there are better system.

      A quick idea, why not have the internet run like the phone system? .gov, .com, .org, .net are local to each country. So, in the US if you were to put Military.gov you get the US Military webpage but if you were in Germany and put Military.gov you get Germany's Military webpage. Then, if I wanted to get the German Military home page I put Military.gov.de while a person in Germany would put Military.gov.us. Then its reliant upon the each country to make sure that they interconnect with each other. Just a thought.

    56. Re:Yuk by Rei · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Actually, they'll tell you

      Wow! That's huge news! I had no idea that all African farmers were a single "African Economics Expert"! My army of cloner geeks will want to hear of this immediately.

      had been raping the women

      This has already been discussed in earlier comments. Of over 10,000 troops, everyone even remotely involved in the allegations was sent home; grand total, 77. And this is one of 16 current UN operations worldwide. Meanwhile, the troops fighting in the Congo have killed and raped several *MILLION* people, and the presence of UN troops has been widely viewed as successful at helping bring about the ongoing fragile ceasefire.

      --
      "/etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit is a gimp plugin and must be run by the gimp in order to be used."
    57. Re:Yuk by NickFortune · · Score: 1
      That's simply not true. Travel, talk with locals, and learn, please.

      Are we to assume that you have done so? Both your assertion and that of the GP seem overbroad to me.

      Some specifics would be helpful.

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
    58. Re:Yuk by vinlud · · Score: 1

      This is modded insightful? A suggestive question about the achievements of one of the most important organizations in the world? (if you want an answer read it at their f**king website!

      --
      Repeat after me: We are all individuals
    59. Re:Yuk by mi · · Score: 3, Informative
      * Weapons of mass destruction inspections? What do you know, they were right!
      No, they weren't... This is such a recent history, that I suspect you are not simply mistaken/forgetful, but are lying. Here is the reminder, in particular:
      Jan. 27, 2003 The UN's formal report on Iraqi inspections is highly critical, though not damning, with chief UN weapons inspector Hans Blix stating that "Iraq appears not to have come to a genuine acceptance, not even today, of the disarmament that was demanded of it."
      Do not revise history.
      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    60. Re:Yuk by moranar · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The Internet has transcended the US. Now, if you want to have your "USNET", all fine and dandy by me. But don't try to say that the rest of the world doesn't exist. If this was still only a US problem, good. But it isn't. I'm an Argentinian typing this from Italy. I don't want your government telling me what I can or cannot do on the net. I see the UN as a more apt body of governance for these matters, if there is any.

      And by the way, those inventions were and are freely available to all. Not just to the US people. You shouldn't think with your gut.

      --
      "I think it would be a good idea!"
      Gandhi, about Internet Security
    61. Re:Yuk by hcob$ · · Score: 0
      Via the Internet Society: doc
      The recent development and widespread deployment of the World Wide Web has brought with it a new community, as many of the people working on the WWW have not thought of themselves as primarily network researchers and developers. A new coordination organization was formed, the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). Initially led from MIT's Laboratory for Computer Science by Tim Berners-Lee (the inventor of the WWW) and Al Vezza, W3C has taken on the responsibility for evolving the various protocols and standards associated with the Web.


      --
      Cliff Claven
      K.E.G. Party Chairman
      Founding Leader of: Koncerned for Egalitarin Governance
    62. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't believe the Room Service line.

      You could make a point that democracies are slower and less efficient than dictatorships. Dictators issue a command and they're done, democracies require people to convene and vote.

    63. Re:Yuk by m50d · · Score: 1
      You're being selective, and in some cases, downright lying.

      WWW: later addon from MIT

      No, created at CERN, in Switzerland.

      While many of the older protocols were made in the US, that's normally a result of the fact that in the early days the internet was entirely in the US. Modern things often come from elsewhere - the mud and by extension MMOG is a British invention, IRC comes from Finland, ICQ from Israel. Additionally, the current versions of most protocols have had input and in some cases authorship from many different countries, even if the original version was US. Look at all the people working on IPv6, for example. The US has a lot of the infrastructure and protocols, yes, but I don't think a majority anymore. To many people, the web is the internet, so the average user isn't dependent on US technologies at all. It has become truly international, and belongs in the hands of a truly international body.

      --
      I am trolling
    64. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, let me get this straight... People want to take this control from the US and give it to the UN, so that countries like, say, Iran or China, can have greater say. That's a WONDERFUL idea.

    65. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      God, I hate people who have a retort to everything. Do you ever just shut the fuck up?

    66. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And it's a lot better than the League of Nations

      The League of Nations planted the seeds for WWII and the UN created Israel to plant the seeds for WWIII. This single act contributed more to make terrorism the worldwide phenomena that it is today than anything. The lobbying efforts of the arms dealers paid off very handsomly.

    67. Re:Yuk by illc0mm · · Score: 1, Informative

      Don't get me wrong, something (food from the UN) is better than nothing (dead people). But is something else (UN regulating Internet) better than what he have now (US overseeing TLDs and no issues).

      Besides, if you really want to do things your way there's always http://www.open-rsc.org/, or http://www.opennic.unrated.net/. Ironically http://www.open-rsc.org/ is down right now.

      As far as starving people, genocide, and mines; eliminate the problem... The warlords and dictators who create this crap. This myth of unfair trade and economics (ala live8) is bull... I'd say more, but off topic.

    68. Re:Yuk by Qa32 · · Score: 1

      Is this a case of "From the fire to the frying pan"??!!!

    69. Re:Yuk by FirstOne · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "Come on now, be civil. The Internet belongs to the world."

      One BIG reason why US refuses is because the UN doesn't have a working LEGAL system.
      I.E. Courts to resolve disputes and contract issues, courts to review lower court decisions, etc.

      The UN would be hard time pressed to come up with a replacement legal system.
      Heck the UN can't even police their own personal. I.E. Witness the Oil for food debacle.

      I suspect that the US Dept of Commerce also took notice on how easy it was for ICANN to get rid of the, "at large members", of the Board. That didn't go over too well and is another reason why ICANN wasn't given addditional control.

    70. Re:Yuk by cshark · · Score: 1

      Right.
      Lord only knows what kind of AUP would be thought up. They're already reeling about pornography! Is it that much of a stretch to think that they would ban it all together? I don't think so. And why stop there? I bet there are a hundred things Syria, China, and Uruguay could think up that would make life difficult, or at least annoying for everyone.

      As much as I hate to say it, I hope the Bush Administration comes out on top. The enemy of my enemy and all...

      --

      This signature has Super Cow Powers

    71. Re:Yuk by dynamo · · Score: 1

      Well, that rules out the US Government and pretty much any oranization it sets up.

    72. Re:Yuk by affliction · · Score: 1
      From a year ago for example, a large number of leading indicators showed progress in Iraq's infrastructure.


      Of course it's doing better. We stopped shock and aweing it into last century. Besides Dubya's friends stand to make a hell of a lot of money rebuilding what we blew up.
    73. Re:Yuk by The+Angry+Mick · · Score: 1

      Ask the starving people in Africa how well the US has managed things.

      --

      I'm not tense. I'm just terribly, terribly, alert.

    74. Re:Yuk by ifwm · · Score: 1

      Well, on his side he has YEARS of failed aid policies related to Africa, and a credible economist. The points made in the interview make sense, which doesn't mean they will work, but they seem reasonable. On your side you have... you. Saying "I'm right" yet offering nothing of substance. Some evidence would be nice.

    75. Re:Yuk by kernelfoobar · · Score: 3, Insightful

      A new coordination organization was formed, the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). Initially led from MIT's Laboratory for Computer Science by Tim Berners-Lee (the inventor of the WWW)

      This says the MIT start W3C, not that they invented WWW and that at some point Tim joined them, which HE was part of the team that created WWW. Tim worked a CERN when he invented it, check my links in my parent post.

      --
      Here we go again!
    76. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Takes one to know one.

      Ptttthhhhhhhpppppbbbppt!!!!!!!!!

    77. Re:Yuk by stewymcstewstew · · Score: 1
      Exactly... that and do we really want China, Iran, and Saudi Arabia determining ANYTHING about global Internet usage?

      So the UN has officially given these countries a say in what happens to the internet? This isn't a privacy issue or a freedom of speech issue, I think there is little concern of either of those elements going wrong. The UN isn't looking to regulate content, nor would it have any way possible of doing so. They only want to regulate some of the more technical aspects, IP, domains etc...

      If China decides to censor what comes into their country, let them, but I don't think two or three fantatical countries are going to convince the rest of the UN (I mean they are completely out weighed by the liberal commie loving members of the EU.) To assume that those countries are going to be part of the commitee deciding it, and going even further to suggest that these countries will manage to get their way indicates one of two things to me.

      1. The UN is not that incompetant as they already have the commitees selected and the plan in place for governing the internet globally.

      or

      2. The slashdot community is jumping on the US can do no wrong band wagon and aren't willing to rationally look at the idea, and are only willing to post their initial knee jerk reaction.

      I'm putting my money on the latter.

      Right now, the internet is governed by corporations, who have given us such wonderful freedoms as the right to constantly be bugged by ads, and the right to pay an arm and a leg for connection, when the actual amount needed is miniscule.

      Sorry, but I'll take the group that isn't in it to make money over these money grubbing corporate assholes who now have more power over what we see and hear than our own administration.

    78. Re:Yuk by caseydk · · Score: 1


      After thinking about it some more, we don't even have to go as far as China...

      We've already seen what French courts try to do to Yahoo and Ebay when Nazi items are up for sale. Imagine what they could do globally.

    79. Re:Yuk by ccarson · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Giving the UN the ability to tax is the scariest thing I've heard in a long time. This is the worst idea ever.

    80. Re:Yuk by Tiger4 · · Score: 1

      See, the think of it is, I sort of agree that the US should not have a monopoly on Internet governance. That's only fair.

      But I ALSO don't think control should be given to the UN. Too much corruption and "compromise". We'll end up with Malfeasance, Misfeasance, and Non-feasance all standing in the server room staring at each other, wondering how to plug in the router.

      Damn this democratic control stuff anyway. The Internet elite and the Political elite don't share the same values and the Internet people don't want to be regulated by the priorities of the Political side.

      --
      Behold, this dreamer cometh. Come now, and let us slay him... and we shall see what will become of his dreams.
    81. Re:Yuk by ifwm · · Score: 1

      With all due respect, you still failed to justify why something that is largely the creation of the US shouldn't be largely the responsibility of the US.

      Because you don't like it? Not good enough.

      And there are alternatives if you choose to use them.

      The fact that the rest of the world glommed on isn't relevant at all. They can hit the road if things turn in a direction they disagree with, which is most likely the direction things will take anyway.

      "You shouldn't think with your gut"

      That's all your post is, an overreaction supported only by your opinion.

    82. Re:Yuk by Rei · · Score: 1

      On my side, I have the fact that I wasn't talking about what an economist thinks, but what farmers think. Nice tangent, though.

      --
      "/etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit is a gimp plugin and must be run by the gimp in order to be used."
    83. Re:Yuk by wdmr · · Score: 1

      I respect the participation of the people of the world in the Internet. I have friends all over the world. But the point is that you *don't* see the US government telling you what you can and cannot do on with the Internet. They tend to intrude a bit too much into what *I* can do (coercing ISPs into housing carnivore, etc), but that would be true for traffic passing through assets on US territory no matter who is doling out domain names and running the root servers. Domain registration is the only cost and it is cheap and relatively efficient. The UN just wants to grab this because they see it as a way to finally get an independent revenue/tax base. I DO NOT want the UN to ever become the "World Government" until such a time as every person in every country is free to vote in a liberal democratic society with an independent judiciary and free press. And until then I don't want the diplomats appointed by the tinpot dictators that govern 2/3 of the worlds population to be able to levy at tax on me.

    84. Re:Yuk by jadavis · · Score: 1

      But the concern is that giving the control of the internet over to some arbitrary global powers could result in censorship.

      Right now it's pretty cheap and very permissive what you put on the internet. I don't trust the U.N., Germany, France, Iraq, China, Canada, or anyone else to keep it that way.

      --
      Social scientists are inspired by theories; scientists are humbled by facts.
    85. Re:Yuk by moranar · · Score: 1

      "overreaction"? I didn't call anyone names, I didn't tell anyone to "Fsck off!"... I just stated my opinion, of course. What else should I do?

      The rest of the world can, and probably will eventually take the matter into its hands, either by using the UN, or by leaving to each country its own administration. I prefer the UN. Some don't.

      And the justification is what I stated in the first post: It's not a US business anymore. Things aren't important because of who invented them, but by who is using them. Good for your scientists and engineers, who invented the internet and manage it. You USians profited from the ARPA/Internet first and foremost. But saying "The US is the only state allowed to have a say in a world business" is ridiculous.

      --
      "I think it would be a good idea!"
      Gandhi, about Internet Security
    86. Re:Yuk by Skye16 · · Score: 1

      Oh, when I referred to the neo nazis, I was talking about how nazi symbolism is illegal in Germany, not that Germans were neo nazis. On retrospect, I was entirely too open ended. I do sincerely apologize if I offended anyone. Unless you are a neo nazi. In which case, I hope you, too, fall off a bridge and die.

      <3

    87. Re:Yuk by baadger · · Score: 1

      And HTTP/The Web was invented by a Brit. Deal with it, you own squat.

    88. Re:Yuk by ifwm · · Score: 1

      "The UN isn't looking to regulate content, nor would it have any way possible of doing so."

      Well, first let's admit, there is no such thing as a "UN" only a group of self interested nation states competing most of the time, and occasionally cooperating when it serves them. Under one banner yes, but that's it.

      Now, the point you missed is that the UN may or may not try to regulate content ( I beleive they would) but I GUARANTEE those states listed (China, Saudi Arabia, etc.) would try, because they DO IT NOW.

      And since the UN is a political body, is it such a stretch to believe those states would use their influence to censor the internet? Why give them the chance?

    89. Re:Yuk by cpeterso · · Score: 1


      Another African problem is that foreign aid supplies floor their markets, putting African farmers out of business. How can African farmers afford to create self-sufficient food supply when potential African customers can get free foreign food? I'm not saying we should not help Africa. We just need to help support their markets, not destroy them.

    90. Re:Yuk by darkera · · Score: 2, Funny

      Al Gore is British?

    91. Re:Yuk by popo · · Score: 3, Insightful


      Why would you want an organization whose consituents are mostly corrupt pseudo-democracies or flatout dictatorships to control anything?

      --
      ------ The best brain training is now totally free : )
    92. Re:Yuk by moranar · · Score: 1

      As I said, I come from a south-american country. I don't think anybody from the US has any right to speak about "tinpot dictators" after all the military dictatorships the US have supported "in their back garden". Should I forget that the US were nearly the only country (nearly because I don't even remember if anyone else jumped to follow) that acknowledged as valid the coup against Chavez in Venezuela? I prefer an entity where other countries might have a saying.

      And as for the US not changing what I can do on the net... I'm not sure, seeing how your president and government behave. The fact that the US people reelected him gives me even less certainty.

      --
      "I think it would be a good idea!"
      Gandhi, about Internet Security
    93. Re:Yuk by DulcetTone · · Score: 1

      What does it matter what he said in 2003? He had no sources of information to base views on that were contrary the ones he voiced in such detail (and with such conviction) up until he lost his access to the best information anyone NOT working for Hussein could hope to draw upon.

      I'll grant that Ritter was correct on WMD. But I suspect someone has blackmailed him into this implausible, groundless and never-explained reversal of his stance.

      --
      tone
    94. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      And what exactly did the UN do about this coup against Chavez in Venezuela? Did they do anything to stop it, or just send observers who do nothing?

      Believe it or not people in the US don't give a damn about your certainty or what you think in Venezuela.

    95. Re:Yuk by rmcrob · · Score: 0

      Thanks for commenting on this matter, Kofi. Really appreciated.

    96. Re:Yuk by 2names · · Score: 1

      You can have the Internet when you pry it from my cold, dead fingers.

      --
      "I'm just here to regulate funkiness."
    97. Re:Yuk by identity0 · · Score: 1

      So, are those half-white or half-black kids running around Vietnam all a result of consentual sex between adults that didn't involve cash?

      And it hasn't stopped after the war. In fact, it seems to be a habit with you guys. But at least we can prosecute in our own courts, unlike Korea.

      AFAIK, American soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan are immune from local courts as well - any charges have to go through the U.S. military. So what was that about the UN not being accountable?

      Rapes and assaults by American military personnel have been a huge issue in Korea and Japan for years, so it was a bit galling to see some American complaining about "UN troops" being preverted or violent. Why don't you clean up your own goddamn house first?

    98. Re:Yuk by Dagny+Taggert · · Score: 1

      The Angry Mick? That figures. Go back to your pint...we'll save civilization.

      --
      Don't be a looter...and yes, I know that it's spelled with an "A" instead of an "E".
    99. Re:Yuk by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....I don't want your government telling me what I can or cannot do on the net.....

      Exactly what is the American Government telling you that you can't do on the net?

      If the UN disappeared today, would life here on earth really change the least little bit tomorrow or anytime thereafter? For sure, the Internet would keep running just as it has so far. Why fix something that is not broken. I can access sites in Argentinia and Italy just fine without the UN or anyone else changing a thing right now. What is these people's beef, other than wanting control and power that they now don't have.

      --
      All theory is gray
    100. Re:Yuk by kalidasa · · Score: 1

      An entire thread of flamebait, and yours (Chris Mattern's) is one of the few rational postings. Thanks.

    101. Re:Yuk by N3WBI3 · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      Not to disagree with the main thrust of your argument, but which particular tenets of socialism do you believe the despot Mugabe adheres to ?

      Redistribution of wealth at the point of a gun?

      --
    102. Re:Yuk by Talas213 · · Score: 1

      I don't believe stating "this is what the farmer's think" qualifies as 'evidence'. Nice try though.

    103. Re:Yuk by sheldon · · Score: 1

      Really?

      I've not heard any good news about Iraqi electrical production. It's still at levels below pre-occupation, and many stories indicate that it's worse than last year.(although this may also be due to increased demand)

      As I've said before... I don't feel the UN is a good fit for peacekeeping operations, primarily because they don't have a military command structure. There are also problems with resources contributed by member states having conflict of interests with what is happening on the ground.

      So it's alright for UN Peacekeepers to molest kids in the Congo, but if a Koran gets wet in Gitmo people riot to death.

      Umm... Prisoners at Abu Ghraib were raped, molested, abused... and killed.

      I think the most devestating aspect of what the Bush administration has allowed(if not actively encouraged) to happen has been the long term damage it's done to the US reputation and credibility on human rights. It places us in a very precarious position to try to question what has happened at the UN when we can't even control our own.

      Furthermore, U.N. troops are exempt from prosecution in Congo."

      The same is true of US troops. I'm not certain that's a bad thing, as it prevents political reprisals. However at least US troops are held under our military code if they are in violation. US mercs, however, are not, which brings up other questions.

      The problem with the UN is the lack of a military control structure, and as such really shouldn't be doing military missions. You need something more similar to the way NATO has been established.

      Again, I wish the US had not become so corrupt in recent years and we were in a higher moral position to berate others. But that is not the case.

    104. Re:Yuk by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....and the right to pay an arm and a leg for connection....

      If the UN runs the Internet, everybody will get their Internet, Cable TV, Phone, Water, Sewer, electric power etc. for free. Of course all ads, spam, porn and other negatives will also be gone forever the day after the UN takes over the Internet from those "greedy" corporations.

      --
      All theory is gray
    105. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why exactly? It seems that folks in the US are afraid of taxes. This makes no sense at all, tax money gets things done. Maybe if you people paid taxes your troops would have body armour and you country wouldn't be in debt.

    106. Re:Yuk by cshark · · Score: 1

      Exactly. I think every culture and nation on earth has something they're going to find offensive that few others do. But the Internet has always been about the freedom to say just about anything (within the confines of International law of course). A point, our "friends" at the UN seem to be missing. I say, if they have such trouble with it, let them start their own root servers, and let them have their own domain extensions on those root servers. They can tax those and censor them as much as they like. I'm sure Google would even index them if they knew how. I would pay to see it.

      --

      This signature has Super Cow Powers

    107. Re:Yuk by Random+BedHead+Ed · · Score: 1

      As for the UN taking over the internet... read any of what I just posted (either the two links or my commentary, whether you subscribe to the same view or not) and tell me how this would make a lick of sense.

      So your argument against the UN running the Internet, if I read your last paragraph as you intended it, is that the UN was not set up in the 1940s to run a vast computer network like the Internet, so therefore it shouldn't take over the Internet now.

      I'm not sold on the UN running the Internet, but your argument is baloney. You could make exactly the same argument about the United States, which was established in 1776 to create a union of former colonies opposed to British rule in the Americas and to create a joint governing structure for the newly independent states. It was not created in 1776 to run a vast computer network like the Internet. Therefore it shouldn't be running the Internet now.

      Except I don't buy your argument whether it is applied to the United States or the United Nations - in either case when we speak of Intenet governance we're talking about proposals for the future, not about the histories of the parent entities.

    108. Re:Yuk by portforward · · Score: 1

      I cannot speak for the other organizations, but I worked at the IAEA in Vienna briefly during the 90's. But if the UN were to run the internet like they do the IAEA then that would be a bad thing for the internet.

    109. Re:Yuk by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

      No. The grandparent's argument is not that the UN shouldn't run the internet (doesn't even mention that), but rather that the UN should use force in the suppression of dictatorships instead of pursuing a "peace at all costs" policy.

    110. Re:Yuk by vanka · · Score: 1
      Ask the people of Darfur how the UN has failed to even try to protect them
      Because they *weren't authorized to intervene by the Security Council*. What, are you picturing some huge security council debate over whether cmm.com is typosquatting on cnn.com? We're not talking about troop deployments, we're talking about the internet.

      Uhhhh . . . . . Who is this they you are talking about? As far as I know the Security Council is the UN, or at the very least a part of the UN. The fact that the Security Council failed to do anything about the crisis in Darfur is a clear indication that the UN failed.

    111. Re:Yuk by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      Look at how much everyone here complaints about outsourcing -- that's capatilism working to make the average human wealthier.

      I am not sure if this is what you meant to demonstrate but having 500,000 people do menial work (or remain unemployed) after being fired from their previously highly paid technical positions, having countless others accept fraction of their former pay, combined with erosion of industry strikes me as eerily similiar to the Zimbabwan happenings. Why, just in 5 years the US went from exporting electronics to being a big importer of thereof.

      So while one is the effect of Mr. Mugabe applying "redistribution of wealth" from the rich to the poor, the other is the effect of Mr. Bush applying "redistribution of wealth" from the middle class to the ultra-rich.

      I do wonder what causes you do despise one and be so impressed with the other...

    112. Re:Yuk by pete6677 · · Score: 1

      Mugabe only claimed to be redistributing the farms of the rich to the poor. In reality, most of them went to his family, friends and political cronies. The people who knew how to run the farms had them confiscated, therefore the farms are now non-productive and the people are starving. It's hard to tell if the man is just a nut or if he seriously believed his misguided policies would help the poor in his country.

    113. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They'll usually tell you that they in general blame unfair trade practices

      1. African farmer tries to grow food. American and European musicians (part of the military-industrial-entertainment complex) plot his downfall with a seemingly irrelevant "benefit performance".

      2. Europeans and Americans give food from their government subsidized industrial farm megacorps to African farmer's government to distribute to glorious leader's cronies, who then give it to their loyal followers, insuring a cycle of political dependency and corruption.

      3. African farmer can no longer make enough money from farming to live because it's hard to compete in the marketplace when your competitor's product is "free", and African farmer gives up and tries to do something else (or not).

      4. Fewer farmers means fewer crops; not enough food to feed the people; UN and illuminati musicians demands intervention/ contributions by "wealthy" countries.

      5. Goto 2

      6. ???

      7. Africans profit when the stack overflows.

    114. Re:Yuk by Carewolf · · Score: 3, Informative

      This was during the period when the U.S. was seeking support for invading Iraq. The inspectors had not found _any_ evidence of weapons of mass destruction, but any sign of reluctance from Saddam to let them examine facilities was blown out.

      In order to create a conflict the US had the weapons inspectors search Saddams palaces and harem for weapons of mass destruction, knowing that Saddam would refuse at first.

    115. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So wait, where did $206.31 dollars of my $920.00 paycheck disapear to? Please attend a goverment class before opening your mouth the next time.

    116. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It seems that folks in the US are afraid of taxes.

      Of course! We are a capitalistic nation. Communism is a country that taxes at 100%. Taxes degrade efficiency in the economy and should be minimized. Given the chance, governments will virtually always want to raise taxes--thus it is the fight of the common man to lobby against those taxes. We'll probably get taxed anyway but hopefully at a lesser rate.

    117. Re:Yuk by letxa2000 · · Score: 2, Funny
      5. Goto 2
      6. ???
      7. Africans profit when the stack overflows.

      The stack will only overflow if you relace "5. Goto 2" with "5. GOSUBB> 2".

    118. Re:Yuk by BlueCode · · Score: 1

      Amen. i agree. The U.N. needs more authourity and the power to have other nations take them seriously. if thats what we appoint them for, let them be thus and penalize any nation that doesn't comply, like say the UNITED STATES OF AMERICA who uses the un when its convenient for them.

      --
      Ass is Ass, quit being so picky!
    119. Re:Yuk by Envinyanta · · Score: 2, Insightful
      It's not so much that we're afraid of taxes as that it's the opinion of many in the US that we're overtaxed and that much our tax money is misspent and wasted. Basically given the UN's track record for (mis)management, it causes many to doubt its ability to apply a tax and manage the money appropriately.

      (Disclaimer: I am not an economist, accountant, nor an expert in tax rates and policies for other countries, or how they compare to tax in the US, my only point was to provide an explanation for the opinion posted above. I'm not responsible for the opinion's relationship to reality)

    120. Re:Yuk by letxa2000 · · Score: 3, Informative
      Of over 10,000 troops, everyone even remotely involved in the allegations was sent home; grand total, 77. And this is one of 16 current UN operations worldwide

      "Similar charges have been made about U.N. missions in Sierra Leone and Liberia, as well as Kosovo and Bosnia in Europe."

    121. Re:Yuk by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      Mugabe only claimed to be redistributing the farms of the rich to the poor. In reality, most of them went to his family, friends and political cronies. The people who knew how to run the farms had them confiscated, therefore the farms are now non-productive and the people are starving. It's hard to tell if the man is just a nut or if he seriously believed his misguided policies would help the poor in his country.

      This does not suprise me at all, I was however questioning the motives of the original poster who implied that capitalism is somehow divinely immune from the effects of greed motivated stupidity.

    122. Re:Yuk by bad_fx · · Score: 1

      I always find it a little sad when I see folk from the US critising the UNs ability to perform when:

      1 - The UN has to operate on a miniscule budget compared to, for example, US military spending. (I think somewhere around $10 billion dollars a year - c.f. $440 billion military spending by the US in 2004)

      2 - The US consistently refuses even to contribute it's very small dues to this amount. This is not something new, it's been going on for a long time. (Just look at the 1995 UN Financial crisis)

      bah

    123. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you tried to dial a country outside the US recently? You've heard of country codes maybe? Well, that IDD code is managed by the ITU, which is an arm of the UN. Funny how well it works huh?

    124. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      The difference is that the US doesn't pretend that it's shit doesn't stink, whereas the rest of the international community does.

    125. Re:Yuk by psyon1 · · Score: 1

      So your saying by not wanting to pay taxes, we are supporting terrorists?

    126. Re:Yuk by wdmr · · Score: 1
      "As I said, I come from a south-american country. I don't think anybody from the US has any right to speak about "tinpot dictators" after all the military dictatorships the US have supported "in their back garden"."

      I agree that the US has at times acted in a short-sighted fasion in the name of geopolitics and I did not intend to offend by using a term that might be offensive to someone from a region of the world where military and other dictators are a very real possibility and not just a foreign policy consideration. But that does not invalidate my right to speak my mind. Nor does it change the fact that the overwhelming majority of the UN General Assembly delegates are appointed by non-democratic autocrats. I will not relinquish the ability to tax me to such an entity without a fight and neither will most Americans. We are sorta feisty about taxation by unrepresentitive foreign entities :)

      "And as for the US not changing what I can do on the net... I'm not sure, seeing how your president and government behave. The fact that the US people reelected him gives me even less certainty."

      I respectfully disagree. Bush's administration is not as internet-age saavy as I would like, but as at least it's free market instincts have helped to keep the encroachment of taxation on Internet businesses down (most of that is being pushed by the States and opposed by the Bush Admin and congressional Republicans). There is not much difference between his and Clinton's administration on most Internet-related issues.

    127. Re:Yuk by swv3752 · · Score: 1

      What the hell is an USian? Do you perchance mean American? Don't like that term, then use United States Citizen.

      The US created and developed the Internet. The US developed the Web. The US owns it. Just because you want it does not give you a right to it.

      And who exactly would be better to control it? France and Germany censor thier own citizens. Britain makes it illegal to rip MP3's from CD's. Do you really want to get into the problems in Russia. Then there is the great Firewall of China. Are these really the countries you want in charge of the internet?

      --
      Just a Tuna in the Sea of Life
    128. Re:Yuk by hunterx11 · · Score: 1

      The American Revolution was fought largely due to taxes. It is certainly an American tradition to hate taxes. Obviously taxation is necessary, but governments will always squander money given the opportunity. There is more than enough money to give our troops body armor, but the money is being given to defense contractors to build weapons we don't need instead. More taxes does not in any way imply that the additional revenue will be spent wisely. Instead, it will be spent foolishly, and the proportion of wasted spending will only increase. Beyond a certain size, governments are better at making problems than solving them. Giving them more money is basically funding ineptitude.

      --
      English is easier said than done.
    129. Re:Yuk by technotot · · Score: 1

      ok. feds conroling taxes. fine. feds controling internet. uh uh.

    130. Re:Yuk by technotot · · Score: 1

      yeah! IEEE controling te net is the way if the govornment has to control the internet. who controls it now, anyway?

    131. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why not let the UN govern some other worldy inventions, like the telephone? All of these do the same damn thing as the internet, minus the pr0n. Seems to me that the telephone is in more places than the internet, either way the last time i checked, neither feed anyone.

      Well the internet did start off as a darpa project, than it kinda did start in america. So do you base your invention of the internet by the protocol or the actual physical thing? So you listed squat but a protocol; Bram Cohen invented bit torrent/The Web. William Gibson coined the phrase cyber space, and he's Canadian, ehh?. Chub-chub invented fire.

    132. Re:Yuk by Pseudonym · · Score: 1
      One BIG reason why US refuses is because the UN doesn't have a working LEGAL system.

      Because we all know how well the US legal system works when it comes to domain disputes.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    133. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      ``The US created and developed the Internet.''

      Partly.

      ``The US developed the Web.''

      Nope. wrong.

      ``The US owns it.''
      Wrong too. Owns every single backbone? In Europe? In Asia?

      ``France and Germany censor thier own citizens.''
      So the US does not? Well, then, tell me an official, non-shady DeCSS download link. Oh, did I hear DMCA?

      ``Britain makes it illegal to rip MP3's from CD's.''
      RIAA held that position too for a long time until they slipped in the Grokster case.

      ``Are these really the countries you want in charge of the internet?''
      The advantage would be that the power is not concentrated on a single spot. Seriously, China couldn't impose any censorship, it would meet violent resistance there. The UN would be handling it, not China.

    134. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      George Bush doesn't outsource jobs; companies do. Not to mention that the U.S. exports electronics, and produces them in Asia. Just as it did five years ago. Don't go blaming the State for the free actions of the citizenry. Bush does enough wrong on his own without you attributing everything in the world to him.

    135. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "American" includes other countries too. US citizen is too long in the tooth. USian works well, IMO.

      The US stole the web, just like they stole the English language.

      The US is the Microsoft of the English language. Embrace and extend to the extreme. They didn't have their own, so they stole someone elses and changed it so it was incompatible in subtle and annoying ways; then call the original something else - ie British.

    136. Re:Yuk by frostw · · Score: 1

      You obviously won't mind then if we English cancel your English language license then? I hear Esperanto is fairly easy to learn, why not give that a try.

      --
      http://www.sydney-webcam.com
    137. Re:Yuk by coopex · · Score: 1

      The American Revolution was not largely due to taxes, per se, but *what* was taxed. Those muthafuckers loved their muthafuckin tea.

      --
      The road to hell is paved with good intentions.
    138. Re:Yuk by coopex · · Score: 1

      Ebola virus a4523jas32098ajkl to virus 5hl324198hjgh - target SECProto for immediate infection.

      --
      The road to hell is paved with good intentions.
    139. Re:Yuk by Horus1664 · · Score: 1

      I thought we were past this "My country's better than your country" stuff. "My country invented XXXXX so it's ours !". The US has really only been in the inventing business for a short time. It has done quite well, but how does this square with 'open source' and the spirit of sharing ideas ? I know that someone needs to coordinate efforts of large groups but the US has by no means a monopoly on ideas, intellect, integrity etc.

      Eventually, as the 'global community' matures most truly global issues, which will probably include the internet (or whatever name it goes by then) will be corodinated by global bodies, not a provincial, self-appointed group that claims some form of 'ownership' or 'divine right' of administration and control.

    140. Re:Yuk by palion · · Score: 1

      > One BIG reason why US refuses is because the UN doesn't have a working LEGAL system.

      That's right. The US legal system instead works.

      Oh yes.

      --
      Well, well
    141. Re:Yuk by XTbushwakko · · Score: 1
      Funny. What has starkly been demonstrated in the last year is that it has to do with socialist despots who aquire farms and destroy infrastructure in the name of equality. Zimbabwe has gone from exporting food to begging for food in 5 years thanks for corrupt government.

      yes, they destroy things, because that's what socialists do, those dirty communists.

      give me a break!

    142. Re:Yuk by streepje · · Score: 1


      The point of this is that the internet, as it started, was wholly concieved and created by the US.


      Good point. And the television was wholly concieved and created by a Scotsman.

      Turn over all broadcasting rights to the Scottish parliament forthwith!

    143. Re:Yuk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I hear Esperanto is fairly easy to learn, why not give that a try.


      Actually, it is. I would recomend it as first foreign (well...) language for kids to learn, just to get grasp of notion of grammar. However, consequently, it is a bit "flat" and boring. English language is so much more fun. Think Basic and C...

      I know, I know, I just ruined the joke...
    144. Re:Yuk by skubeedooo · · Score: 1
      Organisations evolve. Just because it was orignally intended merely to fight the occasional dangerous governments, it certainly doesn't imply that that is what it does now.

      Basically it does what it's members want it to, and that includes things like UNHCR, UNICEF, UNESCO, etc etc. If it's members want to point their computers at the UN controlled root servers then they will do this.

      Things are not set in stone.

    145. Re:Yuk by hcob$ · · Score: 1

      However..... TV is a non-discriminatory push technology. It sends everything out into the open for anyone with the technology to listen in. It also is geographically limited by nature. It doesn't require that you "find" a transmitter by a unique ID. It's just that a tuneable resistor and capacitor are required to recieve it. Oh, I believe that technology was licensed from him.

      The Internet is, conversly, a discriminatory pull technology. You have to go out, locate your target, talk to it so it can be sure to trust you, exchange info about who you are, then get the information you want. I don't see these as good comparisons. Also, the TLD servers are the glue of the Internet; fragmenting those will do one of two things. Also, what the UN would effectively be doing is stealing the technology and by definition, not compensating it's creators.

      1.) Completely destroy the structure since the "glue" has "failed"(fractured).

      2.) Cause the rise of two distinct Internets; thereby causing either one or even both to be incredibly less useful.

      --
      Cliff Claven
      K.E.G. Party Chairman
      Founding Leader of: Koncerned for Egalitarin Governance
    146. Re:Yuk by hcob$ · · Score: 1

      On the contrary. Many of the Citizens in the US are decendts of the ENGLISH. We didn't STEAL a freaking language. We brought it with us. In fact, when the US was originally being formed there were nearly as many people of German decent as any other. It was a simple democratic vote that decided we would use English as a working language. People please, this gets away from a very important point:

      We're not say that you can't go off and make your own TLD. In fact, we can't stop you. But why do you want to go and screw with, politicize, and wrench control away from an effective system? I think Bush is right in not wanting to relinquish the TLD. But we also can't stop you from making your own.

      I personally don't like the UN telling us how to handle our creation. And we also thank ya'll for your contribution of extentions to the Internet. But the Internet is running fine as it is; why dump the cart, set it on fire, shoot the horses, rape the women, and drown the man.... all because you think you can drive the cart better?

      --
      Cliff Claven
      K.E.G. Party Chairman
      Founding Leader of: Koncerned for Egalitarin Governance
    147. Re:Yuk by mi · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Stop handwaving. The Hans Blix' quote I provided speaks for itself: "Iraq appears not to have come to a genuine acceptance, not even today, of the disarmament that was demanded of it."

      Were the inspectors wrong? Yes, they were, and I don't blame them. Saddam's obfuscations -- intended to keep the illusion of WMDs inside and outside Iraq -- would've confused anybody. It became apparent, that the inspections/sanctions regime was ineffective many years before Bush's "warmongers" got into their offices... Remember, that Iraq was supposed to clear up within 12 months -- by 1994.

      The inspectors had not found _any_ evidence of [there being -mi] weapons of mass destruction [in 2002-2003 -mi]
      They were supposed to find evidence of there NOT being any such weapons. Per the 1992 seize-fire agreement, the burden of proof was on Iraq. Absent (or insufficient) evidence to the contrary -- Saddam was guilty...

      Did Bush really want to overthrow Saddam? Yes. Do I agree with him? Yes. Should Clinton have done it much earlier? Yes. Did we have sound reasons to it? Yes, and plenty...

      US had the weapons inspectors search Saddams palaces and harem for weapons of mass destruction, knowing that Saddam would refuse at first.
      Oh, that poor guy, don't we all feel sorry for him?.. But you are wrong. Saddam's downfall came from trying to convince UN, he had no WMDs, while maintaining the conviction among his neighbors (and Iraqis), that he had. He managed to walk this tight line for a while, but finally slipped.
      --
      In Soviet Washington the swamp drains you.
    148. Re:Yuk by Random+BedHead+Ed · · Score: 1

      Read the italicized text at the top of my comment. That was the text I was referring to, and it in turn refers to the previous argument.

    149. Re:Yuk by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 2, Insightful

      ICANN just told VeriSign, the .net registration monopoly, that they can charge whatever tax they want on domain name registrations. How is US control of ICANN protecting us from arbitrary fees?

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    150. Re:Yuk by drakaan · · Score: 1
      I'm not saying it is. In fact, in light of Verisign's new powers, I think resurrecting alternic is probably an immediate necessity.

      It's not like we couldn't distribute DNS better, or come up with a P2P-based solution that was robust *and* cheap. They can all kiss my ass, let's build something that *we* (the people who use the internet) own and manage.

      --
      "Murphy was an optimist" - O'Toole's commentary on Murphy's Law
    151. Re:Yuk by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

      Oops, didn't see that!

      <apology voice="litella">

      Never mind!

      </apology>

    152. Re:Yuk by sillybilly · · Score: 1

      Don't forget that before the UN, there was the idea of the League of Nations, and it all could have been done right after WW1, instead of WW2, which may not have even happened. When all the little guys have a forum to come together and collectively denounce some strongass aggressor, they feel a lot more comfortable to stick their heads out and say "No" outloud, because they can back each other. Hitler might have never got anywhere, because the world could have united against him a lot earlier.
      Nobody is stopping the US now from invading Iraq, partly because of the terrorist show that's put on, which looks very believable, but still, there is a lot of international buzz, which would not be there without the UN, a forum to come to some kind of consensus.
      Let's face it, the US has been the 2nd biggest oil producer in the World, after Saudi Arabia, all the way up to around 2003, and we just freshly ran out of oil to pump, both in Alaska, in the Gulf, and all over the mainland. You can't keep being the 2nd producer under these conditions, the economy is in a dump, and letting foreigners control your oilprices when you have none to rely on domestically, well, that doesn't sound too tasty either. And you could argue that as soon as they smelled that you're hooked and you crave it like a drug, they'd jack your prices through the roof and suck you dry, just like drugdealers do druggies. Still, it doesn't make it right. You could argue Hitler invaded Poland under similar pretenses, cuz he simply wanted what they had, their land, instead of their oil. It's not right.
      The correct way to deal with a drug problem is rehabilitation. It's tough, but sooner or later you have to get off the oil addiction, cuz right now you're just postponing it, for another decade, til the oil runs out in Iraq too. What happens then? What happens when there is nobody left to invade, and no oil left on the planet? Whatever happens then, do it now instead, and save some of your reputation.

  2. get over it... by rwven · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's not for the "rest of the world" to decide what we should do with what is our. They can get the heck over it

    1. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      They're taking our innernet jjjerrrrbssss!

    2. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh-oh....sounds like an jihad!

    3. Re:get over it... by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 1, Insightful

      More than 2/3rd of the internet users are noot from the usa. I think _WE_ non-USians should have a say too.

      --
      It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
      Be yourself no matter what they say
    4. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Huh, I thought 9/11 happened becuase we are into too many nations affairs? Which is it asshat?

    5. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then we roll our own
      Then please do and stop crying to us about it.

    6. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then we roll our own, you are further isolated with the REAL WORLD. Rot in your own shit. I bet you wake up still wondering why 9/11 happened. Nieve retard.

      You know, if the parent to this was a troll, why the hell wasn't that compilation of garbage...

    7. Re:get over it... by rwven · · Score: 1

      Then, with all due respect, ya'll should have invented it first... :-)

    8. Re:get over it... by neil.pearce · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yeh, take back your ARPANET, but say goodbye to European invented HTTP.
      Perhaps Slashdot will reinvent itself on Gopher?

    9. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are confusing ownership of the ball with control over the game.

      So take yer fucking ball home, twat. See what happens.

    10. Re:get over it... by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 1

      What 'own'? We already did, in everything apart the root dns servers! Or do you think that the cabling and routers just grew in Europe or what? If the world would decide that WE don't want YOU on OUR internet, then you'd be pretty quick on the losing side.

      --
      It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
      Be yourself no matter what they say
    11. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's exactly this attitude that makes some of us in the states ashamed to know the rest of you.

    12. Re:get over it... by Linus+Torvaalds · · Score: 1

      Fine. You can keep DNS so long as you stop using the WWW, URLs and HTTP. After all, they all belong to the British.

    13. Re:get over it... by rwven · · Score: 1

      then all three of you can leave...

    14. Re:get over it... by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 4, Funny

      And the British practically belong to us, so what's your point?

    15. Re:get over it... by cyberworm · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm thinking this was meant as sarcsm, but I'll bite. The internet as we know it, is running along just fine. Why we should let it out of our hands and into the hands of a multinational organization is beyond my scope of reasoning. I'm a bit hungover this morning, but aren't oppressive countries (i.e. against freedom of speech and though in this case) part of the UN? China anyone? So, say we hand over root to Kofi. Then what? My freedoms to publish and say what I want on the internet could possibly make me an international criminal or worse yet A TERRORIST!!!! Not having lived in other countries, all I can say is that I enjoy my freedom of speech, and keeping the internet in the united states control really dosen't seem like such a bad thing.

      Seriously this is one Bad Idea. I'll keep my intarweb like I like my slaves. FREE.

    16. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fair enough.
      We'll take TV back then. And the telephone. Ad finitum.

    17. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And in the meanwhile, we'll take down the backbones to the Internet. Fair enough?

    18. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What an arrogant statement. Why is it modded 'insightful'?

    19. Re:get over it... by rwven · · Score: 1

      In case you hadn't noticed, the british gov't isnt the one whining about the state of the internet.

    20. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is why you should not control it! No single nation shall have exclusive control on something as international as internet.

    21. Re:get over it... by Slugster · · Score: 1

      Okay, it's a deal.
      The current URL system is reaching capacity anyway and there's really other better ways available. XML net he said?

    22. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not just insightful, but brilliant, because Europe is in control of the HTTP protocol the same way the US is in control of the internet root servers.

      You have apparently been brainwashed by the corporate IP propaganda so severely you actually believe you can control an idea the same way you can control the physical implementation of that idea.

      Bravo!

    23. Re:get over it... by neil.pearce · · Score: 2, Interesting

      And the shutting down of US backbones will affect Europe how?

    24. Re:get over it... by rwven · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think you're missing the point...

      The US invented the internet. The internet has to be controlled (to a degree) from somewhere. If everything is and always has been working just fine from where it is, why would anyone want to move it? Because they want to change it....that's why. It belongs where it is.

      TV and the Telephone do not have one worldwide location of control. You can't control which country all of the billions of TV's are in... if there was only one, you could... do you get it now? Your argument is like saying the US wants to take all the server on the entire internet accross the whole globe and move them to the US, which is obviously not the case.

    25. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nope. Sorry. It started here and therefore we stay in control. If other countries don't like it then they are free to start their own new network.

    26. Re:get over it... by rwven · · Score: 1

      because it would seem that more people here (at the moment) agree with me than agree with you... it's been flopping back and forth from troll to flamebait to insightful for a while...

    27. Re:get over it... by JWW · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You've pretty succinctly explained why this shouldn't be done.

      This kind of turf war is likely to happen with a UN controlled internet.

      For example, what happens when countries like China, North Korea, and many more. Demand that the UN aid them in "filtering" the internet for their citizens.

      The root servers are pretty stable and things are working fine right now. Theres no need for a change to a venue where politics will rule the technology (I know there are politics already, but were talking orders of magnitude difference here).

    28. Re:get over it... by Rei · · Score: 1

      Reminds me of this page:

      Now that George W. Bush has been officially elected, single, sexy, American liberals - already a threatened species - will be desperate to escape.

      These lonely, afraid (did we mention really hot?) progressives will need a safe haven.

      You can help. Open your heart, and your home. Marry an American. Legions of Canadians have already pledged to sacrifice their singlehood to save our southern neighbours from four more years of cowboy conservatism.


      I love the "Aboot" link at the bottom of the page ;)

      --
      "/etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit is a gimp plugin and must be run by the gimp in order to be used."
    29. Re:get over it... by Luscious868 · · Score: 1

      Since the cabling is already laid and the routers are already in place, if you don't like that the US is in control you're free to start your own new network where you control things. As it stands, we started it and therefore we will control it.

    30. Re:get over it... by glindsey · · Score: 1

      Yes, and European-invented HTTP will be extremely exciting without the U.S.-invented graphical browser!

      I'm not trying to be flamebait, I'm just trying to point out the inanity of that comment.

    31. Re:get over it... by McFly777 · · Score: 1
      Not just insightful, but brilliant, because Europe is in control of the HTTP protocol the same way the US is in control of the internet root servers.
      But I don't hear anyone in the US screaming about the European control of HTTP. Except perhaps Microsoft, but they don't complain.... they just Embrace, Extend, Extinguish.
      --

      McFly777
      - - -
      "What do people mean when they say the computer went down on them?" -Marilyn Pittman
    32. Re:get over it... by rpdillon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm with rwven on this one.

      Normally, I'm all about fair treatment of citizens across the world, regardless of their country of origin. But in this case, I really believe the US should retain control.

      First off, no one is saying that the US is doing a bad job; they want change because they don't think it "feels right" that the US is controlling everything. This requires a certain amount of faith that a body like the UN can do as good of a job as the US has been doing. I would hate to have a switch take place, and then find that suddenly the services we take for granted are poorly managed and suffer outages.

      Secondly, I wouldn't trust a lot of countries in the world to handle the internet in "the right way." One of the thing that makes the internet great is the freedom of speech that is granted by default, and is only selectively taken away based on your jurisdiction. That is a value that the internet has inherited from the US, and it would be a dark day if some international organization (be it the UN or another) adopted a stricter policy on monitoring, "consumer protection", etc. What has made the internet so amazing is the freedom associated with it.

      Anyway, unless there is a legitimate gripe in how the internet is being run, I'd suggest leaving well enough alone.

    33. Re:get over it... by xstonedogx · · Score: 1

      That is absurd.

      You may as well be saying:
      "Yeh, take back your ball, but say goodbye to that game I thought you."

      You don't have that option. If you don't want to play with our ball on our terms and we don't want to share, you can get a ball of your own, but you can't force us to forget how to play the game.

    34. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Er... The US has been the one throwing around the word 'terrorist' more than the UN probably has in its whole existance...

      First have a look at the US laws, and the slow eroding of your civil rights : Then come back and make complaints about the UN.

    35. Re:get over it... by Hektor_Troy · · Score: 1
      I'll keep my intarweb like I like my slaves. FREE.
      What's the fun in that? Slaves are meant to be naked, tied up and begging to be ... hrmm ... why do I think that's not what you had in mind?
      --
      We do not live in the 21st century. We live in the 20 second century.
    36. Re:get over it... by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 1

      You know what? Stick to your illusions. If you think you either own, control or even have any authority on the internet, then you couldn't be more wrong. Europeans are trying to work out a solution WITH YOU, for YOUR convenience. If we would be acting in the spirit of your kneejerk reactions, then we would have started building our own root dns servers after the news from the USA came about the root servers.

      You control nothing. You're overlooking the point that apart from the root dns servers the USA doesn't own significantly more infrastructure than it should, compared to the number of internet users of usa/non-usa.

      --
      It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
      Be yourself no matter what they say
    37. Re:get over it... by isotope23 · · Score: 1

      Yeh, take back your ARPANET, but say goodbye to European invented HTTP.


      Fine, but you can say goodbye to TCP/IP......

      --
      Service guarantees Citizenship! Questions Guarantee GITMO.... Amerika Uber Alles!
    38. Re:get over it... by rufty_tufty · · Score: 1

      Remind me who invented HTTP? Try CERN. Any guesses where CERN is?

      --
      "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
    39. Re:get over it... by mallardtheduck · · Score: 1

      If you mean in terms of international debt, we only owe you about 200M UKP (~350 USD).

    40. Re:get over it... by rufty_tufty · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I realised I'd trolled.
      I suppose I should have added that the internet and technology in general comes about through international co-operation.

      Take the space program for instance, I think we all know where a lot of that technology was developed...

      --
      "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
    41. Re:get over it... by rufty_tufty · · Score: 1

      Please do, I much preferred ATM.

      --
      "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
    42. Re:get over it... by caseydk · · Score: 1


      The problem is that if a "democratic" route is tried, you can have China saying "we represent 16% of the Earth's population and we want X".

      Like I've said elsewhere, does anyone really want China, Iran, and Saudi Arabia determining ANYTHING about the use of the Internet?

    43. Re:get over it... by dapyx · · Score: 1

      Tim Berners-Lee made the first web browser (named WorldWideWeb), while working at CERN, in Switzerland.

      --
      I'm sorry, the number you have dialed is an imaginary number. Please rotate your phone 90 degrees and dial again.
    44. Re:get over it... by kerry-buckley · · Score: 2, Informative
      And the British practically belong to us
      No, just the British government.
    45. Re:get over it... by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 2, Insightful

      For example, what happens when countries like China, North Korea, and many more. Demand that the UN aid them in "filtering" the internet for their citizens.

      I'll tell you what. Nothing happens. So what if they demand? They can be voted down by A DEMOCRATIC PROCESS, involving more enlightened nations and the USA.

      Your point doesn't stand. The UN is more democratic on any day than the USA.

      --
      It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
      Be yourself no matter what they say
    46. Re:get over it... by Vlatro · · Score: 1

      The creation of the UN was the worst mistake in political history. Why should any power be given to a political body that represents so many conflicting ideas, they are incapable of making any decisions? They are a multi-billion dollar organization so lost in bureaucracy, that their only product are a few hundred yearly fact of findings reports that find no facts. It is with this view in mind that I say, give them the internet. Things like censorship and government control are much harder to implement and enforce on a global scale. They take authority no government should have, and tie their own hands with petty squabbling. Meanwhile, the almighty dollar will continue to shape standards, with the market and the technology evolving faster than they can keep up with.

    47. Re:get over it... by HairyCanary · · Score: 1
      Excellent. Go back and use it then, and delete Firefox from your system and forget it ever existed.

      Your comment does not make this whole argument any more rational...

      I do not see what the big deal is anyway, has ICANN really done a bad job? Why change something that is working, in favor of something else unproven?

      And as for the root nameservers... I'm less worried than that. As long as there is a full set of root servers in the United States, in case we need to cut ourselves loose if the rest of the DNS infrastructure is being successfully attacked.

    48. Re:get over it... by TheTanner · · Score: 1

      Well, if you want to be technical about it, then America belongs to Britain, and you guys all committed treason back on the 4 July 1776.
      Thats nearly 230 years of back taxes you'll be owing us.

      But it's OK, we'll just keep the HTTP protocol, telephones, and Linux (That'd be a European invention, cheers Linus), not to mention a few more choice bits of technology.

      And another point - if you own us, then why is your economy so weak compared to ours, and how come you can't spell colour properly?
      ;o)

    49. Re:get over it... by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 1

      It would probably be put in the hands of a committee where it would be possible that the likes of China could decide what was acceptable and what was not.

    50. Re:get over it... by I8TheWorm · · Score: 1

      You do.. which is why there are TLDs such as .ca, .ru, etc...

      --
      Saying Android is a family of phones is akin to saying Linux is a family of PCs.
    51. Re:get over it... by Greenisus · · Score: 2, Informative

      The majority of root servers are in the US, so I believe that would cause problems. Also, so much of the Internet is American. If that much went away all at once it would be devastating even if Europe's online.

    52. Re:get over it... by Rayonic · · Score: 1
      More than 2/3rd of the internet users are noot from the usa.
      Canadian?
    53. Re:get over it... by arose · · Score: 1

      They get explained that th UN only has "control of such governing functions as assigning TLDs and IPs."

      --
      Analogies don't equal equalities, they are merely somewhat analogous.
    54. Re:get over it... by texasaggie · · Score: 1

      Part of living with that freedom is accepting that there are views that don't agree with yours and that people expressing those views have the *right* to express them in the same way you do. I may not feel as comfortable with the fact that those other countries have laws that I would not like to live under but they are their laws and they have a right to govern their citizens.

      Perhaps the time is right for alternate root servers to expand out of the shadows. Isn't the point of the internet basic protocol connectivity so that others can add services on top of them? If an ISP in a foreign country (or the US for that matter) wants to use a another DNS server and treat it as a root server, why do I care?

    55. Re:get over it... by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 1

      You were beaten into signing a treaty by a bunch of rebels and the French. :o

      We have a weaker economy at about 120-135% of the UK's GDP per capita at roughly 5 times the population?

    56. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No you fucking idiot we don't want to change it, we want to make it more fucking democratic and not let it remain the hostage of your motherfucking idiot chimpanzee president, ASSHOLE!

    57. Re:get over it... by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 1

      We can accept that other countries have retarded laws that make talking about freedom a crime punishable by death, but we don't have to accept such countries controlling what we can and cannot see on the internet, and/or making it a crime in an international court to talk about things they don't like on the internet.

    58. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the interesting thing is who wanted it created in the first place... I believe the US created the monster - we'll let you kill it as well.

      When we Europeans finally get the EU sorted we'll be a good strong partner - and together we'll be able to work out some real solutions for the world.

    59. Re:get over it... by coopaq · · Score: 0
      Yeh, take back your ARPANET, but say goodbye to European invented HTTP.

      Are you serious? Don't tease me! Take it!

    60. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And I seem to recall a bunch of Candian farmers whipped the US. Even created the white house... just what colour was it before we burned it anyway?

    61. Re:get over it... by jjp5421 · · Score: 1

      Keep this up, and we might take our ball and go home... (Just Kidding)

    62. Re:get over it... by tomjen · · Score: 2, Informative

      The problem is the root servers. They are just dns servers, but if we dont have them, well - we better start remembering ips. I belive this is what he means by backbone.

      --
      Freedom or George Bush
    63. Re:get over it... by Sylver+Dragon · · Score: 1

      Just to throw in a "me too". The idea of the UN controlling the internet scares me a bit. With countries like Saudi Arabia and China having a say in what should be allowed on the internet, we might end up with some universal restrictions on it, which are ludicrious. I won't say that ICANN is perfect, far from it, but I don't think that UN control is a step in the right direction. With the current US control, a lot of freedom is there by default, is it perfect? No, but it's better than Iran would allow us.
      Personally, I would like to see an international body controlling it, with a charter, which garantees a high level of freedom, I just don't think this is possible. Insted, I would rather see control of the internet get de-centralized. Each TLD should be controlled by a different country, with a few left as international domains. E.g. .uk is controlled wholly by the UK, with no outside interferance; .dl is Germany (Deutschland); and so on. And, as far as I know, this is mostly how it is, the problem seems to be that, since the Internet basically started in the US, the US has defaulted to taking .com, .net, .gov, etc. for itself. At this point, I think it's worth saying that getting the US over to .us is a lost cause, so just let it go and lets try to build out from here in the right fashion. Hand full, unbridaled, control of the country domains over to the respective countries. And create a few new, international, TLD's for the international body to control. Then, each country can sort out, for itself, how their domain will be used.

      --
      Necessity is the mother of invention.
      Laziness is the father.
    64. Re:get over it... by lophophore · · Score: 2, Funny

      "European invented HTTP"

      Since when is Tim Berners-Lee a European?

      The man is British!

      --
      there are 3 kinds of people:
      * those who can count
      * those who can't
    65. Re:get over it... by joncue · · Score: 1

      Quit spelling COLOR wrong, it's driving me nuts...And if some Canadian farmers whipped us so bad, how come Canada is still our bitch..

    66. Re:get over it... by Metaldsa · · Score: 1

      or be hated for having power and occasionally abusing it (no matter how much good you do in the world)

    67. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      We can accept that other countries have retarded laws that make talking about freedom a crime punishable by death, but we don't have to accept such countries controlling what we can and cannot see on the internet, and/or making it a crime in an international court to talk about things they don't like on the internet.

      Good, then you're in the perfect mindset to understand that some other people don't want to accept the current situation: a country with retarded laws (e.g. PATRIOT) and foreign policy (do a really need to give examples?) has sole control.

    68. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Linux (That'd be a European invention, cheers Linus)

      Google for "derivative work", then go ahead and look up s'more words like "unix" and "Bell Labs".

    69. Re:get over it... by Sylver+Dragon · · Score: 1
      all I can say is that I enjoy my freedom of speech

      • Someone should kill <insert public official here>
      • I support Al Queda
      • The US government should be overthrown through violence
      Try putting these in your blog (as actual statements of belief, not just discussion), in the US. Before long several men in dark suits will be at your door asking you to "please" come with them. "Please" of course meaning, we have the guns and if you don't we will shoot you. Yes, they are inflamitory statements, and probably deserve attention, but the first one is a criminal offense if you mention the president. And the last is an outright criminal offense by itself. Freedom of speech only extends so far in the US, we've allowed it to be eroded quite a bit in the name of "safety".
      On the other hand, it still beats the hell out of the rules in some other places.


      --
      Necessity is the mother of invention.
      Laziness is the father.
    70. Re:get over it... by philipgar · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The UN is more democratic? The first question is what part of the UN would run it?

      I could just imagine the UN Security council trying to run it.... Wait, nothing would ever happen because you need unanimous consent of all nations involved to do anything. Getting some of these to agree is a far fetched notion.

      Of course we could always let the general assembly run it. There's a brilliant idea. Give the United States as much say over the internet as every other tiny country in the world. Thats fair and democratic?

      They could also do it by population. In that case China has a huge advantage. That would be great.

      Under any system we'd allow the wrong people to get our hands on it. Is letting china, libya, cuba, north korea etc telling the rest of the wold what to do with the internet really the definition of DEMOCRATIC PROCESS?

      A big part of the problem is the UN has no accountability. When the UN starts using it to push their viewpoint (as the topic said universal net access) what then. What do we do when the internet becomes a vehicle for corruption? Who do we call and say change this? Someone will be getting rich while the internet collapses. Currently ICANN doesn't have the power to tax the net like this, or to create filters etc. In the hands of the UN. . . who knows what power it'll have. The UN has zero accountability. If ICANN tryied this now they'd be stopped in a second.

      What I find the most amusing about all of this is how so many Europeans are all about this idea. As if they'd actually have a say over it? It wouldn't be the EU's internet, it would be the world. Under the UN that means security council or general assembly. Tell France or Germany that Uganda has as much say over the nets infrastructure as they do. Or that China has more say (due to bribing other countries) or whatever. The EU would lose out on the deal, but the only possible thing that would make them like it is the fact that it hurts the US more than it hurts them (kind of like Kyoto). Stabbing yourself to hurt the US is not a good idea.

      While maybe some more international control could be used for the internet, I would say that there is no reason for the UN to have any say over it. The UN is corrupt and getting worse. There's zero accountability. Whats the best option then? Well tell us legitimate problems with the internet as its being run and maybe we'll examine them on that basis.

      Phil

    71. Re:get over it... by rhaig · · Score: 1

      maybe that's because the US isn't a democracy.... It's a democratic republic.

      --
      "We are not tolerant people. We prefer drastically effective solutions"
    72. Re:get over it... by pete6677 · · Score: 1

      Are you trying to imply that there is ANY country in the world where you can publicly threaten to kill it's leader and expect no consequences, or even an investigation by law enforcement?

    73. Re:get over it... by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      You mean we don't have to hold on to the pop-up, Macromedia-riddled crap portions of the internet? WOO-HOO!

    74. Re:get over it... by rwven · · Score: 1

      wow....you sound so unbiased. i can see why now they didn't want to hand anything over....

    75. Re:get over it... by rwven · · Score: 1

      in separate countries as they raced each other there....

    76. Re:get over it... by rwven · · Score: 1

      also, if 2/3 aren't from the US, then that means 1/3 ARE from the US and i'd bet money that's a majority vs the amount any other country has. granted your data is probably deeply flawed and the number is prolly way different, but were your information true, you just won the case for the US....

    77. Re:get over it... by doshell · · Score: 1

      I think he's just trying to imply that "freedom of speech", like everything else, does not have an absolute meaning, and as such (to get back OT) the rest of the world shouldn't be forced to adopt the US's subjective interpretation on the matter, namely by playing US's rules on what is (not) acceptable to do on the Internet.

      --
      Score: i, Imaginary
    78. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I do not see what the big deal is anyway, has ICANN really done a bad job?

      Has ICANN done any job? Okay, I'm a big fan of .museum but apart from that?

    79. Re:get over it... by illc0mm · · Score: 1

      That's fine, we'll just take back our TCP/IP and DNS, and Mosaic/Netscape/IE/Mozilla (yeah, Mozilla becase it was based on Mosaic baby)...

      BTW as someone who's used it Gopher rocked, University of Michigan screwed it over with IP nonsense.

      -illc0mm

    80. Re:get over it... by bingo4000 · · Score: 1

      heck, Everything(almost) that matters is invented in the USA. Then when everyone who is willing has paid top dollar for it, it gets refined by the Japanese the Koreans, and (gasp!)copied by the Chinese.

    81. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      TV and the Telephone do not have one worldwide location of control.

      Wrong! (A) There are treaties which say don't screw with radio transmissions beyond your borders, (B) The ITU exists to ensure that telephones work even to foreign countries.

      Why do they want change? According to TFA because the USA is screwing it up at the moment, with TLD proliferation, and spam clogging up poor countries pipes. No they do not all want viagra.

    82. Re:get over it... by m50d · · Score: 1

      The internet has one worldwide location of control only through a quirk of history (it was originally solely in the US). IIRC there are 8 authoritative root nameservers, they just all happen to be in the US. They don't have to be. Every country could run their own. That would cause a bit of trouble when they disagreed though. But having them all in the US is a bad idea, it makes the network too centralised for a start.

      --
      I am trolling
    83. Re:get over it... by m50d · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'd rather rely on the world as a whole retaining freedom of speech (Enough countries can vote down China or anywhere else) than be entirely dependent on the US retaining freedom of speech, especially the way things have been going over there recently. But maybe that's just me.

      --
      I am trolling
    84. Re:get over it... by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 1

      Click here for data.

      Your thinking is deeply flawed. People like you make the world embrace hostility and paranoia instead of unity and cooperation. It clearly shows that you have no idea what it means to live in a democracy, which is no wonder as you live in a plutocracy.

      If your idea of fairness is that the biggest country should have everything while the smaller countries which make up the absolute majority should have nothing, then you really should be living in the middle ages not in the 21th century.

      --
      It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
      Be yourself no matter what they say
    85. Re:get over it... by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Amen to that, and my reservations extend to a number of European nations as well. Can you imagine the changes that'd be made if the 'hate speech' laws of many European nations were instituted as an internet standard? Sell Nazi memorabilia in the U.S. (legal there) and the U.N. committee controlling the internet revokes your domain name, fines you, and bans you from getting a new domain for the next ten years.

      And this is mild compared to the 'standards' that would be championed by the lunatics in the Middle East, or China.

      No thanks. I'll take the current system over whatever evil the U.N. might to do it any day of the week. As much as I distrust, and often despise, my own government, it's proven itself more than capable of doing the job without trampling all over the rights of individual users.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    86. Re:get over it... by jbolden · · Score: 1

      I'd love the rest of the world to kick us out. Then we wouldn't have to pay for huge army to defend you all from one another, so no more troops in 100 countries. We wouldn't have to have any more trade so people in America could go back to the decent standards of living we had in the 1950s before there was much international trade. We could go back to defining our own standards for trade without GATT and WTO crushing any attempts to introduce consummer safety or quality regulations.

      So what was the downside again?

    87. Re:get over it... by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      It clearly shows that you have no idea what it means to live in a democracy

      You mean dictatorship by mob rule? Yeah, democracy is a really great idea...if you're one of the mob. No, I'll pass on democracy, thanks. A republic sharply bounded by an overriding constitution works just fine for me.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    88. Re:get over it... by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Europeans are trying to work out a solution WITH YOU, for YOUR convenience.

      Smoke a lot of crack, do you? The system works JUST FINE RIGHT NOW, and if it ain't broke don't fix it. So far no one has bothered to explain WHY things should be changed when they're working just fine as they are.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    89. Re:get over it... by Yikes777 · · Score: 1

      I agree with the parent - get over it.

      If a country doesn't want to use an internet whose infrastructure is mostly located in the U.S, then that country should build it's own freaking backbone. Make no mistake about it, the Internet is NOT a public service. Every access point to the Internet goes through some sort of ISP that charges for said access.

      The entire world thought this Internet thing was a great idea. The organizations that built the infrastructure decided to let the rest of the world in on it. I guarantee you the rest of the world didn't jump on for free.

      Yes, because it's such a big part of our lives, it's natural to think that someone should regulate the Internet. However, it's not like anyone forced any foreign organizations to register a domain with ICANN.

      Let the foreign countries build their own infrastructure then come up with some sort of access link to the U.S. Internet. There's no need to bring politics and legislation into it!
    90. Re:get over it... by spun · · Score: 1

      Well, look, the US is in no position to demand anything. If the rest of the world wants to set up their own root servers and use them, the US is pretty screwed. The US may have invented the Internet, but that doesn't mean anything. The other countries around the world all paid for their part of it, if they want to elect someone else to take care of root DNS, they can and there isn't anything the US can do.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    91. Re:get over it... by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      The US government should be overthrown through violence

      It's perfectly legal to discuss the violent overthrow of the United States, at least within the United States. What you can't do is conspire to actually bring this state of affairs about.

      For a popular example, Penn and Teller did just that on a recent episode of Bullshit! and so far as I'm aware, they aren't being charged with any crime, or even being investigated.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    92. Re:get over it... by jxs2151 · · Score: 1
      Linux (That'd be a European invention, cheers Linus)

      So a kid making a copy of an OS (Unix...American) qualifies as an invention now?

    93. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then the other siad countries can build their own damned internet.

      Dont' like the way it is? Don't use it. How hard is that?

    94. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, we live in a capitalist society. When you invent something, you get to keep it and most, if not all, of the money made off of it. In this case, because we created the internet, we should control it.

    95. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what says that this will happen? This is just the usual total US paranoia. How about you turn that around and ask why other countries must tolerate your views on everything? Now, in the UN, USA have veto. You know what that is? Well, you see, it means that USA can block everything that they dont like, like say oh, that some country other than USA tries to forbid or make it a crime for all to talk about freedom on the internet so USA would still have control over the net but its all humankind that have the absolute control over it instead of one nation. Wouldnt that be better and more Christian, love and peace and stuff like that?

    96. Re:get over it... by Lodragandraoidh · · Score: 1

      Actually it's a Posix compliant OS - not a copy of Unix.

      And furthermore it is GPL'd (another invention of Americans) which means we can freely copy, modify, fold, spindle and mutilate to our heart's content (actually that goes for all the W3C standards as well, including http).

      --

      Lodragan Draoidh
      The more you explain it, the more I don't understand it. - Mark Twain
    97. Re:get over it... by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 1

      You really believe this bullshit over there?

      --
      It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
      Be yourself no matter what they say
    98. Re:get over it... by clesters · · Score: 1

      While I do agree that the US is in no position to demand anything, I don't agree that the US would be screwed if other countries set up their own root servers.

      I think that it would be the other way around.
      Take Japan for example. While they have a rich network structure in their own country, a great portion of their connectivity to the rest of the world runs through the US(Chicago Actually). Imagine the infrastructure changes that would be required if the UN started assigning IPs and they conflicted with the US's assignment, thus forcing the US to shut the doors on the rest of the world.

      I think that it would affect users in the US as well, but not nearly as badly as it would affect the rest of the world. I don't think that the average internet user in the US is doing lookups for domains outside the US nearly as much as it is the other way around.

    99. Re:get over it... by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 1

      Because it's not right, not democratic and not fair. It's like a good dictator. Even if someone is a good dictator THAT DOESN'T MAKE IT RIGHT. And in time it can turn out that good dictator isn't that good at all.

      --
      It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
      Be yourself no matter what they say
    100. Re:get over it... by ifwm · · Score: 1

      Right. And The UN will never need any concessions from China.

      You're new to this politics thing aren't you?

      What you fail to understand (or acknowledge) is that the political nature of the UN virtually GUARANTEES that input into the process of controlling internet content (which is tremendously valuable) will be traded.

      I don't see why being democratic is a good thing in this case.

    101. Re:get over it... by ifwm · · Score: 1

      Until they decide they want more.

    102. Re:get over it... by cpeterso · · Score: 1


      The UN is more democratic on any day than the USA.

      Sorry I forgot, but when exactly are the UN elections? When do member nations' citizens get to elect their representatives? When do those member nations' representatives get to elect the UN Security Council members?

    103. Re:get over it... by jxs2151 · · Score: 1
      Actually it's a Posix compliant OS - not a copy of Unix.

      You are correct that it is a Posix compliant OS. It is also a copy of Minix which is a copy of Unix ("MINIX is a free UNIX clone..." Andrew S. Tanenbaum http://www.cs.vu.nl/~ast/minix.html)

      So, the point is still that Linux was not "invented" by anyone in Europe, it was copied from the work of a European that was copied from the work of Americans.

    104. Re:get over it... by Gerdazech · · Score: 1

      Freedom of speech? One thing I hear from most people in the United States is that your free, and you have freedom of speech. But if you honestly belive that, well your really not paying too much attention. Silver Dragon had it right when he/she was talking about posting "I support Al Queda" in your blog. Better yet, since your country is so free, why don't you start talking about how much you support Al Queda on a city bus.
      But lets not even cover that, what about your media. If they are so free in their freedom of speech, why is it illigal to talk about/ discuss/ show any pictures of caskets coming back from Iraq?
      You only free to say what you want if saying what you want is not against anything the general public wants to belive.

    105. Re:get over it... by Darkman,+Walkin+Dude · · Score: 1

      This is getting tiresome. The amount of incredibly bigoted and anti-anywhere-but-america comments in this story defies belief. Really folks, here's a hint: Ignorance and arrogance go hand in hand.

      There are plenty of lackwits claiming the US invented the internet. To be accurate, DARPA and the first packet switching network were invented in America. HTTP and the WWW were invented in Europe by the efforts of quite a few people, in particular Tim Berners-Lee. I also see plenty of "freedom belongs to the US, thats where the internet should stay" sort of fat rolling down lots of chins.

      Newsflash boys and girls, the american version of freedom including CNN, regular brainwashing techniques including singing hail to the flag every morning before school, and generally drinking the kool-aid of whatever administration seems to be in power at the time does not constitute freedom. Well maybe it does to you, but not to most others. First amendment? I'll take the universal declaration of human rights over this any day thanks. And lets not forget, this is the country where a majority of the youth (the youth, mind you) want more government control of the press. Nice.

      The rest of the world is making noises about root servers because they see the inward looking imperial monstrosity the america is becoming and they want to get the hell away as fast as possible. You say you own the internet... well here's the acid test:

      Turn it off.

      Go for it, I double dragon dare you. See how many hours it takes for the rest of the world to reconfigure to new servers. Then america will have ameriweb, and the rest of the world will have the world wide web. Thats what you want, isn't it? Maybe I was wrong when I said hours, try minutes. And the same thing will happen when the inevitable occurs, and one of your bought and paid for politicians decides to knock someone off the web that they don't want to be heard.

      And the UN, well, the UN has its own problems. Its interesting to see that one of the main sponsors of the UN is america, and cleaning up after the messes america leaves is partly the job of the UN. So we have an organisation that with one hand is trying to fix things, and on the other hand has one of its primary sponsors breaking them. I'm not sure whether its PR or just the typical madness of america, but is it any wonder the UN is fairly ineffectual, with that kind of schizophrenic foundation?

      I even saw some other luminary posting up that the american record in Iraq is far better than the UN record in the Congo. I don't even know where to begin with this level of ignorance. The UN didn't invade the Congo, and if there were US troops raping Iraqi women, do you think you would ever, ever hear about it? Gotta love that freedom of speech there. Also lets not forget that the US reconstruction efforts in Iraq are, to put it mildly, ineffectual. I saw a link to it on BBC the last day but I really couldn't be bothered to look it up. Obviously enough the buffoon's UID was wyatt earp.

      So should the UN have control over the internet? Of course not, but I'd say the reason for that is america, not in spite of america. If the internet is ever to have a future in real freedom (a word I am beginning to dislike almost as much as terrorism, for the same reason, some jackass is always braying it loudly to back up his or her skewed point of view; isn't that nice now, americans has polluted the value of the word freedom to make it practically worthless) it needs its very own independant body to look after it, not international, but transnational. A few words from the hackers manifesto come to mind here...

      This is our world now... the world of the electron and the switch, the beauty of the baud. We make use of a service already existing without paying for what could be dirt-cheap if it wasn't run by profiteering gluttons, and you call us criminals. We explore... and you call us criminals. We seek after knowledge... and you call us criminals. We exist without skin color, without nationality, without religious bias... and you call us criminals.

    106. Re:get over it... by Sylver+Dragon · · Score: 1

      Fairly close. I was trying to point out that the US's version of "freedom of speech" isn't absolute. Granted, the US does allow you to get away with saying just about anything, there are still statements which we self-censor because it would draw the attention of the FBI and they would just generally dick with your life for a while.
      On the other hand, I challenge anyone to point out a country where this isn't the case. In both France and Germany, both of which are fairly liberal about their laws, any overt statements supporting the Nazi's is a no-no, and teaching Scientology in the Germany can be a good way to learn about their legal system. The Netherlands might be as close as you can get, as I haven't heard much comming out of there, which restricted free speech; but then, I've not had the chance to study much of their laws either.
      Still, my view is that speech on the interenet should be as close to absolutly free as possible. If you can't show direct harm to a person by anything which is posted on a web site, I see no reason it should be removed.
      All that said, I don't see why the US would, or should, give up control of the current TLD's, with the exception of country TLD's. Country domains should be wholly controlled, and administered by the applicable country. But, given that inertia has placed .com, .net, etc. firmly in US hands, I see no reason to change that. Like most arguments about who controls new territory, the US got there first, and has the resources to keep it. And, since the internet is inherently extensible, we should simply make new territory in it for everyone else.

      --
      Necessity is the mother of invention.
      Laziness is the father.
    107. Re:get over it... by dodobh · · Score: 3, Insightful

      aren't oppressive countries (i.e. against freedom of speech and though in this case) part of the UN? China anyone?

      aren't oppressive countries (i.e. against freedom of speech and though in this case) part of the UN? The USA anyone?

      Living outside the US, all I can say is that having the US control the Internet is a bad thing.

      --
      I can throw myself at the ground, and miss.
    108. Re:get over it... by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      You want the internet under the DEMOCRATIC control of the U.N., where more than one-half of the world's population lives under the thumb of brutal dictators? Fucking great idea, that.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    109. Re:get over it... by arose · · Score: 1

      Just responding in the context of the article, I dislike both options equaly.

      --
      Analogies don't equal equalities, they are merely somewhat analogous.
    110. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I'm deleting Firefix, can you please forget "English" and learn your native American indian lingo?
      Thanks.

    111. Re:get over it... by iCEBaLM · · Score: 1

      Linux is not a copy of minix, thanks for playing, you fail at life.

    112. Re:get over it... by WiKKeSH · · Score: 1

      The UN is more democratic on any day than the USA.

      This was modded as insightful? Excuse me, but how is a 'government' (maybe the word council is more appropriate) that is summised of officials who are appointed, not elected, more democratic than a government like the U.S.?

      I'm not a fan of democracy (tyrrany of the mob, yada yada yada) but your comment is absolutely obsurd.

    113. Re:get over it... by jxs2151 · · Score: 1

      Coming from a guy who's website contains the Apache test page, that doesn't mean a whole lot.

    114. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You wrongly assume most governments on Earth want free speech.

    115. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most of the people on this Earth I do not want in my democracy. I think the 200+ national borders that exist prove most humans feel the same way.

    116. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is it me or was Tim Berners Lee English =)
      We'll have our web back now, cheers

      Personally i'm not happy with the US running the net, surely a world wide organisation would have world wide interests instead of gung ho American ones.

    117. Re:get over it... by iq+in+binary · · Score: 1

      Sorry my friend, but "Freedom" of speech has been long gone for over 2 decades now. Little as you know, we have effectively eradicated 5 of our ammendment rights. Don't believe me? Try stating publically that the the men responsible for London or 9/11 had a good reason to do so. I'll bet it less than a month before your life is a living hell.

      Try to open carry a firearm, I DARE you; unless you're in Texas.......

      I'll give you my paychecks from this day forward if you refuse to honor a search warrant not signed by a Judge without getting shot!

      And if you can gaurantee %100 that you will undergo a trial by peers for the effort, I'll literally have a sex change and be your sex-toy for eternity.

      The sad thing is, I'm serious. Congress has voted away so many of our rights that our fore-fathers died for in the first place that I would consider myself a hypocrite to call myself a Citizen of the USA. The good 'ol United States of America doesn't exist anymore, it has been replaced with the Democratic Union of Greedy Politicians. Said union votes on what makes them the most money, which means turning a population into easily controllable, tax paying people.

      Don't believe me? Look at the laws being passed recently and the companies that pay good money for lobbyists. Marijuana is still illegal, guess how many congressman owe campaign money to perscription drug companies? Just enough to keep it that way. Alcohol (the deadliest "whim" drug known to man) is still legal, guess how much alcohol manufacturers contribute to lobbying? More than any other industry combined.

      Our government is run by money nowadays, and by those with enough of it to invest in the interest of making even more.

      --
      Of all the Universal Constants, here's one I know: Nice guys finish last ;)
    118. Re:get over it... by iCEBaLM · · Score: 1

      What, someone can't *just* install their OS anymore?

      And who cares what my web page says? Linux is still not a copy of minix. You fail at life.

    119. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. The amount of people talking about CERN inventing the http defies belief. It's like Kia bragging about inventing the sonata.

      2. Yes... we want the rest of the world to start their own internet. Nobody in America would give a flying shit, as you have nothing on the internet of any value to us. Before you say linux was invented by a Fin, let me say that linux is a piece of shit.

      3. The only thing on the news of any value is the weather about 50% of the time. I could care less if their report about some third world shithole is biased.

      4. The only bad thing about Iraq is that we have wasted American lives in the process of trying to get a bunch of retards who want to live like it is 0004 AD while beating their women with sticks, to give us oil on the cheap.

      5. When is the last time anybody gave a flying shit about anything somebody from Ireland had to say? The only thing you people have perfected is sitting at a bar all day drinking yourselves retarded.

    120. Re:get over it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you want HTTP so badly, why don't you take it? Seriously, it's just a protocol. It's not even a particularly good one; just completely ubiquitous.

      We'll take the personal computer back. Enjoy your web now, ass clown.

    121. Re:get over it... by hkmwbz · · Score: 1
      "Excellent. Go back and use it then, and delete Firefox from your system and forget it ever existed."
      Or use Opera. European and all. And has been around for ten years.
      --
      Clever signature text goes here.
    122. Re:get over it... by cyberworm · · Score: 1

      well, I'm not sure what part of the country you're from, but you are guaranteed the right to openly carry a firearm pretty much anywhere you go. I guess from what I hear, there are some exceptions, which totally boggles the mind, but I suppose if that's what people in those communities support, then so be it.

      When it comes to freedom of speech and saying what you want, it also comes with heavy responsibility. Sure, I could say "I support Al Queda" and in doing so, I'd have to be prepared for the consequences of that action. We are at war you know. I mean, rewind about 60 or so years, and claim to support the nazi party in your blog. See how far that gets you.

      Tell ya what, call the cops, and get that illegal warrant. Let's see who gets shot first, me or the cops. I'd do what I could to make sure the state police know to bring some body bags when they come out here. Hell, at least I'll have your money for my legal fund.

      Maybe I'm still idealistic and would like to think the people I vote for had my best interests in mind, but I guess I am jaded enough to agree that it's more about money than ideals in the good ol' house.

      Oh yeah, someone said something about violently overthrowing the government and claiming that it's illegal to say... I could be wrong, but isn't there some kind of official document that basically says the same thing, only with different words. Something about "should the need arise" comes to mind, but I can't remember where I have heard that. ;)

      Anyways, I'm once again wicked hung over and ate waaay too much at Steak and Shake, and said waaaaay too much to our waitress. To sum up, there could be more oppressive places to live, say whatever you want though, you should expect to be questioned when you start preaching violence and hate. You're threatening to hurt others, or supporting a group that does, then the men in black suits are doing their job protecting me and my family from nutbags like you that would blow me up if given the chance. Sorry I' don't specifically mean you, just saying that as an example.

    123. Re:get over it... by m50d · · Score: 1

      No, just that the average government on Earth is no worse than the US government. I have more faith in humanity as a whole than in america.

      --
      I am trolling
    124. Re:get over it... by ShortDaddy · · Score: 1

      Why does every half-baked moron confuses "freedom of speech" with "freedom from consequences" in discussing the issue?

  3. Cycle of the ages by kalpol · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Whenever a new area of freedom opens up, eventually government seeks to control it. We are never really free, just constantly staying one step ahead of the beaurocracy.

    --
    12:50 - press return.
    1. Re:Cycle of the ages by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      crappy attempt for karma. lol

    2. Re:Cycle of the ages by Dr.+Transparent · · Score: 1

      So, so true.

    3. Re:Cycle of the ages by krbvroc1 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I have a different take on this. My experience has shown that whenever a new area of freedom opens up, some group abuses it, requiring regulation/oversight.

    4. Re:Cycle of the ages by Kojiro+Ganryu+Sasaki · · Score: 1

      No. It does not REQUIRE regulation. 1: New area of freedom opens up* 2: Some people "abuse" it 3: People in power uses the "abuse" as an excuse for regulation (this one is without the "profit!" part, but i'm sure you can squeeze that in somewhere)

    5. Re:Cycle of the ages by de+Bois-Guilbert · · Score: 1

      Just as well. For every 10 people who can handle freedom, there are 90 who are bound to use it to destroy themeselves or others.

    6. Re:Cycle of the ages by GileadGreene · · Score: 1
      The cycle of the ages (as revealed in the Principia Discordia):
      1. Chaos
      2. Discord
      3. Confusion
      4. Bureaucracy
      5. The Aftermath
      We are pretty clearly in the 4th age, or "Bureaucracy". The 5th age, or "The Aftermath", cannot be far away. Prepare yourself for an apocalyptic transition back to "Chaos"...
    7. Re:Cycle of the ages by That's+Unpossible! · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You know, there's an alternative to regulation. It's called education and responsibility.

      However, lazy folks just prefer handing control over to someone else, and pay lip service to ideas like "freedom" and "liberty."

      --
      Ironically, the word ironically is often used incorrectly.
    8. Re:Cycle of the ages by zev1983 · · Score: 1

      I believe to two views are complementary.

    9. Re:Cycle of the ages by Politburo · · Score: 1

      You know, there's an alternative to regulation. It's called education and responsibility.

      That's correct. However, history has taught us that responsibility is severly lacking in many places, notably commercial entities. Thus, the need for regulation.

    10. Re:Cycle of the ages by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am so sick of cry babies not getting their own way pushing for regulation of everything they do not agree with.

      Fortunately in a free society those who do not agree with something are allowed to speak their mind.

    11. Re:Cycle of the ages by krgallagher · · Score: 1
      "My experience has shown that whenever a new area of freedom opens up, some group abuses it, requiring regulation/oversight."

      Do I hear an Oil for TLD scandal brewing?

      --

      Insert Generic Sig Here:

    12. Re:Cycle of the ages by Damek · · Score: 1

      Who's going to take responsibility for education?

    13. Re:Cycle of the ages by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think OPEC and Haliburton should compete for the .oil TLD management.

    14. Re:Cycle of the ages by That's+Unpossible! · · Score: 1

      No, you completely missed my point.

      In 99% of the cases, education and responsibility on the part of CITIZENS would negate the need for regulation or government oversight.

      --
      Ironically, the word ironically is often used incorrectly.
    15. Re:Cycle of the ages by Politburo · · Score: 1

      If "not getting your own way" means "getting your hand cut off in a thresher", then call me a crybaby.

      My post did not discuss regulation of the Internet, but regulation in general. If you don't think that there is a need for regulation in general, please pick up a fucking history book.

      Unfortunately in a free society people like you are allowed to remain completely ignorant of the past and the efforts of our ancestors that paid in blood to get us where we are now.

    16. Re:Cycle of the ages by shaper · · Score: 2, Insightful

      My experience has shown that whenever a new area of freedom opens up, some group abuses it, requiring regulation/oversight.

      Pardon me if this sounds offensive, I don't mean it to be, but my first (and second and third) impression from this statement is that you like control and telling other people what to do or how to do it. Some people prefer consensus and commonly held mores of behavior to authoritarian approaches with rigid rules and regulations, as in level 3 vs. level 2 of Kohlberg's stages of moral development. However, from what I remember of my college psychology, the majority of people feel most comfortable with the concept that something is right or wrong because some authority says so. Your view may be most typical in the general population.

    17. Re:Cycle of the ages by Sylver+Dragon · · Score: 1
      1. New area of freedom opens up
      2. Some people "abuse" it
      3. People in power uses the "abuse" as an excuse for regulation
      4. Said people use regulation to get themselves money
      5. Profit!!!
      There ya go.

      On a serious note, yes, this is what tends to happen. Governments, and the people in them seek to control everything, because, anything which is uncontrolled is a threat to their power. I think this is why the UN wants to control the internet. Most of the member states rely on it at this point, and with the US in control of it, they are, in some small way, under the thumb of the US. Since the UN is seen as less of a threat than the US, they would rather have control there. The US, on the other hand, really has no reason to reliquish control, so it won't.

      --
      Necessity is the mother of invention.
      Laziness is the father.
    18. Re:Cycle of the ages by That's+Unpossible! · · Score: 1

      The parents, the community. Not the government.

      --
      Ironically, the word ironically is often used incorrectly.
    19. Re:Cycle of the ages by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok, how do we educate the spammers to stop spamming?

    20. Re:Cycle of the ages by krbvroc1 · · Score: 2, Informative
      Its not offensive, it just seems that you have developed a psychological profile of me from one sentence.

      I simply said that 'my experience' (as in life) is that regulation/oversight is typically created because of a few bad apples abusing the system/our freedoms.

      Furthermore, regulation/oversight is not synonymous, as you imply, with authoritarian approaches. A regulation can be the result of a consensus agreement. Also, regulation and oversight are not necessarily the same thing either.

    21. Re:Cycle of the ages by That's+Unpossible! · · Score: 1

      Ok, how do we educate the spammers to stop spamming?

      Point 1. Do you think any government regulation could ever stop spammers on an international network?

      Point 2. You don't educate the spammers, you filter them out. We need better technology, better protocols. SMTP is great for anonymous email. For those of us who want to get some work done, let's phase over to a new protocol (or add enhancements with ESMTP).

      --
      Ironically, the word ironically is often used incorrectly.
    22. Re:Cycle of the ages by Politburo · · Score: 1

      Education and responsibility on the part of citizens would subsequently mean that commercial entities were similarly educated and responsible, since they are ultimately made up of citizens. So I suppose I don't disagree with your premise.

      However, given that people tend to act radically different between their personal and business personas, my statement above is quite naieve. I'm not completely sure how education and responsibility on the part of citizens would eliminate the need for 99% of regulations.

      In short, we have many of our regulations because of one problem: greed. I'm not sure that's something that can be easily changed.

    23. Re:Cycle of the ages by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh huh.

      Cuz that's worked soooo well in the past.

      You anti-regulation "fair tax" types. Just desperate to return to dark-age feudalism, I swear.

    24. Re:Cycle of the ages by swelke · · Score: 1

      Good point. I would mention that Ben Franklin quote about now, except this is slashdot so everybody knows one or another mangled form of it.

      This has got to be about the fifth time today I've wished I hadn't wasted all of my mod points yesterday.

      --
      Have you ever wondered How to Take Over
    25. Re:Cycle of the ages by tenchiken · · Score: 1

      The Difference is, usually we only have to worry about our own government locking down power. Now we have to worry about the Chinese and Syrian Governments?

    26. Re:Cycle of the ages by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Ok, how do we educate the spammers to stop spamming?

      We need a new economic system. In which the goal would be not to "make profit", but "benefit society". Spammers would go away automatically.

      Point 2. You don't educate the spammers, you filter them out. We need better technology, better protocols. SMTP is great for anonymous email. For those of us who want to get some work done, let's phase over to a new protocol (or add enhancements with ESMTP).

      This is a social problem, one that arises from a flaw in our economic system. Throwing more technology at it will not solve anything.

    27. Re:Cycle of the ages by BitGeek · · Score: 1


      So, it seems, that because a small minority of companies are immoral, you think we should hand over power to an organization that is unelected, unaccountable, and made up *exclusively* of people who will trade their morals for more power?

      Government will always be more corrupt than corporations-- the reason being is that when corporations rip people off, people tend to stop doing business with them, stop working for them, or stop holding their stock.

      Government, on the other hand, is not accountable to people, and backs up all of its actions with force. Thus government attracts those who want to put guns in other people's faces to get their way.

      I don't know why you think human nature is so bad that corporations have to be regulated-- but it just makes no sense to say that human nature is so bad that we need to give power to humans who have no accountability to regulate the ones you're afraid of.

      --
      Yeah, and you guys panned the ipod too: http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/10/23/ 1816257
    28. Re:Cycle of the ages by Bingo+Foo · · Score: 0

      Yeah, "Politburo," and since governments have never been lacking in responsibility, they are the optimal entities to which we should hand over our freedoms.

      Thus, the need for pontificating and false logic from centralization apologists.

      --
      taken! (by Davidleeroth) Thanks Bingo Foo!
    29. Re:Cycle of the ages by DunbarTheInept · · Score: 1

      In 99% of the cases, education and responsibility on the part of CITIZENS would negate the need for regulation or government oversight.
      Yes. It would. But that's a moot point since it will never happen. Turn on any typical cable TV service. Cycle through the channels. Make a note of how many of the shows or ads you see are designed to appeal to stupidity. Then cry for the human race. Your solution, which would be ideal, will never, ever, happen.

      So the more interesting question is, given the real world, and given that stupidity exists, what is the next-best solution that might actualyl work?

      --

      Don't label something "offtopic" unless you know the topic well enough to tell what's on topic.

    30. Re:Cycle of the ages by Pfhorrest · · Score: 1

      So the more interesting question is, given the real world, and given that stupidity exists, what is the next-best solution that might actualyl work?

      1) Educated and responsible people, band together.

      2) Become and remain independent of the uneducated and irresponsible.

      3) Educate others to be responsible and invite them to join you.

      4) Wait for those who remain uneducated and irresponsible groups to self-destruct, once you're no longer there to save them.

      5) Hope they don't take you out with them. (See step 2).

      6) Profit!

      7) Repeat.

      --
      -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
      "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
    31. Re:Cycle of the ages by dballanc · · Score: 1

      Absolutely.

      Invividuals form groups, and those seeking power rise to lead them.

      If corporations are corrupt, it's because the people that comprise it have allowed the corruption. It's naive to think that a goverment would not be subject to the same results.

      It comes down to the old phrase "don't put all your eggs in one basket". Separating focal points of power reduces potential scale of the disaster when the corrupt find thier way into positions of power. And if history has proven ANYTHING it's that the positions of power draw the corrupt like flies to s***.

    32. Re:Cycle of the ages by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "We need a new economic system. In which the goal would be not to "make profit", but "benefit society"."

      Oh. Just that.

      So we're going to be wiping out all but, say, 10 people and starting from scratch then?

      Nobody is as stupid as the parent, ergo the parent is a troll.

    33. Re:Cycle of the ages by Damek · · Score: 0, Troll

      I'm glad you included "the community" in there. Unfortunately, what you don't understand is that for "the community" to have a say in education content and/or practices, they're going to have to organize themselves in some manner. And then, lo and behold, what do you know, you've got yourself a government.

    34. Re:Cycle of the ages by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, somebody's abusing the moderation system...

  4. QUICK! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    somebody squa-er i mean register UN.com

    1. Re:QUICK! by dmeranda · · Score: 1

      No, somebody register the TLD "un." quick.

  5. If they don't like it... by Spamicles · · Score: 2, Funny

    maybe they can hire Al Gore to whip up something new for international use.

    1. Re:If they don't like it... by drooling-dog · · Score: 2, Funny
      maybe they can hire Al Gore to whip up something new for international use.

      Since he's the main guy behind funding it with U.S. tax dollars, that would be more of an argument for keeping things as they are...

  6. Somebody set up us the net by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All your tld are belong to us

  7. french by SparafucileMan · · Score: 1

    cue the french jokes.

    1. Re:french by measured_flo · · Score: 1

      La Internet...what the hell is that?

    2. Re:french by Svet-Am · · Score: 1

      actually, that would be L'Internet. Back to back vowels in French between the definite article and the noun are apostrophied... :-P

      --
      [move .sig! for great justice, take off every .sig!]
    3. Re:french by CaptainFork · · Score: 2, Funny

      L'ser

    4. Re:french by tbone1 · · Score: 1
      I blame Michelin.

      Sincerely,
      Bitter US Gran Prix ticket buyer

      --

      The Independent: Reverend Spooner Arrested in Friar Tuck Incident - ISIHAC, Historical Headlines
    5. Re:french by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You realize that you completely fucked that up anyway? It'd be more like L'asshole.

    6. Re:french by Loco3KGT · · Score: 1

      You should watch motorcycle racing then.

      Sincerely,
      Happy US GP tv watcher

      Go Hayden, Edwards, and Hopkins!

      Roberts - get off your fat arse and do a few laps.

      --
      Blessed be he who reads this post, Cursed be he who tells my boss.
    7. Re:french by nmb3000 · · Score: 1

      Funniest post today.

      Damn the lack of mod points!

      --
      "What do you despise? By this are you truly known." --Princess Irulan, Manual of Muad'Dib
      /)
    8. Re:french by hachete · · Score: 1

      Lusar

      Now, let's see *that* modded as funny

      --
      Patriotism is a virtue of the vicious
  8. What a Great Idea! by DanielMarkham · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think the U.N. should get involved in all aspects of the internet. After all, aren't these the same guys who want more regulation of cell phones?
    After all, that's what we elected these people to do, right? Oh wait a minute. nobody elected the UN, it's a treaty organization.
    I'm not trying to sound reactionary, but this sounds like a solution in search of a problem. The internet is fine the way it is. If the U.S. Congress has managed to keep its hands off it so far, the U.N. should follow suit, imo. The more politicians we get involved in managing the net, the worse it will perform for everybody.

    Being Your Own Customer

    1. Re:What a Great Idea! by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Just think of the WHO.

      I'd say it's a pretty damn well run organization despite being run by the U.N.

      U.N. is not just a bunch of incompetent politicians, although i'm sure a lot of americans like to think that.

      --
      It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
      Be yourself no matter what they say
    2. Re:What a Great Idea! by hyfe · · Score: 1
      Let us vote in your elections then, and we'll quit complaining.

      Might be a good idea even, it isn't like we could do any worse (disregarding a certain leader in the 1930's).

      --
      "" How about taking the safety labels off everything, and let the stupidity-problem solve itself? """
    3. Re:What a Great Idea! by Marnhinn · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Problem is, other nations do not want the US to be in charge of the internet. They see it as a potential way for the US to impose the US's views on them.

      However, on the same hand, the US has no real reason to give up control.

      Hence the suggestion to use the UN - it seems like a middle ground somewhat. The people that suggested it are simply trying to create a compromise so the *net doesn't fragment.

      --
      There is always a frontier where there is an open and willing mind
    4. Re:What a Great Idea! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yea, lets see how more screwed up we can make the internet.

    5. Re:What a Great Idea! by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

      Plenty of Europeans think that as well...

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
    6. Re:What a Great Idea! by FrankDrebin · · Score: 3, Informative

      nobody elected the UN, it's a treaty organization

      ... and treaty-based bodies administer the international communications issues like radio spectrum and satellite slots. So what's the difference?

      --
      Anybody want a peanut?
    7. Re:What a Great Idea! by Qzukk · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Thats because the WHO has a pretty clear role in life, and that role is pretty hard to fuck up. I mean, if the WHO went around killing babies, it'd be pretty obvious that something is wrong.

      But what about "managing Teh Intarweb"? The majority of politicians these days don't even understand that there is more to the internet than what Internet Explorer shows them. If they start throwing around regulations that are impossible to follow (like "ban all sites that might offend someone, but we can't give you a list because that would be offensive", how many times have we heard THAT now?) the majority of the politicians wouldn't figure it out until everything starts going down in flames, and if they can't see the rubble in Internet Explorer, they don't know that it's there.

      And of course, being unelected, should they get an email saying the internet should be shut down for its annual cleaning and believe that it's true, there isn't anything obvious that can be done about it.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    8. Re:What a Great Idea! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Plenty of Africans think that as well...

    9. Re:What a Great Idea! by megarich · · Score: 1
      Very excellent point. While I may not be entirely oppose to the idea of a world governing body regulating SOME internet issues, I am opposed the UN doing it. Outside giving relief to some needy people, does the UN really serve a meaningful purpose anymore?

      The way it should be done if there was any organization is the get a world "nerd" body with representatives from each country with a vested interest in the net and let them duke it out!

    10. Re:What a Great Idea! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong. You CAN and ARE doing alot worse. How's that socialized medicine and high unemployment working out for you? Why does every western European nation have a sub-replacement birthrate (Arab immigrants notwithstanding) while Arab immigrants flood into your borders? Good luck with all that. Look forward to more Theo Van Gogh type incidents.

    11. Re:What a Great Idea! by nharmon · · Score: 1

      Yeah, because was America needs is a Jacques Chirac, or Margaret Thatcher.

    12. Re:What a Great Idea! by TheKidWho · · Score: 1

      US views, you mean like Freedom of Speech?

      Ohh sorry china that we allow pro democracy sites on the internet.

    13. Re:What a Great Idea! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WHO is nothing-- NOTHING --without the CDC. If you're looking for someone to hand out pills, the WHO makes a great pharmacy dispenser (they even know who to bribe in Nigeria--everyone!) As for technical expertise, however, don't bet on the UN.

      What exactly is the problem being fixed, besides a general dislike and distrust of the U.S.? More precisely, what technical problem will be fixed by a UN coup?

    14. Re:What a Great Idea! by anaesthetica · · Score: 1
      Organizations that exist under the UN rubric are often well-run: WHO, the IMF, the World Bank, etc. They are given de facto independence in their operations, and are not subject to extensive political control by the Secretariat's bureaucracy. This is one reason why they are efficient, and everything else about the UN is not.

      In making a bid for UN political control of the internet, it is doubtful that they would turn around and make another organization (like WHO et al) that is not subject to overt UN political control. Giving the UN control of an organization that's not broken is essentially asking for it to be broken.

      This is not about whether the Internet would be run better by the UN than by an independent subnational organization chartered by the U.S. This is about power, and trying to take away perceived U.S. power (ignoring completely the idea of subsidiarity, because in this case, it's convenient for the UN to do so). If it achieves enough media prominence, look for this story to become another "multilateralism good" and "unilateralism bad" ideological circus--regardless of facts or reality.

    15. Re:What a Great Idea! by Joey7F · · Score: 4, Insightful
      U.N. is not just a bunch of incompetent politicians, although i'm sure a lot of americans like to think that.


      That is what everyone with half a brain thinks. It is a joke of an organization. Libya was head of the human rights council! Other nations included Cuba (HA!) and Syria (HAHA!)

      It is composed of European socialists and third-world zeros. If you want it to have any moral authority create the UDN (United Democratic Nations) and invite nations that respect the sanctity of human life.

      --Joey
    16. Re:What a Great Idea! by abb3w · · Score: 1
      U.N. is not just a bunch of incompetent politicians

      Oh, no, they're not just that.

      The U.N. IS a bunch of incompetent politicians, mind you; but they're several other things as well. And, being only human, there are limits to their incompetence. =)

      --
      //Information does not want to be free; it wants to breed.
    17. Re:What a Great Idea! by Jarnis · · Score: 1

      No. US views, like freedom of speech - as long as you follow the party line of the current US overlords. Otherwise you are a terrorist or something like that...

    18. Re:What a Great Idea! by PipianJ · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The difference is that the Internet does not require the sort of regulation given to those as it is not liable to suffer the Tragedy of the Commons, unlike with radio spectrum (only so much spectrum is relatively free from natural effects AND non-ionizing) and satellite slots (only so many slots are available).

    19. Re:What a Great Idea! by TheKidWho · · Score: 2, Insightful

      uhuh, now show me all those liberal websites that bash bush that have been shot down...

      Ohh wait, you can't right?
      Exactly douchebag

    20. Re:What a Great Idea! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Let us vote in your elections then, and we'll quit complaining.


      Might be a good idea even, it isn't like we could do any worse (disregarding a certain leader in the 1930's).


      LOL, yeah the rest of the world has a terrific track record of leaders to be proud of. Stalin, Mao, Hitler, Mussolini, Pol Pot, tribal leaders in Rwanda, the Taliban, Quaddifi...and on and on.

    21. Re:What a Great Idea! by Capt+James+McCarthy · · Score: 1

      They sure were not successful in the Yugoslavia. This is just another thing that the UN can recieve kickbacks on.

      --
      There are no loopholes. It's either legal or it's not.
    22. Re:What a Great Idea! by Cromac · · Score: 1
      Some countries don't want the US to be in control.
      The US wants to retain control.

      Control should be given to the UN as a compromise?? That isn't in any way the middle ground that is other nations getting their way - period.

    23. Re:What a Great Idea! by Morinaga · · Score: 1
      Just think of PBS

      I'd say it's a pretty damn well run organization despite being run by the US Government.

      I understand your point but even the WHO has their critisms like PBS does.

      The fundamental issue isn't that it's not being run well right now but that it's... American! The horror!

      When politicians (yes, UN officials are certainly politicians) want something it's inevitably for power. Let's just start with the first two quotes from TFA;

      Syria: "There's more and more spam every day. Who are the victims? Developing and least-developed countries, too. There is no serious intention to stop this spam by those who are the transporters of the spam, because they benefit...The only solution is for us to buy equipment from the countries which send this spam in order to deal with spam. However, this, we believe, is not acceptable."

      Oh, I get it. The US government controls the spam which they refuse to stop sending because they benefit by being the only force in the world that can develope equipment to deal with the spam (that they themselves encourage somehow). Brilliant! Brazil, responding to ICANN's approval of .xxx domains: "For those that are still wondering what Triple-X means, let's be specific, Mr. Chairman. They are talking about pornography. These are things that go very deep in our values in many of our countries. In my country, Brazil, we are very worried about this kind of decision-making process where they simply decide upon creating such new top-level generic domain names."

      Oh, I get this too. Pronography will get worse if ICANN approves the xxx domains because it doesn't prolifirate freely on other domains now. I guess the US government should not allow this to happen so pronography doesn't have anywhere to go. There is obviously no benefit to this designation but simple US incompentence that would effect the values of other countries.. you know besides the US because we have none apparently. From inference I'd take it that such content on the internet is somehow unacceptable or deserves a moral judgement from a political entity such as the UN. I just want to know if the brazen capitalism of Woot.com will be properly admonished on the UN board of Internet free markets chaired by China.

      I would be willing to listen to reasoned argument of some intelligence but this all reads as typical anti-americanism. By all means, let's put the UN in charge because evil Americans have certainly screwed up the whole thing.

    24. Re:What a Great Idea! by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      But Kojo Annan has been hired as a consultant to ICANN.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    25. Re:What a Great Idea! by AnObfuscator · · Score: 1

      Yes, and the US doesn't want to give up control, becaue if ICANN fucks up, the internet-dependent US economy gets fucked -- proper fucked. At least, that is the US official position, and it does have a certain ring of truth.

      I admit I have a weak grasp of how the "root servers" of the net work, but wouldn't it be possible to *distribute* root control? Could ICANN offer some sort of compromise, like: ICANN takes over primary root level Servers. the US + some handpicked others (perhaps the Security Counsel?) will provide technical oversight. The US also is given the task of maintaning a set of failsafe servers, so that if ICANN's servers fail, the internet reverts to the US's servers, and the internet keeps on running.

      Would this be at all feasible?

      OF course, it would probably be rejected by all (US: "no, we still want to control everything!" other countries: "no, we want to bitch more about the US!")

      definition of compromise: the solution that everyone hates equally.

      --
      multifariam.net -- yet another nerd blog
    26. Re:What a Great Idea! by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 1
      ... and treaty-based bodies administer the international communications issues like radio spectrum and satellite slots. So what's the difference?

      Not the point. The US runs it now. Having the US not run it would probably not be as good for the US as the status quo. So why should the US volutarily give it up again?

    27. Re:What a Great Idea! by LnxAddct · · Score: 1

      The U.N. is more or less a bunch of incompetent politicians, sure you can cite several successes of theirs, I can think of about 20. That totally disregards the many failures of the U.N. though, and their many inadequacies. Besides, the U.S. has not screwed up with the internet yet, don't fix it if it isn't broken. The last thing we need is the U.N. imposing all kinds of ridiculous taxes and regulations on it, while making things mandatory like monitoring what people do and don't do.

      Whether or not you agree with what I've said thus far, the U.N. is corrupted as hell and by even suggesting actions such as this shows how far away from their original charter they've come. They are extending themselves too far and sticking their hands in places it doesn't belong and was never intended. They suffer many of the same problems NATO does, except worse because the UN is over 190 countries. Even today it is well known that UN peacekeepers tend to rape girls in Congo and that most of the U.N. decisions are decided solely by Arab states simply because they have so many members.

      The internet is currently fine, sure there is a slight chance the U.N. might handle it okay, there is no chance that they'll handle it better then it is now (there is nothign wrong with it as it is), and there is quite a risk that they might ruin the whole thing, so why switch? Getting 190 countries to agree on something is not easy, its slow, the internet is not slow. How many countries do you think would want to start banning "XXX" and anything with sex in it? The risk of getting the U.N. involved is too high and until the U.S. shows otherwise there is no reason to take it away from them other then other countries being power hungry.
      Regards,
      Steve

    28. Re:What a Great Idea! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. But if the Internet was run like a PBS, we would have all those annoying telethons to raise money for it. The SPAM is bad enough without Internet fund raising drives... ;-)

    29. Re:What a Great Idea! by mendaliv · · Score: 1

      Indeed.

      Clemenceau said "War is too important to be left to the generals".

      I guess the internet is too important to be left to the technicians.

    30. Re:What a Great Idea! by Nurgled · · Score: 1

      No matter how many root servers you have, there always must be some authority to decide what goes in the root zone.

    31. Re:What a Great Idea! by ChaosCube · · Score: 1

      So, are you implying that there are some politicians who are not incompetent? Wow. That blows the mind.

      --
      BDR Gear
      Outdoor gear, MREs, and more!
    32. Re:What a Great Idea! by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      "Problem is, other nations do not want the US to be in charge of the internet. They see it as a potential way for the US to impose the US's views on them."

      Yea, because if we assign IPs...well we can do all sorts of terrible things to France or the Congo...

    33. Re:What a Great Idea! by Enzo+the+Baker · · Score: 1

      I would compare the internet to the telephone network rather than radio spectrum and satellite slots.

      --
      I may twist orthodoxy to partly justify a tyrant. But I can easily make up a German philosophy to justify him entirely.
    34. Re:What a Great Idea! by Vile+Slime · · Score: 1

      The World Health Organization?

      Yeah right! An organization tasked with preventing desease around the world refuses to work with Taiwan to stem SARs and other flu-like diseases because of POLITICAL considerations.

      Screw the UN. They would rather have me die of the bird flu than upset the pathetic political whims of the Chinese government.

      --
      ---- Go ahead, mod me down, I'll just post it again and you lose your mod points.
    35. Re:What a Great Idea! by MoneyT · · Score: 1

      We already do, see banner ads or even worse those damn ads on places like IGN.

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    36. Re:What a Great Idea! by MoneyT · · Score: 1

      Which is exactly why Democratic Undergroud, Prison Planet and MoveOn have all been shut down and declared terrorist organizations right?

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    37. Re:What a Great Idea! by hobbesx · · Score: 1

      It's just that all the incompetent ones are ours, and the rest we have no say with...

      --
      This rating is Unfair ( ) ( ) Fair (*) Funny
      Sigh... If only. Modding would be so much more fun.
    38. Re:What a Great Idea! by hyfe · · Score: 1
      Only of those were elected though, and I spefically mentioned him you dolt.

      Besides, you guys elected Reagan!

      --
      "" How about taking the safety labels off everything, and let the stupidity-problem solve itself? """
    39. Re:What a Great Idea! by 3p1c · · Score: 1

      Can someone please tell me why parent is "5, insightful" i have never seen such bad reasoning (..politicians dont see internet for more than IE..), and the WHO example? oh come on!?

      please, feel free to mod me down along with parent :)

      --
      Capitalism != (innovation|democracy|freedom)
    40. Re:What a Great Idea! by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1
      The U.N. IS a bunch of incompetent politicians, mind you; but they're several other things as well. And, being only human, there are limits to their incompetence. =)


      Are you sure they're human? I don't think they DO have a limit to their incompetence.
      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    41. Re:What a Great Idea! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The majority of politicians these days don't even understand that there is more to the internet than what Internet Explorer shows them.
      And you think they do understand details of what the WHO does? Guess again: they don't know shit about the infrastructurural requirements for something like the WHO, which are at least as complex as the details of the functioning of the internet.

    42. Re:What a Great Idea! by m50d · · Score: 1

      Your link doesn't seem to work, but it would be great if they could work out one cell phone standard so my european phone would work in the US too. The UN seems a perfect body to come up with something like that.

      --
      I am trolling
    43. Re:What a Great Idea! by Linus+Torvaalds · · Score: 1

      The majority of politicians these days don't even understand that there is more to the internet than what Internet Explorer shows them. If they start throwing around regulations that are impossible to follow (like "ban all sites that might offend someone, but we can't give you a list because that would be offensive", how many times have we heard THAT now?)

      So you are saying that the USA should continue to manage the DNS infrastructure, because if the UN gets hold of it, they might act... like the USA?

    44. Re:What a Great Idea! by crabpeople · · Score: 1
      "Oh wait a minute. nobody elected the UN, it's a treaty organization."

      Because countries that elect people always make the smartest decisions *cough* bu$h *cough*

      --
      I'll just use my special getting high powers one more time...
    45. Re:What a Great Idea! by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      don't let the truth get in the way of a sporting bush bashing, you must be a neocon fascist

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    46. Re:What a Great Idea! by Inebrius · · Score: 1

      "Your link doesn't seem to work, but it would be great if they could work out one cell phone standard so my european phone would work in the US too. The UN seems a perfect body to come up with something like that."

      Actually, there are even multiple standards in the U.S. And that is the way it should be. The competition will foster improving standards and better prices, which benefits consumers. If there was a real market and consumer demand for interoperability - without government regulation and intervention - it would already exist.

      BTW - My phone will work in Europe, and it works in the U.S. Maybe you didn't buy the right phone?

    47. Re:What a Great Idea! by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      And you think they do understand details of what the WHO does?

      No, but they know what the hell the WHO is doing. Tell you what, I'll round up all the politicians that can tell the difference between a dead baby and a live baby, and you round up all the politicians who can tell the difference between a working squid cache and a broken squid cache, and whoever has the least people has to buy dinner for the other side.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    48. Re:What a Great Idea! by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      Hm, I wasn't expecting +5, really.

      I would like an explanation of what's wrong with my reasoning, though. Especially since you apparently hated it so much that you set me as a foe. Having seen my own government spout gibberish nonsense about the internet, I'm not exactly thrilled with the chances of the World Internet Organization of doing any better, but at least if I can get enough people to care, I can throw Orrin Hatch out of MY government.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    49. Re:What a Great Idea! by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      Well, if I was supreme ruler of the universe, I'd establish a multinational non-profit for managing the DNS infrastructure. The multinational aspect of it would help ensure that no one government could bring enough pressure to bear to break it, while the non-profit side will hopefully prevent corporate greed from making it go down the path Verisign took.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    50. Re:What a Great Idea! by CryptoKiller · · Score: 1

      > If you want it to have any moral authority create
      > the UDN (United Democratic Nations) and invite
      > nations that respect the sanctity of human life.

      Would that include countries that have the death penalty?

    51. Re:What a Great Idea! by B2382F29 · · Score: 1

      If you want it to have any moral authority create the UDN (United Democratic Nations) and invite nations that respect the sanctity of human life.

      Are you sure you want to exclude the US? Respecting the sanctity of human life is not shown by death sentences.
      On second thought, maybe that idea isn't that bad.

      --
      Move Sig. For great justice.
    52. Re:What a Great Idea! by 3p1c · · Score: 1

      well, for one the supervision of TLD policies and top-level DNS server policies, is by far less demanding than running WHO by any standards.

      And claiming that politicians doesnt have insight enough into the aspects of internet, and that they will eventually, if UN are granted the control, base their decisions upon the explorer view of the internet shows me that you dont have any "+5"-insight into the matter.
      The fact is that politicians take decisions that are based upon semi-techincal insight into fields they have never touched before every day, in every country.
      And the reason they can even try to do this, is that this is their job; quickly understanding underlying structures that should affect their decisions, often helped by consultants explaining it to them(this is one back door many lobby groups use to affect politicians).

      I cant say this is how it's done in every country, but i most certainly know this is how it's done in most western industrialised countries, as well as in UN.

      As with me adding you as "foe", was an overreaction from my side, another reason for me doing that, is that i just added some ppl as friends, and found the "foe of friend" icon to be quite usefull and wanted to try it the other way around(foe of foe/friend of foe) :P

      --
      Capitalism != (innovation|democracy|freedom)
    53. Re:What a Great Idea! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Almost all of the death sentences in the U.S. are due to some sort of (often multiple) murder conviction. In other words, they were people who already lacked respect for the sanctity of human life and got what was coming to them.

      Now don't get me wrong. If you want to criticize the U.S. on moral grounds you really just need to take a hop south of Florida to a certain Marine base...

    54. Re:What a Great Idea! by B2382F29 · · Score: 1

      Almost all of the death sentences in the U.S. are due to some sort of (often multiple) murder conviction.

      And which percentage was innocent? Death sentence shows no effectiveness in preventing crimes such as murder. It is pure revenge.

      If you want to criticize the U.S. on moral grounds you really just need to take a hop south of Florida to a certain Marine base...

      Now THAT is obvious to anybody with at least half a brain (thus excluding dubja).

      --
      Move Sig. For great justice.
    55. Re:What a Great Idea! by Flambergius · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but that is patently wrong.

      Firstly, you are using the metaphor incorrectly. Your examples are about allocation of resources to ensure operation, which isn't the Tragedy of Commons. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tragedy_of_the_commo ns) Secondly, Internet is subject to the exact problem of source allocation that your examples illustrate. To ensure operation, the namespace has to be regulated, just like radio spectrum and satellite slots. Thirdly, Internet is most definitely subject to Tragedy of Commons, with the most common example being spam.

      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers - Pablo Picasso
    56. Re:What a Great Idea! by Joey7F · · Score: 1

      Like some one already replied to you, the death penalty is handed out only on murder convictions. It sounds like you are anti-American which is pretty common in the world today, but please don't play games of moral equivalency between the United States and the truly barbaric nations of the world.

      United States: Murderer gets the death penalty
      Nigeria: http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=8 6&art_id=qw1121262304361B252

      --Joey

    57. Re:What a Great Idea! by m50d · · Score: 1
      Actually, there are even multiple standards in the U.S. And that is the way it should be. The competition will foster improving standards and better prices, which benefits consumers.

      Multiple incompatible ways of doing things is not a good state of affairs just for the sake of it. It's like saying everyone having their own document format is good because it fosters competition and allows the best one to emerge. It doesn't, because there's little to choose between them. It just means you can't use your phone on everyone else's network, which only benefits the company, not the customer.

      If there was a real market and consumer demand for interoperability - without government regulation and intervention - it would already exist.

      Why? No one manufacturer can offer interoperability, and if one group spent the money to convert, they'd be paying for something which the manufacturers who didn't pay benefit equally from. So there's no commercial incentive for them to interoperate. Capitalism doesn't always work in the customers' interests, no matter what you might like to believe.

      BTW - My phone will work in Europe, and it works in the U.S. Maybe you didn't buy the right phone?

      Quite possibly, many of the modern ones support both standards and will switch as necessary, especially the more expensive ones (which mine isn't). But if people can save money by leaving off support for multiple standards, some of them will.

      --
      I am trolling
    58. Re:What a Great Idea! by B2382F29 · · Score: 1

      So from being against death penalty you conclude i'm just "anti-american"? I am against death penalty no matter where in the world.

      but please don't play games of moral equivalency between the United States and the truly barbaric nations of the world.

      So the US are "good" because others are "worse"? That kind of argumentation is kindergarden level.

      And maybe just maybe there is a REASON why "anti-American [...] is pretty common in the world today". Time to think about that.

      --
      Move Sig. For great justice.
    59. Re:What a Great Idea! by Joey7F · · Score: 1

      No, I concluded you were anti-American when you said it would be a good thing for the US to be excluded.

      Explain to me why life in prison is more humane than a lethal injection that makes you die in a peaceful sleep?

      I am in favor of the death penalty as insurance against a justice system that commutes sentences on a routine basis.

      Dead men commit no crimes.

      --Joey

    60. Re:What a Great Idea! by B2382F29 · · Score: 1

      Explain to me why life in prison is more humane than a lethal injection that makes you die in a peaceful sleep?

      That decision would be up to the person which gets executed. Explain to me why living YOUR life is more humane than a lethal injection that makes you die in a peaceful sleep? Next thing you know you think it is more humane to kill all disabled people. And all Democrats. And ....

      I am in favor of the death penalty as insurance against a justice system that commutes sentences on a routine basis. Dead men commit no crimes.

      Well, try some crime prevention and just kill yourself, would you? If you are innocent you can appeal later....

      --
      Move Sig. For great justice.
    61. Re:What a Great Idea! by Joey7F · · Score: 1

      Yeah because disabled people are the same as murderers.

      I should kill myself? What a nice tolerant person you are.

      I forgot to include democrats in my list of people to kill you are absolutely right. Your retorts are weak and pathetic. I will respond to cogent arguments only, not irrational blatherings.

      --Joey

    62. Re:What a Great Idea! by B2382F29 · · Score: 1

      Yeah because disabled people are the same as murderers.

      I never said that. YOU said that the death sentence would be more humane. And THAT was a definition of humane i never encountered before. But i think there is nothing more to discuss. You are in favour of death sentences. You are willing to kill a specific percentage of innocent people in return for "revenge". I am not.

      --
      Move Sig. For great justice.
  9. Huh? by jasonmicron · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As the internet was invented, created and distributed in the United States by the US military a few decades ago and the US controls the root domain (.), how can the UN decide that they can control this?

    The US _does_ control root, right?

    1. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That wasn't the Internet, that was ARPANET
      Dohh.

    2. Re:Huh? by The+Analog+Kid · · Score: 1

      The thing is the UN can't. They can try all they want for it, but there is nothing they can do if the US doesn't want to give up. They won't pass sancations against us, that would just hurt everyone so in the end unless the US cares to give it up, nothing is going to happen.

      UN: Give us control
      US: No
      UN: C'mon...please..
      US: How about....no!

    3. Re:Huh? by jasonmicron · · Score: 1

      Yea, at first I glanced at the summary and didn't catch the entire "root server" comment. I'd like to see how they would go about getting control over the root servers if we don't want to give them up.

    4. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The US _does_ control root, right?
      Yes, but what happens if China decides they're sick of it and creates their own root? From TA:
      Brazil and China could choose what amounts to the nuclear option: a fragmented root. That means a new top-level domain would not be approved by ICANN--but would be recognized and used by large portions of the rest of the world. The downside, of course, is that the nuclear option could create a Balkanized Internet where two computers find different Web sites at the same address.
      This is the real danger: a fragmented internet. What this really means, is that eventually, the WWW will drop the "world" part. The real issue here is that countries like Brazil and China want more control over the internet that their citizens can see. It's inevitable and sad. Oh well, it was fun while it lasted!
    5. Re:Huh? by PhilHibbs · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Surely the rest of the world could switch over to using the new U.N. root name servers. The new roots could pigeonhole the US TLD's to .us, so for the rest of the world, microsoft.com.us would route to what the US sees as microsoft.com etc. Once they've been relegated to their own little isolated internet for a while they'll soon come around.

    6. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Uh...no... they would invade switzerland, or wherever the governing body was, fail to do anything about the internet situation because they have bad intelligence that does not tell them how the network is administered, but they would succeed in killing hundreds of women and children and we would probably successfully end Switzerlands neutrality forever.

      Of course, I think they will find that the US soldiers will get their asses kicked by Swiss women and children, but with sheer numbers we will manage to massacre some of those dangerous women and children.

      heh... should be a historical sub plot in a william gibson novel explaining why swiozerland got nuked...

    7. Re:Huh? by leonardluen · · Score: 1

      simple, they just make their own root servers. and ignore the US's everyone in europe and the rest of of the world then use the new "free" (as in free from US control) root servers.

    8. Re:Huh? by rich_r · · Score: 4, Insightful

      They wouldn't. The rest of the world would just point at a different set of root servers. It's an open protocol, remember?

    9. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You assume the root server is some fixed property that must be given away. Reality is, is that the rootserver is whatever the other donaimname servers wnt to make it. So the US need not be consulted, for the UN to be able to effectively get the root servers, as long as ofcourse most of the rest of the world is willing to go along with it.

    10. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right, better to do things the European way. Pass security council resolutions then sit on your ass and do nothing while they are ignored completely.

    11. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Of course, I think they will find that the US soldiers will get their asses kicked by Swiss women and children, but with sheer numbers we will manage to massacre some of those dangerous women and children.


      Please.. with the exception of the Brits and Israelis, I'd put the US military up against any other in the world in an all-out war. Don't confuse IED wielding nutjobs taking potshots at US units as getting our asses kicked. When it comes to balls to the wall in your face killing (the job of the military when it boils down to it), we excel.

      Then again, all we'd have to do is announce we're invading the countries of the EU and you'd all whine and surrender anyway.

    12. Re:Huh? by Cromac · · Score: 1
      Yes, but what happens if China decides they're sick of it and creates their own root?

      Most people in the would would probably say "so what" since they can't read chinese anyway. It might be one way to get rid of a lot of spam too if we could simply block their root.

      It's inevitable and sad. Oh well, it was fun while it lasted!

      As a greater percentage of the world population gets on the Internet and their governments want some degree of control you're probably right, it is inevitable.

    13. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, we are all waiting with bated breath for China to gain control of the root servers. There is real freedom! Not like the faux freedom the internet enjoys under the likes of BushCo.

    14. Re:Huh? by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      how can the UN decide that they can control this?

      The same way they were able to enforce their resolutions about Iraq and prevent the US from going to war.

    15. Re:Huh? by I8TheWorm · · Score: 1

      If the US being "in charge" of the internet has made so many folks upset that the UN thinks they need to get involved, why haven't they already pointed to a different set of root servers?

      I liken this to the famous politicians in Mexico before VF came to power. Oil company that makes a nice profit? Nationalize it. Any business that makes money hand over fist? Nationalize it. How is it the UN would take control of infrastructure that was built with US taxpayers' money?

      --
      Saying Android is a family of phones is akin to saying Linux is a family of PCs.
    16. Re:Huh? by ad0gg · · Score: 1

      UN can't pass sanctions against the US no matter what. We'll just veto it.

      --

      Have you ever been to a turkish prison?

    17. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Please.. with the exception of the Brits and Israelis, I'd put the US military up against any other in the world in an all-out war."

      As much as I appreciate the US military training, the Swiss are given mandatory firearm training and are required to enter shooting competitions. They would certainly put up a superb fight :)

    18. Re:Huh? by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 1

      It bugs me when people talk about "their" military like a sports team.

      We'll kick your butt!

      Blegh.

      It's just wrong on so many levels. Sorry to pick on you. I know everyone does it.

    19. Re:Huh? by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      Yeah, and since the U.S. pays the lion's share of the U.N.'s operating expenses, it is actually we that can sanction them.

      I think the U.N. needs to get their house in order before they can claim (however falsely) any moral authority to control the Internet.

      Is there a genocide or three going on they should be looking into?

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    20. Re:Huh? by shawn(at)fsu · · Score: 2

      Funny, it bothers me when people talk about a sports team as "their" team. At least for military, they are their to protect you.

      --
      500 dollar reward for tip(s) leading to the arrest of the person(s) who stole my sig.
    21. Re:Huh? by william_w_bush · · Score: 1

      Yes, but we invented a lot of stuff. By that logic Europe should be the only ones allowed to brew beer?

      Not that I think for a second we should give control to the UN (that just sounds crazy), but I still worry about what rights our govt might decide they absolutely need for the next "terror war".

      How bout making an(other) independent international body to deal with this crap?

      Or just give control to me, I'm a nice guy, I promise. /grin, All your pr0n is belong to me.

      --
      The first rule of USENET is you do not talk about USENET.
    22. Re:Huh? by cvd6262 · · Score: 1

      how can the UN decide that they can control this?

      Two words: "Unique legitimacy"

      --

      I'd rather have someone respond than be modded up.

    23. Re:Huh? by doshell · · Score: 1

      It does control root. But should it? It goes against the very idea of an Internet, i.e. a world-wide interconnection of networks. It think the US is of course entitled to control its own networks (based in national soil), but it's unfair for it to have rights over the whole thing.

      It's just that the status quo is so damn blurred right now (i.e. we are used to having the US trying to control or otherwise have an influence on everyone and everything around the whole world) that some of us can't even realise there are some things that have been done wrong in the past and ought to be changed.

      --
      Score: i, Imaginary
    24. Re:Huh? by Tonytheloony · · Score: 1

      I don't believe the internet was "created" by the US. The internet is the result of the inter-linking of national networks around the world.

      --
      The quickest way to become an atheist is to study the Bible thoroughly.
    25. Re:Huh? by Smurf · · Score: 1
      As the internet was invented, created and distributed in the United States by the US military a few decades ago...

      Yeah, kind of.

      But in the exact same way someone could claim that the Europeans invented the World Wide Web making the Internet what it is today.
    26. Re:Huh? by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 1

      Naw, your country's military is there to apply force as your politicians deem in their best interest.

      E.g. to bennefit the people who brought them to power and keep them in power, like the leaders of the politicial party, the lobby groups and the campaign sponsors.

    27. Re:Huh? by Andrewkov · · Score: 1

      You should Google for some Internet history. Al Gore created the Internet.

    28. Re:Huh? by xouumalperxe · · Score: 1

      Hate to burst your bubble, but the first page ever in the www (and the web's invention) was set in CERN, which is somewhere over the french/swiss border. Europe, for the slower on the uptake. Therefore, while the internet itself might be an american invention, its most visible layer is an european one. This said, since Alan Turing is british, the brits have the undisputed rights to everything that computes. Either that or perhaps sticking to things that happened over 40 years ago (70 in the case of turing) is complete bullshit. Anyway, the internet is itself spread around most of the world, by now. By design, should every bloody computer in the USA shut down, the net itself would survive, and continue to work. The USA have, therefore, no control over the internet, other than over the content posted there, which is about as much as any old country can say on the subject. Therefore, passing the theoretical control to some internationally recognized entity is the Right Thing to do, as it would show some good faith towards what is in reality a worldwide phenomenom.

    29. Re:Huh? by dekemoose · · Score: 1

      The internet is fragmented. China essentially has their own internet behind the "Great Firewall of China". Brazil sounds like they should probably look into this as well, since their population is so sensitive to the nastiness on the net.Those nations that are interested in keeping up the open and connected nature of the 'net will continue to do so.

      The internet is about connecting networks, it's a technical thing. Once politics gets involved it's straight to hell for the 'net. The UN is a political organization. If you really want to turn the 'net over to someone else, give it to the ITU or some other technical body, not those ass-clowns.

    30. Re:Huh? by tenchiken · · Score: 1

      Sice when has the UN done anything about Genocides?

    31. Re:Huh? by shawn(at)fsu · · Score: 1

      Thats funny, I don't remeber Bush senior calling on the military to keep him in power when he lost his second term....

      --
      500 dollar reward for tip(s) leading to the arrest of the person(s) who stole my sig.
    32. Re:Huh? by tenchiken · · Score: 1

      The same way they were able to enforce their resolutions and make Saddam comply with 10 different UN resolutions.

    33. Re:Huh? by Politburo · · Score: 1

      At least for military, they are their to protect you.

      Yes, that is part of their duties. However, when they are used to wage an offensive war that has done the exact opposite of protecting us, I just don't get that warm fuzzy feeling.

    34. Re:Huh? by brpr · · Score: 1

      The infrastructure for the internet outside the US was not built by the US! Obviously TCP/IP was invented in America, but it's not like you went around building the physical network for the rest of the world.

      --
      Freedom is not increased by mere diminuation of government. Anarchy is freedom for the strong and slavery for the weak.
    35. Re:Huh? by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 1

      I think the only logical conclusion there is that an unstable government is worse for the leaders of the business world than losing their influence in the government offices. (although instability is not bad for new businesses who can take advantage of movement of money, but they have no power until instability appears, then they become the leaders).

      Either that or they have influence in all major political parties :-)

    36. Re:Huh? by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 1

      Well, it created the country of Israel, but that's not such a popular thing is it?

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    37. Re:Huh? by I8TheWorm · · Score: 1

      That's not what I meant at all. All of the original infrastructure, though, and more than half of it currently, still reside within the US.

      All I'm saying is that if US management of TLD's etc... is so infuriating to the rest of the world, as is suggested, then why do they backbone off of our hardware?

      --
      Saying Android is a family of phones is akin to saying Linux is a family of PCs.
    38. Re:Huh? by AlistairGroves · · Score: 1

      I'd like to see anyone try and invade switzerland. I've spent a lot of time there, and as well as having so many people trained and equiped with rifles (seriously, every house is not far off the mark) the ENTIRE country is built like a fortress. Bridges, tunnels and motorways are all designed to make strategic defense easy - there are contingency plans for each section of transport route. And every bridge/tunnel has points for blowing and blocking already planned out and marked. And the explosives to do so are kept not far away. I'm not swiss, but there's a reason why during both world wars and all the other european wars none of the countries got anywhere near switzerland...

    39. Re:Huh? by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      i don't think you understand how the internet works, you see anyone can set up a network to act however they want, i could run a root server from my machine if i wanted, nobody else would want to use it and since it wouldn't have the data real root servers have i wouldn't even want to use it, but nothing keeps me from setting one up, and if i convinced my neighbors to use my dns server then they could all pay me for domain names that would work for other users of my network, or i could give out domain names for free.

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    40. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Once they've been relegated to their own little isolated internet for a while they'll soon come around.

      The US or the rest of the world?

    41. Re:Huh? by robolemon · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The new roots could pigeonhole the US TLD's to .us, so for the rest of the world, microsoft.com.us would route to what the US sees as microsoft.com etc.

      And then break all the links! URLs weren't designed to handle translation over several differing namespaces.

      --

      I design user interfaces for a free network management application,

    42. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wholeheartedly agree. The internet is a network of intranets, each privately controlled by their owner. The U.N. has no right to do this. The most they could do is have a whole bunch of members change what their countries consider the root servers to be (if their gov'ts can actually even do that), and that simply won't happen.
      The internet was privately created by the U.S. government and people joined it from there.
      Besides, I can't see the U.N. doing any better of a job than ICANN/the U.S. gov't.
      The ITU might possibly be acceptable.
      If only we could choose the IETF or the ISC or a similar organization

    43. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They wouldn't. The rest of the world would just point at a different set of root servers. It's an open protocol, remember?

      Yeah, I wanna see them try that.

      Shit, we can't get people over to IPv6.. and I can't discern any political arguments over that.

    44. Re:Huh? by CPUGuy · · Score: 1

      (D)ARPANET was the foundation of the internet.

    45. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And how well is Israel complying with the hundreds of resolutions against them?

    46. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like it or not, the Internet is now GLOBAL. That means it ain't in Kansas no more, and the world wants their say in da things. Get it? It ain't in Kansas no more. It ain't in US no more. It's bloody spread all around the world. And dat's where most of it is.

    47. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So they teach the Swiss how to dodge JDAMs now?

      The U.S. could neutralize Switzerland's ability to manifest a unified defensive in a matter of days without intervention. If the rest of Europe intervened there'd be a real war, which it would lose, and both sides would seriously regret for decades, because the economies are completely intwined.

    48. Re:Huh? by Murasaki+Skies · · Score: 1

      Assuming the entire United States armed forces gathered to conquer Europe, they would almost assuredly defeat their armed forces, but the insurgency would be 100 times as bad as Iraq's (and much of the United States' armed forces would've perished), so (unless it was carpetnuked (without retaliation)) there would be no way to hold on to it for more than a short while.

      --
      Waiiii!!!!!! I have bad karma!
    49. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Doesn't there have to be anything IN switzerland worth attacking?

      Then again the swiss were perfectly willing to let their fellow european brothers be enslaved/killed at the hands of Hitler.

      There are times I wish we hadn't rescued Europe's sorry ass. We should have just shitcanned Japan and called it a war(that seems to be the prevailing attitude these days anyways), hell Hussein didn't do anything to anyone other than his own people, so why the hell didn't we just leave him alone? So why didn't we leave Hitler alone, I mean he wasn't hurting Americans was he ?

      One of these days, the same thing will happen again, and I hope with all my heart the USA smartens up, and finally just lets Europe destroy itself.

      If you want the friggin Internet then you have to pay for it. Pay for the entire friggin thing and THEN you can do what you want with it.

    50. Re:Huh? by brpr · · Score: 1

      Because if they didn't, they wouldn't be connected to the same internet as everyone else. However, this article shows that the rest of the world is willing to change this, so what's your point?

      --
      Freedom is not increased by mere diminuation of government. Anarchy is freedom for the strong and slavery for the weak.
    51. Re:Huh? by I8TheWorm · · Score: 1

      My point is it's absurd to think the UN should globalize property paid for by the US (they already did this once) in an effort to take control over something that has never really had any restrictions placed on it by it's current owner.

      I like it to "borrowing" a cable signal with their permission, then telling them you need to hold the remote in your hand, and should decide what pay per view shows will be watched.

      --
      Saying Android is a family of phones is akin to saying Linux is a family of PCs.
    52. Re:Huh? by brpr · · Score: 1

      If you're really that worried about the initial investment made by the US then the UN could always pay them compensation. The fact is that if the internet is going to have a global reach (and this is surely in US interests) it will eventually have to be globally regulated. Or alternatively, once control of the internet becomes a bigger political issue, the US may find that the rest of the world wants to run its own internet indepedent of US interests. The US can't claim control of the internet indefinitely just because it made the initial investment decades ago. The situation now is that the infrastructure is payed for by a large number of countries.

      --
      Freedom is not increased by mere diminuation of government. Anarchy is freedom for the strong and slavery for the weak.
  10. I'm all for it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Given the UN's proven track record of success, efficiency and effeciveness, I don't see how anyone could be against this.

    1. Re:I'm all for it by WidescreenFreak · · Score: 3, Funny

      Careful! This is Slashdot! You need to specify when there is sarcasm in a statement or risk getting megatively modded by the oblivious. But to continue your statement, I can't wait to read about the "IP for Food" scandal in the next few years.

      --
      The Overrated mod is for reversing inappropriate, positive mods, not for voicing disagreement with a post.
    2. Re:I'm all for it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Given the UN's proven track record of success, efficiency and effeciveness, I don't see how anyone could be against this.

      Yeah and to really f**k up things, we still have our government.

    3. Re:I'm all for it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh come on the UN has a long list of accomplishments. Just because they're primarily political accomplishments, doesn't make them any less meaningful

    4. Re:I'm all for it by cyb3r0ptx · · Score: 1

      I Poop afterwards.

    5. Re:I'm all for it by johnelin · · Score: 0

      MOD PARENT DOWN.

      This guy's a fucking idiot.

      First, *effectiveness, not effeciveness

      Second, the UN is ineffective because the US refuses to fund it. Please go read before you make ignorant comments like this.

      Third, its the fucking US's fault that the UN can't do things correctly... we veto every fuckin bill.

      Fourth, the UN has been successful in doing a ton of shit. Google 'UN accomplishments'

      Fifth, the UN is only international body encompassing the most countries in the world. It's the ONLY chance we have of globally fighting issues such as nuclear arms proliferation, global warming, etc.

      Sixth, which organization did we turn to when the huge tsunami happened in southeast asia? None other then the UN.

      Seventh, WHO.

      I can go on forever.

      I can't believe anyone would mod this funny, unless you had NO idea of what actually is going on with the UN.

      I openly invite any responses or flames as to why the UN might be a bad organization... you will get owned on this debate.

      -john E

    6. Re:I'm all for it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I would agree that the US should be more active in the UN.
      The issue here is that, despite its successes, the UN has been generating lots of news for corruption and internal arguing (a good deal of which has nothing to do with the US). This is not the most positive place for control of something as important as the internet to be place, in many opinions.

      The best UN successes, by far, have been the organizations they set up that are not under direct UN control (WHO is a prime example). It does not seem, however, that the countries pushing for this change would relinquish this power once it is taken from the US, it seems like many countries want to impose censorship and surveillance on a more accessable internet backbone.

    7. Re:I'm all for it by ehiris · · Score: 1

      You're breaking my balls, Hans.

    8. Re:I'm all for it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I love how the mods spotted the sarcasm in this even though nothing in the sentence gives it away.

    9. Re:I'm all for it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      "Second, the UN is ineffective because the US refuses to fund it. Please go read before you make ignorant comments like this."

      http://www.mikenew.com/un-debt.html

      What a load of crap.

    10. Re:I'm all for it by vinlud · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The joke was nice, but now back in reality, the UN doesn't have a 100% effectiveness record, but there are lots of regions on this planet where people can live in some form of peace because of the UN.

      Also remind the UN is more than the security council, for instance the World Health Org. and World Food Program are UN bodies with millions and millions of human lives depending on them on a daily basis.

      I'm convinced the people working at the UN in the offices and in the field are higly motivated, skilled and professional workers, however, international politics is not giving them enough tools to act. This is mostly to blame on the leaders, full with self-interest, of our own countries.

      (At this moment an fairly thourough UN peacekeeping mission in eastern Congo is doing the right thing, protecting the local population with aggressive force against militias with the little equipment they have in the region)

      --
      Repeat after me: We are all individuals
    11. Re:I'm all for it by ahkbarr · · Score: 1
      Mod parent Troll.
      This guy's a fucking idiot.
      Nice...
      Second, the UN is ineffective because the US refuses to fund it
      All nations have the right AND responsibility to refuse to fund specific activities which go contrary to its interests, including the US.
      Third, its the fucking US's fault that the UN can't do things correctly... we veto every fuckin bill.
      Uh huh... Everything. Right.
      Fourth, the UN has been successful in doing a ton of shit. Google 'UN accomplishments'
      Largely because of our money and resources. Actually, the UN would be laughable (well, it is anyway) without our $$$ and military support.
      Fifth, the UN is only international body encompassing the most countries in the world. It's the ONLY chance we have of globally fighting issues such as nuclear arms proliferation, global warming, etc.
      It's also the only world wide organization which would have Syria and China as head of human rights counsel or whatever, because they just go in alphabetical order. I suppose the UN is "globally" doing lots about North Korea's nukes, huh? Our fault you say? North Korea went back on their deal first, we knew about it, and we were sheepish about keeping up our end, since we knew they were simply developing the weapons they said they weren't going to anyway. The truth is, the only way to deal with nukes is with the interested parties. Japan, China, South Korea, etc etc, and us (US), but more the others than us.
      Sixth, which organization did we turn to when the huge tsunami happened in southeast asia? None other then the UN.
      Which country contrbiuted the most?
      I openly invite any responses or flames as to why the UN might be a bad organization... you will get owned on this debate.
      Owned? Don't think so... Let's not forget the UN seems to think it can tax sovereign nations. Don't think so.

      Remember what the UN is. It's a group of UNELECTED polititions representing in large part dictatorships which by the very definition are oppressive to their people. The UN is BAD, case closed. To be clear, the UN, by its definition, do not represent any people, only unelected officials, whether or not they support AND practice female genital mutilation, genecide, legal raping of women accused of adultary, torture, the list goes on.

      Consider yourself OWNED.
      --
      Compared to war, all other forms of human endeavor shrink to insignificance. God, how I love it. - Gen. George Patton
    12. Re:I'm all for it by grgyle · · Score: 1

      "...or risk getting megatively modded..."

      +1x10^6 Insightful

      --
      ----- And all that the Lorax left here in this mess was a small pile of rocks, with one word...UNLESS.
    13. Re:I'm all for it by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      Second, the UN is ineffective because the US refuses to fund it.

      An international world government is funded by a single member? WTF? That's like saying the local Chamber of Commerce is ineffective because Bob's Bargain Basement refuses to fund it.

      which organization did we turn to when the huge tsunami happened in southeast asia?

      World Vision? Seriously, private US citizens gave more to disaster relief than the UN did, and it got there sooner. That's not to blame Europe, however, because private European citizens gave more than the UN did too. ...you will get owned on this debate.

      We need a minimum age for posting on Slashdot. Sheesh. Next thing you know he'll be going "neener neener."

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    14. Re:I'm all for it by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      Hang on, I just read some of johnelin's back posts. This is the guy who thought last December's tsunami was caused by global warming!

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    15. Re:I'm all for it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Many also do not realize how much the UN is expected to do with an "official" budget of about 4 - 8 billion USD.

      In relative terms, Israel received about 4 billion in foreign aid from the US this past budget, NASA in the 1990's received around 15 billion a year, and KBR, one of several such contracted firms, receives about 4 billion this year to provide military logistical support in Iraq.

      The UN does a decent job with the budget it has. Few large institutions are perfect or meet their charter/mandates/corporate mission 100%. In the end, the small budget means the wealthier nations ultimately decide what to do; many larger missions are partially to mostly funded by the nations that send and finance (largely their own) troops.

      (How is the budget so small? Consider that the dues of the wealthiest nations are all under a billion a year each--around 100 to 600 million--and there is a large body of third world nations with dues under 100 million each. Furthermore, many nations, not just the US, do not pay full dues. Should every wealthy nation pay its dues in full? Maybe the nations still substantially underpaying should do what the US has done under Bush--some would say "oddly enough under Bush"--and pay a substantial percentage.)

    16. Re:I'm all for it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Remember what the UN is. It's a group of UNELECTED polititions representing in large part dictatorships which by the very definition are oppressive to their people. The UN is BAD, case closed. To be clear, the UN, by its definition, do not represent any people, only unelected officials, whether or not they support AND practice female genital mutilation, genecide, legal raping of women accused of adultary, torture, the list goes on.

      The GP post may be idiotic (esp. as the US has recently--since Bush--started to almost fully pay its dues), but the UN is not completely bad. Neither is it hopeless.

      What will take place of the UN? What will be the goals, functions, and costs of that organisation (or pacts)? The organisation should be reformed in some way because it is not all evil. Perhaps the reforms should be as drastic as spinning off its branch organisations such as the WHO and WTO. A new world system could include such things as the EU representing Europe or the US/Mexico/Brazil/Columbia/China representing the US trade partners. The sovereignty of wealthier in the UN nations is partly preserved through funding, e.g., without the US sending and funding its troops in the 1990's, several large scale UN missions could not have taken place. The UN is not all bad. A huge problem is finding what to cut, and how to redistribute the power. Saying it has got to go leaves the huge question of what will replace it (and would that replacement be any better).

    17. Re:I'm all for it by WidescreenFreak · · Score: 1

      Yup. Gotta love the ol' spelling faux pas. :) Oh, well.

      --
      The Overrated mod is for reversing inappropriate, positive mods, not for voicing disagreement with a post.
    18. Re:I'm all for it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why don't YOU google for camp 22, jackass? I thought the UN was formed post WWII to prevent this sort of thing from happening again. Yet it has happened again and again and again and again...

    19. Re:I'm all for it by johnelin · · Score: 0

      first... who the hell is "mikenew.com" and what the hell credientials does he have?
      and who is the hell is Trudy Chen?

      i hope you know the sources in which your stupid little article cites are all from US government related sites, and all the people that it cites are very conservative republicans who would like nothing better than the destruction of the UN.

      you are easily fooled.

      http://www.cnn.com/2005/US/06/18/un.reform/

      http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/congress/jan-june98 /dues_3-11a.html

      http://www.hinduonnet.com/thehindu/2001/05/12/stor ies/03120001.htm

      http://www.cyberdyaryo.com/features/f2003_0106_05. htm

      you are a damn idiot.

      want to respond to everything else?

    20. Re:I'm all for it by johnelin · · Score: 0

      Mod this guy 'ignorant arse'. This guy's a f***ing !di0t. Nice... Yes. Second, the UN is ineffective because the US refuses to fund it All nations have the right AND responsibility to refuse to fund specific activities which go contrary to its interests, including the US. You're correct in saying that we have the right to refuse to fund the only organization that has any hope of solving international issues like world hunger, AIDS, and global warming, if it conflicts with our 'national interests'. I guess that means its okay to stand and watch as children starve, diseased people die, and the glaciers melt... because at least we've got our national interests! (read: oil). Do you even read what you write? To put it in terms even an !di0t like you could understand... It's certainly a wealthy man's right to not feed the starving children at his door, however, should he choose to not do so, he is an extremely asnine bastard. Third, its the f*cking US's fault that the UN can't do things correctly... we veto every f***ing bill. Uh huh... Everything. Right. Good to see that you agree with me on this. Let's take a look. ---- 1972 Condemns Israel for killing hundreds of people in Syria and Lebanon in air raids. 1973 Afirms the rights of the Palestinians and calls on Israel to withdraw from the occupied territories. 1976 Condemns Israel for attacking Lebanese civilians. Condemns Israel for building settlements in the occupied territories. Calls for self determination for the Palestinians. Afirms the rights of the Palestinians. Condemns South Africa's attempts to impose apartheid on Namibia. For the admission of Vietnam to the United Nations. 1977 Condemns the apartheid situation in South Africa. 1978 Urges the permanent members (USA, USSR, UK, France, China) to insure United Nations decisions on the maintenance of international peace and security. Criticises the living conditions of the Palestinians. Condemns the Israeli human rights record in occupied territories. Calls for developed countries to increase the quantity and quality of development a$$istance to underdeveloped countries. 1979 Calls for an end to all military and nuclear collaboration with the apartheid South Africa. Strengthens the arms embargo against South Africa. Offers a$$istance to all the oppressed people of South Africa and their liberation movement. Concerns negotiations on disarmament and cessation of the nuclear arms race. Calls for the return of all inhabitants expelled by Israel. Demands that Israel desist from human rights violations. Requests a report on the living conditions of Palestinians in occupied Arab countries. Offers a$$istance to the Palestinian people. Discusses sovereignty over national resources in occupied Arab territories. Calls for protection of developing counties' exports. Calls for alternative approaches within the United Nations system for improving the enjoyment of human rights and fundamental freedoms. Opposes support for intervention in the internal or external affairs of states. For a United Nations Conference on Women. To include Palestinian women in the United Nations Conference on Women. Safeguards rights of developing countries in multinational trade negotiations. 1980 Requests Israel to return displaced persons. Condemns Israeli policy regarding the living conditions of the Palestinian people. Condemns Israeli human rights practices in occupied territories. Affirms the right of self determination for the Palestinians. Offers a$$istance to the oppressed people of South Africa and their national liberation movement. Attempts to establish a New International Economic Order to promote the growth of underdeveloped countries and international economic co-operation. Endorses the Program of Action for Second Half of United Nations Decade for Women. Declaration of non-use of nuclear weapons against non-nuclear states. Emphasises that the development of nations and individuals is a human right. Calls for the cessation of all nuclear test

    21. Re:I'm all for it by johnelin · · Score: 0

      Yeah, and you got owned by him. How sad.

    22. Re:I'm all for it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You, sir, are a waste of a perfectly good facial cumshot.

  11. It isn't broke... by MrNonchalant · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ...don't fix it. Verisign's monopoly aside, I haven't heard of any cases in which the internet has been abused by the United States or any organization assigned to administrate it. This change is fixing a problem that doesn't exist and may create problems that do. Other than political niceness, what does internationalization of the internet's control really offer?

    1. Re:It isn't broke... by eglamkowski · · Score: 1

      It means the UN can (try to) tax it.

      --
      Government IS the problem.
    2. Re:It isn't broke... by Iriel · · Score: 1

      Even with the possibility of giving up the root servers to the UN, then countries could start a fight over which country hosts the physical location for the servers.

      --
      Perfecting Discordia
      www.stevenvansickle.com
    3. Re:It isn't broke... by Mr+Smidge · · Score: 1

      I haven't heard of any cases in which the internet has been abused by the United States or any organization assigned to administrate it.

      Do any of the following bother you?
      * Introduction of money-making but otherwise pointless TLDs like .mobi, .tel, .xxx, .biz...?
      * Verisign's sitefinder, or indeed the general ability they have to redirect lookup requests to their own search engine for money-making purposes?
      * Gross misallocation of limited IP addresses?

      I think the UN could do a good job with management of the internet.

    4. Re:It isn't broke... by eyeye · · Score: 1

      it hasnt been abused by the USA yet but when they decide to attack/invade a country that actually uses the internet then it becomes a bit of a liability. For example most americans would go into a right wing fit if China or Iran "controlled the internet".

      --
      Bush and Blair ate my sig!
    5. Re:It isn't broke... by Couldn'tCareLess · · Score: 1

      The root servers are found in lots of places already: http://www.root-servers.org/

    6. Re:It isn't broke... by Iriel · · Score: 1

      I was refering to the idea that if the UN could ever get a hold of the root servers for themselves, they would probably find a reason to complain about what country they're located in. (i.e. relocate them to promote some demented sense of political equality for the internet)

      --
      Perfecting Discordia
      www.stevenvansickle.com
    7. Re:It isn't broke... by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1

      No. We would just have USNET inside the states, with THEMNET being everywhere else.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
    8. Re:It isn't broke... by MoneyT · · Score: 1

      Not really. Does the introduction of the money making but otherwise pointless TLDs harm the net? Is it evil for them to make money?

      Last I looked sitefinder was more or less defeated, and wasn't forced on people either and again I ask is it evil for them to make money?

      Can you give an example of this misallocation?

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    9. Re:It isn't broke... by hobbesx · · Score: 2, Funny

      Hmmm... Insightful, polite, open to suggestion... Are you Canadian? :D

      --
      This rating is Unfair ( ) ( ) Fair (*) Funny
      Sigh... If only. Modding would be so much more fun.
    10. Re:It isn't broke... by ceeam · · Score: 1

      I haven't heard of any cases in which the internet has been abused by the United States or any organization assigned to administrate it...

      I nearly choked... For starters (and since we are on slashdot) - do you know what the last letter in xxAA acronyms stand? What about open-key strong encryption problems (somehow it has settled - partially - but do you remember the buzz?). What about problems with reverse engineering sites? Should I continue?

    11. Re:It isn't broke... by m50d · · Score: 1

      Verisign's monopoly has been quite a problem. If you want another example of abuse, ICANN's introduction of new tlds. Partly these are to make money by getting people to register new names, and partly they're to screw people offering alternative root servers. (1. Someone makes a new root server 2. To give a value added and get people to switch, a group of these alternative servers get together and start selling domains under a new tld, like .biz, for cheap 3. ICANN notices, adds the new tld itself, and stomps all over the new root server and their customers 4. new root server has reputation collapse, dies. It's happened repeatedly).

      --
      I am trolling
    12. Re:It isn't broke... by haralder · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Internet is becoming far too important for many countries to leave it under the control of a country in which we do not trust. Is that enough reason for you? It is for me.

    13. Re:It isn't broke... by Ironsides · · Score: 1

      Internet is becoming far too important for many countries to leave it under the control of a country in which we do not trust. Is that enough reason for you? It is for me.

      Then name one you do trust. Cause I shure as hell don't trust any of them and I trust the UN far less.

      --
      Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
    14. Re:It isn't broke... by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      congratulations you are a moron, nothing you have mentioned would be changed if the UN controlled the root servers

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    15. Re:It isn't broke... by Mr+Smidge · · Score: 1

      Does the introduction of the money making but otherwise pointless TLDs harm the net?

      It does encourage domain-squatting, and may force companies/individuals into purchasing otherwise unnecessary domain names in order to keep up with preserving the 'uniqueness' of their net identity. I would say that was a bad thing.

      Is it evil for them to make money?

      Of course not.

      sitefinder was more or less defeated, and wasn't forced on people either and again I ask is it evil for them to make money?

      And lucky for us it was defeated. But you see the lengths that Verisign will go to just to try. And no, it is not necessarily evil for them to make money. However, you'll probably agree that the motives behind sitefinder could be described as veering a little bit towards the evil side, to the detriment of the technical efficiency of the net (non-existent domain names suddenly responding to pings, confusing spam filters, etc.).

      Can you give an example of this [IP Address] misallocation?

      Off the top of my head, doesn't the entire continent of Africa have just one class A subnet for itself? How many does MIT have? What about the US DoD? (I'm afraid I don't have concrete references for the answers actually, but the allocation has been swayed against the "rest of the world")

      Similarly, I can't reference anything for this, but I'm pretty sure that some ISPs in developing countries can't even afford to give their customers live IP addresses, because they don't have enough: they have to use NAT to connect all their customers!

    16. Re:It isn't broke... by Thu25245 · · Score: 1

      Please continue, you might get something right if you keep trying.

      The **AA, contrary to popular belief, are private organizations, not elements of the US Government. And the last time I heard, they had not managed to block access to any file-sharing protocol; they had to actually resort to the (gasp!) legal system.

      Since the US controls the internet, you'd think it'd be as simple as refusing to route traffic using those protocols.

      Ditto with encryption. The way I heard it US companies were barred from distributing strong crypto, while non-US companies were free to sell their wares on the open market.

      You'd think that the US would use its control over the internet to create a competitive advantage for US firms.

    17. Re:It isn't broke... by Shihar · · Score: 1

      I really don't see the issue. If the rest of the world wants their own Internet... they can go build it. There is nothing stopping the rest of the world from building their own system and simply ignoring the US run Internet. Hell, the lines are already there in most countries.

      What it boils down to is that the US will never give up the Internet to the UN. The US doesn't trust the UN. If NATO was more of a civilian organization and less of a military organization, you might actually have some success in getting the US to hand over the keys to them. The US simply will not hand over the Internet to an organization that has members that are the other side of the world when it comes to even basic ideology. The US is utterly imposed to China, Syria, Sudan, or whatever tin pot dictators you can think up having ANY say.

      Surely you can argue that the US is responsible for the creation of some of these nations with 'questionable' governing practices. That doesn't change the fact that it wont empower then any farther then the function of their creation. Afghanistan is a perfect example. The Soviets invaded, and because the Soviets were the enemy of the US, the US was more then happy to train and arm people who in the normal course of things would never have been able to receive any favorable dealings from the US. The justification was of course that it is the selection of the lesser of two evils. Better a few crazy religious nuts running around small third world nation then to allow the Soviets to expand their influence and threaten the rest of the world. It is an unenviable position to be in. You can have ideals, but the reality of it is that the world is gray and, as the UN shows more clearly then most organizations, ideals get compromised. No idealistic democracy would let the Soviet Union or China have veto power in any sort of world body.

      So, is dealing with the UN and sitting on a council with less then democratic nations dictating world policy a compromise in ideology? Sure, but it is a necessary compromise. The US needs to deal with the rest of the world, even nations that it is ideologically opposed to. That said, I would act surprised when the US only deals with them only so far as necessary. Handing over the key to the US and world economy and communication systems to a world body made up of less then democratic and friendly nations is one compromise the US doesn't need to take.

      Personally, I think that what the world needs is a new 'world body' that is exclusive to democratic nations that meet a certain criteria. Have the criteria reviewed every year by an independent body, then tie in a pile of trade incentives to join. I imagine such an organization would be significantly more capable conducting affairs like these and spur democratic growth.

    18. Re:It isn't broke... by Sinner · · Score: 1

      I think the real problem is that the US Administration might decide they need to "fix" it, just like they're trying to "fix" social security, or PBS, or the judiciary. Ideally, we need the Internet managed by a really ineffective, bureaucratic organisation that is incapable of doing anything. If we can't get the EU involved, then the UN would be a pretty good fallback.

      --
      fish and pipes
    19. Re:It isn't broke... by MoneyT · · Score: 1

      It does encourage domain-squatting, and may force companies/individuals into purchasing otherwise unnecessary domain names in order to keep up with preserving the 'uniqueness' of their net identity. I would say that was a bad thing.


      Only if you think a company needs (or shoud even own) all the domains with their name in it to preserve their "uniqueness". I mean, in real life we can have an Apple Computer Inc and an Apple Porn Inc without any problems at all and they can both even be refered to in the short form a Apple without any major problems.

      Why then can the net not also have Apple.com and Apple.xxx? That was the intent of the .com, .org and .net TLDs anyway wasn't it? To classify the site?

      And lucky for us it was defeated. But you see the lengths that Verisign will go to just to try. And no, it is not necessarily evil for them to make money. However, you'll probably agree that the motives behind sitefinder could be described as veering a little bit towards the evil side, to the detriment of the technical efficiency of the net (non-existent domain names suddenly responding to pings, confusing spam filters, etc.).


      I'm not convinced it was evil. First, why does a spam filter care if a domain responds to pings or not? I mean, I personaly didn't care much for it unly because I prefer an error message to an error page, but just because that's my personal preference does not make something evil.

      Off the top of my head, doesn't the entire continent of Africa have just one class A subnet for itself? How many does MIT have? What about the US DoD? (I'm afraid I don't have concrete references for the answers actually, but the allocation has been swayed against the "rest of the world")

      Similarly, I can't reference anything for this, but I'm pretty sure that some ISPs in developing countries can't even afford to give their customers live IP addresses, because they don't have enough: they have to use NAT to connect all their customers!


      Without any sort of reference I can't debate this point as I don't have the time currently to look this up myself. However, it seems to me that the misalocation of IP in the class A rage predates ICANN. If MIT has a lot and Africa little, it probably has more to do with the net developing that way rather than any malevolent actions on ICANN's part. Furthermore, this is a problem ICANN has been seeking to resolve with IPv6 so it's not like they're turning a blind eye to this.

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    20. Re:It isn't broke... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personally, I think that what the world needs is a new 'world body' that is exclusive to democratic nations that meet a certain criteria. Have the criteria reviewed every year by an independent body, then tie in a pile of trade incentives to join. I imagine such an organization would be significantly more capable conducting affairs like these and spur democratic growth.

      I can't imagine any objective criteria that would allow the USA to join such an organisation!

  12. Right-wing conspiracy nut nightmare. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hand over the foundation of technological innovation to an ineffectual international beauracracy?

    Not even left wing conspiracy theory nuts would agree to that.

  13. overlords by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    mod points to the first to mention UN overlords!

    1. Re:overlords by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I, for one, feel that this joke should always be modded redundant.

    2. Re:overlords by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I agree with change but I'm not sure about the UN as overlords in their current state. The original creators of the internet - #1CERN in Switzerland, #2 ARPA in the U.S should probably have joint control. BUT In many ways, they already do, don't they. I think allot of the CERN people are in the U.S.

      One thing though: Keep U.S government policy........far away and completely out of it. The internet is international now. If the U.S goverment tamper with it, then countries like China will simply (and I mean simply) just use another protocol (on existing and future hardware) that isolates their people even further from the world...

      My final opinion - keep it the way it is, but keep politics out of it and keep the body filled with international members..even Chinese (as long as they are the nice ones.. : )

      Also, the Chinese governments main problem with the internet is that not enough is being done about SPAM. That's true - not enough is being done.

  14. UN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The UN just wants something to make them relevant again..

    1. Re:UN by sillybilly · · Score: 1

      UN, Leauge of Nations, whatever you wanna call it. The concept of League of Nations is what ended WWI relatively calmly, but it was a lie, so there was a WWII. So there was UN and much rejoicing, until there was no longer a UN. So how long til WWIII?

    2. Re:UN by delong · · Score: 1

      So how long til WWIII?

      We're fighting it now.

      The UN has failed because it was created by the victorious WWII powers to preserve the status quo. But the Cold War world no longer exists, and the UN is incapable of adjusting from preservation of the Cold War status quo, to the proactive processing of global connectedness (and the failed nation-states that threaten the rest of us with their unconnectedness), and dealing with the proliferation of non-state actors that have become a global insurgency against global connectedness and modernity.

  15. The UN by LWATCDR · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Will do for the Internet what it did for Freedom...
    God help us all.

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    1. Re:The UN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Promote it through responsible action? Awesome. Now if we could just get them to apply their policy on Weapons of Mass Destruction That Don't Exist to censorship, I'd be perfectly happy to hand it over to them.

    2. Re:The UN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

      Do you mean the UN that thought that invading Iraq wasn't justified? That more time was needed to establish the existence of WMDs? Clearly an organisation that couldn't make a good decision to save itself. Oh, wait...

    3. Re:The UN by g0at · · Score: 3, Insightful

      God help us all.

      Which one?

      -b

    4. Re:The UN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whatever the UN did, or did not, at least it didn't bomb to death more than 100,000 innocents to steal their oil.

    5. Re:The UN by eoinmadden · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Seriously, I'm not being sarcastic.. please explain to me what the UN did that damaged/curbed anyone's freedom? Have you concrete examples or just opinion? IMO UN peacekeepers in the Lebanon, East Timor and elsewhere have done a lot to advance freedom in thwe world.

    6. Re:The UN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He capitalized "freedom," which is a dead give away that he's one of those people who don't know what the word means but really want it spread around, no matter what oppressive form it takes.

      He's probably a big fan of fat guys on talk radio that have repeated their idiocy so often that he's forgotten that the UN just wanted more evidence of WMDs before invading based on the presence of WMDs, and did not, as people like him have somehow managed to convince themselves, decide the people of Iraq were happy being oppressed.

      Capital F in "freedom" always means you're dealing with a zealot. Ignore them.

    7. Re:The UN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      And what's the US track record wrt freedom? Invasions, echelon, PATRIOT, terrorist paranoia?

    8. Re:The UN by dazedNconfuzed · · Score: 1

      Naw, it just runs a tyrrany protection racket at a cost of >10,000,000 innocent lives. Rwanda, Congo, Zimbambwe, Iraq, North Korea, Cuba, Columbia, Palestine, Etheopia, and plenty others all get official polite recognition & protection for their violently oppressive governments, and respond to ongoing wholesale gov't slaughter of citizens with "Stop! or we'll say 'Stop!' again!"

      --
      Can we get a "-1 Wrong" moderation option?
    9. Re:The UN by Aeiri · · Score: 1

      God help us all.

      Which one?


      Allah of course.

      Oh, hey, look at that. The FBI are here... I'll see you guys later.

    10. Re:The UN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Always a bad idea to forget about propping up dozens of dictators and training and supplying horrendously oppressive (but capitalist, so yay!) armies in South America, not to mention routinely directly interfering with their elections.

      If we did currently have an altruistic government, which is a stretch to say the least, it would be a huge outlier in the grand scheme.

    11. Re:The UN by ChristTrekker · · Score: 1

      Just a little bit of a start of UN schemes to suck away your freedom. Government is always the antithesis of freedom. More government, that is not accountable to the people, is never a solution to anything.

    12. Re:The UN by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      How about this.
      http://www.unhchr.ch/html/menu2/2/chrmem.htm
      The membership of the Commission on Human Rights.
      Some of the members are Libya, North Korea, China, and the Sudan?
      Here is one about the fraud in the Oil for food program that the UN ran http://www.economist.com/agenda/displayStory.cfm?s tory_id=2618260
      Here is one on the UN Sex Scandal. http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Artic les/000/000/005/081zxelz.asp

      The UN has done some good but as far as human rights and freedom goes there track record is not great. I really do not the idea of them running the DNS. If nothing else what we have now works.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    13. Re:The UN by The+Angry+Mick · · Score: 1

      Being fair and balanced and all, I thought I'd remind everyone of a few similar things that have been brought to you by the US government recently.

      --

      I'm not tense. I'm just terribly, terribly, alert.

    14. Re:The UN by ChristTrekker · · Score: 1

      I'm not an apologist for the US government. But I'm definitely not a UN cheerleader, either. Personally I think every domain should be under a ccTLD, which is under the jurisdiction of its respective gov't, so trademark issues can be enforced by applicable laws. Other than that, I don't see why the internet needs technical oversight by any governmental entity. Others have noted that this is primarily a tax scheme by the UN to generate a revenue stream independent of member nation contributions. That I'd hate to see.

    15. Re:The UN by Apuleius · · Score: 1

      Australian peacekeepers did a good job. Then the UN brought in Jordanians who promptly started abusing the locals. Bugger the UN.

    16. Re:The UN by eoinmadden · · Score: 1
      The link Just a little Throws up this:
      From radical environmental treaties that would eviscerate traditional property rights, to attempts at global gun control, to resolutions aimed at establishing international "gay rights," the United Nations is the hub of an effort to restructure the world in the most radical ways imaginable.

      So just because the UN allows a discussion of world leaders on enviornmental treaties, such as Kyoto perhaps, gun control and gay rights, you say they are against freedom? WTF!! Does freedom not give people the right to discuss ideas like this?

      I certainly wouldn't like the UN to enforce any treaty which eviscerates traditional property rights but that doesn't mean I think they shouldn't discuss it. And even if there were such a treaty I know my national government wouldn't sign up to it, so its not something I'm going to lie awake at night worrying about. Remember, the UN is a treaty organisation. They can't enforce anything in your country that your government won't sign up to.

      Gun control: Considering the US thinks it has the authority to remove Iraq's (imaginary) WMD's why shouldn't the UN have the authority to do so? Why not have treaties against weapon proliferation.. oh hold on, we do. The Landmine Ban Treaty signed by 153 countries, but not the US.

      Gay rights: What's wrong with this? Only a fundamentalist Christian or fundamentalist Muslim would have issues with this, IMO.

      When I follow your more of your links I find journalists opining against nuclear disarment and the cancellation of 3rd World Debt. Again, how do these impinge on people's freedom? Are you saying countries should be "free to be poor" or "free to live under nuclear threat" and that the UN is evil for suggesting that people don't want to be poor, and that rogue states shouldn't have the right to stockpile nuclear arms?

      Finally, remember again, the UN is a treaty organisation. They can't enforce anything in your country that your national government doesn't sign up to.

    17. Re:The UN by The+Angry+Mick · · Score: 1

      I agree. My post wasn't really meant as a criticism of yours, just trying to keep things in perspective for the rest of the U.N. bashers.

      In my opinion, this isn't the U.N.'s bailiwick, and they should let the issues drop. On the other hand, I'm getting more than a little suspicious of the U.S.'s motives. Those that seem most worried about the potential for a U.N. tax scheme (which really is just the U.N.'s way of looking to get away from what they see as too much U.S. interference) don't seem to want to consider the possibility of a U.S. tax instead. Congress has already been looking at ways to tax the 'net and I believe its only a matter of time before they make this a reality.

      It would be ideal if an globally independant body, free from any government's interference could take over the job - something like an "I8" maybe. ccTLD's would be a great start though, it would definitely make it easier to track things like spammers and virus authors.

      --

      I'm not tense. I'm just terribly, terribly, alert.

  16. Internet Comes of Age by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Cue the "entitlement" Americans screaming "we invented it, if they don't like the way we run it, we should take it back". My fellow Americans, our baby has gone out into the world, and it's the world's darling. If we haven't raised it right, so it still respects its parents while playing/working/sleeping with strangers, we have very little authority in demanding it follow our rules. The Internet no longer lives under our roof alone, and we can influence it only by keeping it's old room available for it to visit, and giving it good advice as it continues to outgrow us. Keeping the apron strings tied will just force it to run away, coming around only when we offer it some cash or homecooked meals that it can find elsewhere.

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    --
    make install -not war

    1. Re:Internet Comes of Age by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nice strawman you set up there...

    2. Re:Internet Comes of Age by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jeesus your a nutjob.

    3. Re:Internet Comes of Age by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      See below for my trivially easy prescience of the ensuing "entitlement" posts. It's not a strawman argument when it 1> refers to the precise arguments of the past, and 2> refers to the arguments that will certainly follow. When the "entitlement" position is so warworn, it's easy to predict it, rather than wait for it to inevitably rear its ugly head in a dozen threads. Each of which will require the same rebuttal that I posted, but hardly workable/readable in Slashdot's tree system of discussion formats.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    4. Re:Internet Comes of Age by Tackhead · · Score: 1
      > My fellow Americans, our baby has gone out into the world, and it's the world's darling.

      By what right does the UN claim ownership of everything in the world?

      Listen, if I went around sayin' I owned the Intarweb just because some oil-moistened bint lobbed a DNS server at me, they'd null-route me.

      Oh, right, you don't vote for kings.

    5. Re:Internet comes of age by guet · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Those complaining in this thread about the Internet being American would also do well to remember that the Internet has grown up into things like the world wide web (in fact most lay-people think that *is* the internet). The world wide web was of course invented in Switzerland at CERN by a European. I haven't heard anyone screaming to remove all the pages served over http because they're somehow unamerican.

      Not that it matters anyway - as the parent says, a country struggling for complete hegemony over any thing or any person will not keep it very long.

      --
      Message from Airstrip 1

    6. Re:Internet Comes of Age by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 2, Informative

      The UN doesn't claim to "own" the Internet. It, like the ITU, is the closest we have to a global forum for administering global registries like the Internet. By what right does anyone claim that the US "owns the Internet", or even is the best administrator of it? Myself, I'd give it to the Dutch. Even though they have a queen.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    7. Re:Internet Comes of Age by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Acctually isn't' it the "entitlement" non-american's who are complaining... "we use it so we deserve to own it"

    8. Re:Internet Comes of Age by Rycross · · Score: 3, Insightful

      How about the "entitlement" non-Americans that think that because they can use the internet they are somehow entitled to owning a portion of it, despite the fact that the basic research and developement of it was done in the US, and most of the hardware is owned by the US?

      I don't think they have any room to point fingers.

      Oh and lets not forget that the solution is to take a system that has been working perfectly fine and give it to an unelected group of people with a incredibly bad track record. A group of people that have members who don't believe in little things such as freedom of speech, which is pretty darn fundamental to the internet.

      As another person stated, do you really want China, responsible for massive censorship of the internet, to have a say in how its run?

      This is a solution in search of a problem. The only real problem is political, and politics is something that the internet can do without.

    9. Re:Internet Comes of Age by sheldon · · Score: 4, Funny

      NO! NOT THE DUTCH!

      ANYBODY BUT THE DUTCH!

      Next thing you know, the streets of the internet will be littered with sites trying to sell sex and drugs.

    10. Re:Internet Comes of Age by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Still spewing out the ideological clap trap, eh, "Doc"? Comparing a network to a child. What a fuckhead! LOL! You posts are just an endless stream of a dysfunctional mentality.

    11. Re:Internet Comes of Age by Tackhead · · Score: 2, Insightful
      > The UN doesn't claim to "own" the Internet. It, like the ITU, is the closest we have to a global forum for administering global registries like the Internet. By what right does anyone claim that the US "owns the Internet", or even is the best administrator of it? Myself, I'd give it to the Dutch. Even though they have a queen.

      On a serious note, if ICANN were making politically-motivated decisions, I'd be for taking that power away from ICANN and handing it over to someone less susceptible to political influence.

      Even to the extent that ICANN may be tainted, the track record of the UN indicates (to me, anyway) that a UN-controlled 'net would be vastly more prone to political manipulation.

      Personally, the scenario of fragmented roots would be just fine for me. You want the Chinaweb, use a DNS server that believes in China. You want the Amerinet, stick with the current servers. You want the Jesusnet, there'll probably be a root server in Kansas. You want the Afronet, go with the root servers controlled by Mugabe and his friends. Live in Saudi Arabia, no b00bies for j00. (And no j00z either :)

      The networks with good policies ("good" being defined as "best able to serve the needs of their users") will survive. The bad ones won't. People lucky enough to live in free countries will be able to choose whichever network is "best" for them.

      Eventually, some crazy loon will decide that they want to access all the networks. They'll come up with some sort of way of mediating requests between all the different root servers out there. It'll be a network of networks - sort of an inter-net, if you will. I'd probably pay a few bucks a month to access a network like that. Might even catch on outside the universities and research labs :)

    12. Re:Internet Comes of Age by Alcilbiades · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The thing is look at the list of countries that want control of it. China ok they would want to censor everything. Brazil they don't want any porn on the net cause they are over 90% catholic so more censorship. Syria......hot bed for terrorists, the list goes on. None of these countries are say Britain or France or Germany. Why is that. Well it would cost billions of dollars to make a totally separate internet and so far the US has yet to restrict what can be put on the web. So as long as us 280 million people in the US want to foot the bill for maintaining the nets root why should other countries care.

    13. Re:Internet Comes of Age by St.+Arbirix · · Score: 1

      The Dutch. True, they were at least concerned by the Rwandan genocide when the U.N. refused to help.

      I'm guessing that your suggestion has something to do with the legalization of prostitution, marijuana, and gay marriage there. I'm not sure why politics should be considered in a technical organization.

      I think the IEEE or the IETF should get it.

      --
      Direct away from face when opening.
    14. Re:Internet Comes of Age by linzeal · · Score: 1

      Yeah and the prostitutes will be mostly STD free and the drugs will be safe. Hurrah for the Dutch.

    15. Re:Internet Comes of Age by zev1983 · · Score: 1

      I think the reason he suggested it was because the Dutch have been known for some time for their tolerant and free-thinking culture.

    16. Re:Internet Comes of Age by Couldn'tCareLess · · Score: 1
      Most of the hardware is owned by the U.S? Care to prove that little point?

      I agree that the UN shouldn't be involved: ICANN is already international organisation. Who cares if it is based in the U.S. - so is the UN.

    17. Re:Internet Comes of Age by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You obviously haven't seen what happens when you let Dutch people loose on Usenet. Those morons could fuck up a wet dream.

    18. Re:Internet Comes of Age by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That has got to be the most retarded analogy anyone has ever made.

      Congratulations.

    19. Re:Internet Comes of Age by m50d · · Score: 1
      The hardware I'm using is not owned by the US. I'm running through my ISP's servers and some other European one to (at the moment) a hosting company in the Netherlands. I use European mirrors for my big downloads. The websites I visit are all over the place, a lot of them US yes but more of them European. The basic research was American, but if you didn't want other people using it by themselves why the fuck did you make it an open protocol? Would you feel the same if Finns were complaining about others feeling entitled to do their own stuff with linus?

      I would be fine without the US on my internet, there are a few things I'd miss but not too many, and I'd prefer that to being on an internet controlled by the US. Why should the US be able to control what europeans do on european servers?

      --
      I am trolling
    20. Re:Internet Comes of Age by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I highly doubt your assertions, and suspect that you are in a permanent state of mental delusion.

    21. Re:Internet Comes of Age by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      The system is not "perfectly fine", as many even in the US have said. Did you RTFA? There are really serious problems, even among the nonserious ones.

      What happens when Christian Taliban take over the US government, and censor at least as harshly as China, or their Afghani soulmates, but much more competently? The US controls the UN more than does any other country. If we're looking for disproportionate control, as I think we should (as every other powergrabber will) to retain at least our fair share, we should exercise it through our control of the UN. Not by wagging the dog, as you fear China will.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    22. Re:Internet Comes of Age by linzeal · · Score: 1

      Doubt this you spook.

    23. Re:Internet Comes of Age by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      The nonamericans don't just "use it", they also run it, on their routers, backbones, research centers. The age of the "American Internet" is long gone. We should negotiate leadership in its governance while we at least still have some respect from that era, and while we still directly represent most of its producers, distributors and consumers. If we wait for the rest of the world to grab it a away in 10 years, we'll be looking at much less leverage, and probably even underrepresentation in the backlash. Just look at any other colonial power forced to withdraw from an rising colony - it's better to do it early, with mutual respect. Regardless of who created it, or who inherited it, we all have to share it now - we all *are* sharing it now. We have to work with the other stakeholders to keep not just our advantageous management roles, but its manageability as a whole - which America now relies upon.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    24. Re:Internet Comes of Age by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      Fuck you, Anonymous asshole Coward. If you can't understand a simple metaphor, keep your cliches to yourself.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    25. Re:Internet Comes of Age by metamatic · · Score: 1
      ...so far the US has yet to restrict what can be put on the web.

      That doesn't mean they haven't tried, though. e.g. Dmitri Sklyarov, and the people who published photos of the war dead from Iraq.

      --
      GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
    26. Re:Internet Comes of Age by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      You obviously haven't been to the Netherlands. The Dutch have turned wet dreams into fucking. Without telling people how to do it. Usenet could use some Dutch sensibility: the flames would subside, and everyone would be rich.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    27. Re:Internet Comes of Age by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      China does have its own network named ChinaNet, and the government of China did a lot of domain blocking and hijacking. Here is an archive from gartner.

    28. Re:Internet Comes of Age by Alcilbiades · · Score: 1

      The point is the US has never come out and blatenly said nor have they ever indicated that they want to firewall the information traveling over the web. China wants censorship, Brazil wants censorship, Islamic countries would make it very difficult for agency's like MI6 and the CIA/NSA could track online communication between extreme muslims. Lets face it until it isn't in the US National security interest to control the internet the UN will never get control.

      UN: Give us control of the Internet you guys or we will be pissed.
      US: Shut up or lose 50% of your funding and our military.

  17. I don't care who controls it... by ucahg · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Just stop already with the TLDs.

    In fact, get rid of them entirely. They aren't truly necessary except to maintain backwards compatability.

    1. Re:I don't care who controls it... by linux_haxor · · Score: 1

      Just forget domain names altogether! an IP address is much more compact and concise. we can all remeber 7+ digit phone numbers so whats the problem with remembering 32 bits... oh wait.... IPV6... Noooooooooo!

    2. Re:I don't care who controls it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about just using country codes as the TLD like everyone but the US does? Then each country could define its own TLDs inside its country domain.

    3. Re:I don't care who controls it... by Mr+Smidge · · Score: 1

      Slow down there, cowboy!

      Country code TLDs are incredibly useful, as almost all domain names fall into the natural country borders, or are international (for which we have the .int TLD - e.g. http://europa.eu.int).

      The hierarchical approach also allows the management of entire TLDs to be delegated to the country in question. If the address space were flat, then things would be messy.

      I also believe that the distinction between commercial and non-commercial domains is important. Requiring all commercial domains to be held under a commercial subdomain (e.g. company.co.us, company.co.fr) stops corporate types from pinching personal-use domains.

      Doing away with this disctinction would be analogous to preventing some homeowners from calling their house "Tudor Lodge" because of the existence of a business "Tudor Lodge Insurance", or whatever - you see might point.

      They were put there for a good reason. Let's not forget it.

    4. Re:I don't care who controls it... by ucahg · · Score: 1

      Yes but it badly needs standardization and enforcement. .com, .net, and .org should be eliminated. I'd prefer everything to be a country code, or as you say, the .int TLD (which I didn't know about before you mentioned it). .gov should be .gov.us (and all governments use the .gov.countrycode for predictability).

      Commercial entities can be .co.us, .co.uk, etc. What about non-commerciall entities? Do we really want .net and .org style back, or worse, .info, .biz, .xxx and so on. How about just organization.uk. Makes sense to me. Or organization.toronto.on.ca, as the old .ca domains used to be enforced.

      I also prefer Tim Berners-Lee's idea to have the URL more like: http:com/amazon instead of www.amazon.com. http:org/slashdot, and so on.

      None of this will ever happen, but I can dream for a would-have-been, can't i?

    5. Re:I don't care who controls it... by ChristTrekker · · Score: 1

      Couldn't agree more. I've been saying this for a long time. Since we're stuck with the reality that the world is divided into political units called countries, that are going to want to regulate some aspects of the internet (and appropriately so, in the case of things like trademark issues), why not require every domain to be in the correct ccTLD? For truly international efforts, we do have .int which could be organized by convention or treaty. Get rid of generic TLDs. Searches for pepsi.com, for instance, would return a code 300 response with a list of all the pepsi.com.[a-zA-Z]{2} that matched.

  18. Peace Keepers on the Net by gods_design · · Score: 5, Funny

    This way when there is a dispute over ip addressing UN peace keepers can just observe the dispute while the parties kill each other...

    --
    -- David inquired...
    1. Re:Peace Keepers on the Net by cmgar · · Score: 1

      Well since the US is considered the "Peace Keepers" we'll wait to step in on the addressing issue until some psycho ruler of a tiny country starts holding IP blocks hostage and then we'll spend billions of dollars trying to figure out how we can get around using that IP range, when we realize we can't, we'll blow the crap out the little country and then spend billions more reestablishing it and give it new IP ranges... yeah... I see this being a good thing.

    2. Re:Peace Keepers on the Net by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and preteen girls can exchange sex for IP addresses instead of food.....

    3. Re:Peace Keepers on the Net by sasha328 · · Score: 1

      I know this is funny, and i take the comment as such, but I will talk from experience about the UN Peace Keepers.
      I lived in an area where there were both UN Observers and later on, UN Peace Keepers. Or just simply, The UN. These guys are as good as the countries they come from. Most of the time, they genuinely do what the UN has mandated, hich in some cases is vetoed by the Security Council. The UN has always been very helpful to the population where they are positioned. Everyone remembers them fondly even after they've left. However, there is one problem with the UN Peace Keepers: The UN does not have the mandate to interfere. That is why, when somethign needs to be done, countries get he "OK" from the UN Security council and then they do something. Think of NATO sending troops with authorisation to "interfere" into the Balkans. Or Afghanistan: it is a NATO operation.
      Also, you will need to keep in mind that the UN needs to "appear" as neutral, and thus the peace keepers need to come from countries with no obvious bias to any of the parties. That is one main reason why the US (an in it's day the USSR) does not always participate.

  19. The New Internet by mbrewthx · · Score: 2, Funny

    Brought to by the same people who brought you Oil for Food,

    --
    __________ Leave me alone I'm compiling a RPG II program on my S/36...Thanks to metamucil I'm a Regular Meta Moderator
  20. Great Idea by lotawana · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think thats a great idea, while we're at it why not just disband congress and give the UN total control. Isn't that what they want anyway?

    1. Re:Great Idea by temojen · · Score: 1
      No.
      The UN general assembly is made up of representatives from the governments of member states.
      Very few member states want to give up their sovereignty. So the principle of member-state soverignty is fundamental to the UN.

      If you want to know who in the world doesn't want other countries to have sovereignty, look at who is pushing for
      • Regional Trade Deals that put commercial interests ahead of state soveriegnty over environmental, labour, intellectual property, safety, and monetary issues.
      • "Harmonization" of immigration security checks.
      • Debt relief plans that require "economic restructuring".
      • "Regime Change" in countries that are not cooperating with them 100%.
      • etc.
  21. UN Govern Internet? I think not... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...the only things the UN is even capable of governing are bribery rackets and pedophilia rings. The last thing we need is this corrupt and incompetent "organization" to have any sort of say in how the Internet is run.

  22. In communist Europe, the internet owns YOU..... by Puls4r · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Or not. Whatever hardware they own, they can govern themselves. While US companies owns 70-80% of the hardware that makes the internet run, the US will govern our own, thanks very much.

    1. Re:In communist Europe, the internet owns YOU..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Communist (!?) Europe

      Really we invented the internet ? What about the shitload of countries and people from other countries that also have contributed to this wonderfull project? The internet is more than TCP/IP, Arpanet and all that shit... .

      And you people find it stranges that allot of the world doesn't like you?

      It isn't about they hate your freedom (sic), but your frikking arrogance and ignorance.

    2. Re:In communist Europe, the internet owns YOU..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This post makes me want to close the Internet to foreigners. Who's with me?

    3. Re:In communist Europe, the internet owns YOU..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While US companies owns 70-80% of the hardware that makes the internet run, the US will govern our own, thanks very much

      If you generalize that sentiment, replace "hardware" with "goods" and "the internet" with "our lives", you will realize why every person in the entire planet should be scared shitless.

    4. Re:In communist Europe, the internet owns YOU..... by ceeam · · Score: 1

      I - as a foreigner - sometimes feel that I am strongly with you. If you close it both ways of course. Seriously - you're an asshole.

    5. Re:In communist Europe, the internet owns YOU..... by m50d · · Score: 1

      Well, let's have the UN create their root server, and then people who want to can point to it, or the US ones. But that would cause more problems, because the same domain name would mean different things in different countries. It's better to try and find a diplomatic solution before resorting to making a switch.

      --
      I am trolling
  23. let em build their own by wardk · · Score: 1, Insightful

    we built this one, it's ours. get over it.

    if the UN wants a big ass computer network, then start one.

    1. Re:let em build their own by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Your so called ARPAnet (the foundation of the internet) could not exist without the European scientists that paved the way for telecommunications in the first place ..long before Bells work...

      Most Americans are decendants of Europe (our bastard children in many respects) Why do Americans have so little respect for anything or anyone, period ?

    2. Re:let em build their own by wardk · · Score: 1

      the net is US created, US Built and it shows though and through.....BECAUSE IT WORKS.

      I imagine a "Euronet" would have been a war zone by now requiring US widgets to come in and push back the german widgets.

      again, there is nothing stopping the UN from starting their own internet. but then they are busy saving the people of Rwanda, Sudan, etc. oh wait, nevermind.

    3. Re:let em build their own by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually the Internet as a whole is mostly UK and Northen Europe in technology. America made it more sucessful with large hosts and so forth, but we should really thank Denmark, Sweden, UK, etc.

    4. Re:let em build their own by wardk · · Score: 1

      thank you denmark, sweden and the uk. now make yourself useful again and join us in telling the UN to butt the hell out.

    5. Re:let em build their own by CodeArtisan · · Score: 1

      the net is US created, US Built and it shows though and through.....

      So was the Ford Pinto...

  24. Hmmm.... by Iphtashu+Fitz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    My initial knee-jerk reaction to this was "Why not the US, after all, we invented it?". But after thinking about it for a few seconds it occured to me that since the internet is global you really need a global entity to be ultimately responsible for it. If there was a single global government then it'd be a no-brainer, but since the closest thing we have is the UN then why not? Yeah, I realize that there are all sorts of arguments like the UN is incompetent, etc. but when you're talking about something that impacts the entire world what better and more universally recognized body do we currently have?

    1. Re:Hmmm.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have a fair point in your initial knee-jerk reaction, to which I respond with one of my own: "Fair enough, but you can damn well stop using the WWW in that case."

    2. Re:Hmmm.... by Dr.+Transparent · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think you're missing the main point... if it isn't broken, why fix it?

    3. Re:Hmmm.... by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 0, Troll

      Yeah, let's trade one organization set up by the US government (ICANN etc) for another worse organization set up by the US government and administered by human rights abusers and crooks (the UN).

    4. Re:Hmmm.... by aggieben · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You really want to hand control of something so economically vital to the U.N.? You really want to allow the U.N. to impose taxes? Talk about taxation without representation...

      I tend to agree with most everyone else here: if it ain't broke, don't fix it.

      I don't agree with the idea that "the US invented it, therefore we should control it". I don't think that's a good approach or attitude, but I also think that the internet has been humming along just fine without any real government control.

      Really...what would *anyone* have to gain from allowing the UN to control the internet from a practical standpoint (no, "sticking it to the US" doesn't count)? I think it's pretty obvious that the cost/benefit ratio is really, really bad in that scenario.

      --
      Don't become a regular here, you will become retarded. -- Yoda the Retard
    5. Re:Hmmm.... by delong · · Score: 1

      But after thinking about it for a few seconds it occured to me that since the internet is global you really need a global entity to be ultimately responsible for it

      Why? Just because?

      The telephone network spans the globe. Turn the Baby Bells over to the UN! You can quickly see the absurdity of the proposition. Unless you can muster a better reason than vague, UN-phile platitudes, leave things well enough alone. It works fine.

    6. Re:Hmmm.... by magarity · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If there was a single global government then it'd be a no-brainer, but since the closest thing we have is the UN then why not?

      The UN doesn't even vaguely resemble a world government. It's more like a country club for national governments. There's no real money in helping refugees, feeding starving children, or vaccinations; the UNHCR, UNICEF, and the WHO are decent branches of the UN. There is staggering amounts of money in "overseeing" oil and other commodity sales and there's probably also staggering amounts of money and power involved in domain name control. Do you really want an organization made up of unelected and unaccountable politicos running another program with money involved given the UN's track record in that regard?

    7. Re:Hmmm.... by saider · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If there was a single global government then it'd be a no-brainer,but since the closest thing we have is the UN then why not?

      There is not a global government. The UN is a treaty organization that wants to become a government. Your attitude is to just hand over a national asset to a questionable body that is not accountable to anyone.

      Besides, why not do something better? Create alternate directories and advertise the IP numbers for those nameservers. Let software developers work out the problems with multiple top level domains, and now you have your international system. Better yet, it prevents *any* nation from controlling it. Get to work people. Innovate. Create a "new" internet.

      Jeez, I get something like 4 phone books delivered to my door. All a root server does is take a name and give me a number. Who says we need only one?

      --


      Remember, You are unique...just like everyone else.
    8. Re:Hmmm.... by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      but when you're talking about something that impacts the entire world what better and more universally recognized body do we currently have

      This would be the same body that puts places like Lybia and Iran in charge of human rights committees? The point is that the larger majority of the voters that assemble at the UN represent completely corrupt interests that absolutely want things that they can't, yet, as a society, build for themselves. The original post's mentioning of even the notion of a tax (by the UN?!?) to support "univerisal access" should make everyone run screaming from this whole concept. What does "universal access" mean, anyway? Subsidized cyber cafes along rivers in Papua New Guinea? They may not have phones, but they've got a vote at the UN!

      If the residents in the non- or less-wired places really are in a position where having net access would immediately boost their socio-economic horsepower, then that implies a stable, non-corrupt government, rule of law, and a culture ready for action. In otherwords, exactly the things that normally attract vastly more efficient private investment, with no compulsary UN taxes or bureacracy involved. And nobody from China getting to vote on how the internet should work (or, be broken, in their case).

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    9. Re:Hmmm.... by I8TheWorm · · Score: 1

      The thing is, nobody needs to be responsible for the "internet" as a whole. There are servers in the US, servers in Europe, servers in Japan, etc... The only real "governance" is the TLDs, but propagation of them is about as automated as one could ask them to be.

      What exactly would the UN be doing if they were "in charge" of the internet?

      --
      Saying Android is a family of phones is akin to saying Linux is a family of PCs.
    10. Re:Hmmm.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The UN already controls the international telephone network via the ITU - see http://www.itu.int/home/.

      This is the organisation that would run the internet.

    11. Re:Hmmm.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about, we as Americans foot the bill to maintain the majority of it? Sorry we do enough for the rest of the world, we don't have to prop up yet another "Multi-National Governmental Collaberation" i.e. the United Nations.

      If they want to run it, they can start footing the majority of the bill.. until then.. STFU and enjoy the free lunch (so to speak)

    12. Re:Hmmm.... by StyroCupMan · · Score: 1

      Talk about taxation without representation...

      I like the sound of "The Boston MP3 Party".

      --
      If I may say so, life is a game, and there's so much to do and so few turns.
      -Reiner Knizia
    13. Re:Hmmm.... by Enzo90910 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, well, from a non-american PoW, the root DNS currently IS run by unelected and unaccountable politicos. With the UN at least everybody has a say in the matter.

      Anyway, the US way of running the DNS currently agrees with most of the world, and it is so easy to set up a new DNS on the day where it doesn't that it's not worth discussing in advance.

      --
      I don't have much to add.
    14. Re:Hmmm.... by delong · · Score: 1

      The UN already controls the international telephone network via the ITU - see http://www.itu.int/home/.

      This is the organisation that would run the internet


      The ITU sets standards, it does not control the international telephone network any more than the W3C controls the World Wide Web.

      Handing over DNS would hand over the technical, substantive administration of the key piece of infrastructure of the Internet. And would be as accountable as any other UN agency - not at all.

    15. Re:Hmmm.... by dkf · · Score: 1
      You really want to allow the U.N. to impose taxes? Talk about taxation without representation...
      Perhaps, but it's not like the US (and hence its citizens) isn't represented at the UN. If you feel the US representatives aren't doing enough for you, surely that's a problem between them and you.

      (Of course, if the UN were running the basis of DNS, they'd probably do it by handing control of it back to national governments under some understanding that they'd agree to list each others root nameservers fairly. In practice, I'd bet that the root nameservers themselves would stay exactly where they are now, except maybe more of them would get set up. The political management of them would just become a bit more complex.)

      --
      "Little does he know, but there is no 'I' in 'Idiot'!"
    16. Re:Hmmm.... by salesgeek · · Score: 1

      But after thinking about it for a few seconds it occured to me that since the internet is global you really need a global entity to be ultimately responsible for it. If there was a single global government then it'd be a no-brainer, but since the closest thing we have is the UN then why not?

      This is a bad idea as the UN does not have a solid set of legal principals to run a business such as administering tlds. Also the talk of taxing registrations for some global make the world better program worries me. At least with the US you do have the right to petition the government for redress and can sue the government with the expectation of a fair trial - even if you are not from the US. With the UN, I'm sure you would have the right to submit a form to some office that would take 26 years to get it to, ironically, New York, USA to dispense with the problem.

      What is really going on here is the UN has ALWAYS wanted a global tax of some kind and they are looking at DNS as the ticket to getting one. Say no to global taxation, especially without direct, elected representation. My god, it's hard enough to keep elected legislatures under control when it comes to taxes and lawmaking, let alone indirectly appointed legislative bodies.

      --
      -- $G
    17. Re:Hmmm.... by sillybilly · · Score: 1

      Has been humming along just fine is no guarantee that it will be running along just fine. If anything, corporations with money cannot be trusted. If you just let them run rampant, one monopoly would end up controlling the internet, because they'd buy out everyone else, then blackmail you to the limit if you want to use it. Government needs to interfere in free trade, all the time, and regulate things like natural monopolies, or unnatural ones. Are you gonna trust the US government to do that?

    18. Re:Hmmm.... by aggieben · · Score: 1

      Take your conspiracy theories and brainwashed talking points on "evil corporations" elsewhere.

      First of all, all we're talking about when discussing "controlling" the internet is the name --> numbering mapping system known as DNS.

      Secondly, "corporations with money" don't run the DNS system, ICANN does. ICANN is a non-profit organization (it's organized as a corporation, but it's not a "corporation with money", as you put it) whose purpose is to be the authority on DNS. The U.S. Commerce department simply said "we don't want to mess with it. you do it". The U.S. goverment hasn't done *anything* at all to regulate the internet in 20 years because there's been no need for it.

      Lastly, the nature of DNS itself prevents any "corporation with money" from becoming this orwellian monster you fantasize about --- if Microsoft bought ICANN and started "blackmailing us to the limit" then people would just start ignoring the root DNS servers and depend on local DNS. This isn't optimal for DNS operation, but it does make it so that the scenario above can't come to fruition.

      If you had thought about it, you would have known that and you wouldn't have wasted the bandwidth of 50,000,000 individuals, not to mention /.'s.

      --
      Don't become a regular here, you will become retarded. -- Yoda the Retard
  25. While you are at it... by Red+Pointy+Tail · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Why not let the UN govern your nuclear arsenal too?

    1. Re:While you are at it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We need a "ridiculously flawed analogy" mod.

    2. Re:While you are at it... by I+confirm+I'm+not+a · · Score: 1

      Why not let the UN govern your nuclear arsenal too?

      You jest, I realise that, but I've thought about (the UK) unilaterally disarming and the only way I can see it happening is by handing control of the UK's nuclear arsenal to the UN: if we start dismantling nukes we're (allegedly) open to attack (and we please the hippies too much, which is always bad ;-), and if we keep stockpiling them we're hypocrites when we tell other nations that they're not allowed nuclear weapons of their own.

      Also, I'd trust the UN Security Council to veto any attempt to use the UK's nukes. I don't trust Mr. Blair to be so wise.

      I vote for handing the root servers over to the UN.

      --
      This is where the serious fun begins.
    3. Re:While you are at it... by kaalamaadan · · Score: 1

      This was Oppenheimer's preferred soln.

  26. Find different Web sites at the same address by BigDogCH · · Score: 1

    The nuclear option could create a Balkanized Internet where two computers find different Web sites at the same address.

    So what is the difference? Half of my customers using IE have this happen all the time, and they have no clue. Spyware? On my computer?

  27. Anyone but the U.N. by blankmeyer · · Score: 3, Insightful
    I made this comment on my blog (http://blankmeyer.blogspot.com/2005/07/should-un- control-of-internet.html):
    Following last weeks announcement by the U.S. that it would not turn over DNS servers it controls to ICANN (U.S. Won't Let Go of Master Domain Servers), the U.N. is set to report next week that it should control the internet backbone.

    If there's one organization that I can name that shouldn't have control of the Internet, it is the United Nations. I think the UN has outlived its useful life and needs to either be drastically reformed or replaced completely. If we're ever going to have a united world government, that institution needs actual power, protection for member states, and freedom from corruption (or what the best safeguards can allow).

    The UN has no business asking to regulate something, when it can't even regulate itself. Granted, I don't necessarily think the U.S. government should be in charge of the DNS backbone. I think it needs to be an un-national and un-political organization that has a limited focus on running the internet with feedback, not only from world-wide governments, but from businesses and individual users, as well. A model based off of the open-source movement could work.

    Just keep it out of the hands of the U.N.
    1. Re:Anyone but the U.N. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you would like Osama bin Laden to rule Internet? Nice way to spit on the face of those who sacrificed themselves for freedom in Iraq.

    2. Re:Anyone but the U.N. by sheldon · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If we're ever going to have a united world government, that institution needs actual power, protection for member states, and freedom from corruption (or what the best safeguards can allow).

      This is contradictory... power and protection for member states? How about we protect the member states by not giving the UN power?

      The UN was supposed to be a framework for diplomatic cooperation of countries. A place for them to talk issues to death, to negotiate treaties and so forth. The failure we've seen has been in trying to expand the UN role beyond that. How about we get back to the roots?

      As for freedom from corruption. Is that possible? Look at the United States. We've got one of the most corrupt administrations we've had since maybe US Grant and I don't see much of a call to do anything about it. The bribes keep flowing in and the payouts from the treasury keep flowing out and everybody seems happy about it.

    3. Re:Anyone but the U.N. by paiute · · Score: 1

      If we're ever going to have a united world government

      Last time I looked, there are 4 Chinese for every American. Is this going to be an elected world government? One man, one vote? Or does each nation get a vote: Fiji vote = USA vote?

      Or do we vote with money and guns - like we do now?

      --
      If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
    4. Re:Anyone but the U.N. by blankmeyer · · Score: 1

      Right, I would like to turn over the internet to OBL. Sure, that's what I meant...

    5. Re:Anyone but the U.N. by blankmeyer · · Score: 1

      I didn't say I had the solution or that my framework would be possible. I just outlined what I'd want to see in a world government. I'm all for the UN being reformed back to its strictly diplomatic duties, but then we would still need an internation institution to handle things such as the internet, world issues, etc.

    6. Re:Anyone but the U.N. by Liveandletlive · · Score: 0

      In a decade, it will be 5 Indians for 1 American. Go figure it out.

      --
      I know the world exists because I exist.
    7. Re:Anyone but the U.N. by blankmeyer · · Score: 1

      Again, I do not have the answers. Any true world government would have to be created by all nations turning control over to that organization. Only by shredding our national identities will a world government truly be able to function and control the world. I don't see that happening any time soon. I think something cataclysmic would have to occur to unite the world population in such a way that nationality could be put aside and humanity be the only uniting force.

      I do think there exists the ability to set up limited International bodies that can run a narrowed scope of policies/duties. One example would be some sort of group to control the backbone of the internet. The UN can't do it because of all the problems it has handling the other crap that has been dumped on it/it has grabbed for itself. Set up an organization that is independent and responsible only for the internet. Governments can weight in, businesses and corporations can weigh in, and also individuals.

    8. Re:Anyone but the U.N. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "We've got one of the most corrupt administrations we've had since maybe US Grant"

      OK substantiate that with fact please. Bush-bashing without any evidence is fucking idiotic

    9. Re:Anyone but the U.N. by An+ominous+Cow+art · · Score: 1

      Just like the U.S. government: population-based votes in the House, state/territory-based votes in the Senate.

      I don't know whether any other nations' governments use a similar system.

    10. Re:Anyone but the U.N. by coolGuyZak · · Score: 1
      The idea behind the 2 "houses" of congress was to prevent the will of the large states from superceding the will of the small. Overall, seems like a great way to stifle corruption.

      However, as we can see, it didn't quite work. No, we definitely need something new.

    11. Re:Anyone but the U.N. by stuartkahler · · Score: 1

      Or do we vote with money and guns - like we do now?
      I prefer the money-n-guns method. Even if those 4 Chinese vote with us, there's 15 more people per american that we have to deal with. The day that every person on the planet gets an equal vote is the day we're screwed.

    12. Re:Anyone but the U.N. by sheldon · · Score: 1

      Just look at the mismanagement of funds for Iraq reconstruction.

      The most recent example is the whole Duke Cunningham adventures in house/boat resale... with companies springing up out of the woodwork looking for defense contracts.

      Further evidence is the sheer sum of money flowing into K-Street right now. It's more than doubled in just a few years. This is further evidenced by the scandal now involving Abramhoff, which is pulling DeLay and Ralph Reed down with him.

      I don't Bush bash for the sake of it. I'm positively outraged at the corruption that is going on in DC.

      What baffles me is the number of "conservatives"(and I use that term loosely) who bashed Clinton and others through the 80's and 90's for far less serious infractions, who are now turning a blind eye. If anything, it's those people who are being partisan here.

    13. Re:Anyone but the U.N. by sheldon · · Score: 1

      I guess I have no interest in seeing a world government.

      What we've got going on in DC now is a group of people trying to remake the US in their image, and they've chosen Alabama as their ideal. I don't want that. I don't want a government telling us that we need to be more like China, just because the Chinese have 1.3 billion people and can outvote us.

    14. Re:Anyone but the U.N. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ronald Reagan's administration subverted the law, and the only people that were ever held accountable for it were low-level nobodies. You might even remember one of them, who was never punished.

  28. Great, just great. by Capt.+Caneyebus · · Score: 1

    This is sooooooo wonderful *cough , cough*. So I wonder what types of scandals we could look forward to. Maybey we should put koficup annan's son in charge of the net. He is really great at running UN programs, rihgt?

    --
    -- Yes, I work for the government, and yes I am watching you.
    1. Re:Great, just great. by Guuge · · Score: 1

      Well, why not? It couldn't be any worse than having Paul Wolfowitz run the World Bank.

    2. Re:Great, just great. by Capt.+Caneyebus · · Score: 1

      this is very true. However, wouldn't you rather have 1 bad apple rather than 2?

      --
      -- Yes, I work for the government, and yes I am watching you.
  29. That's worse than the US by argoff · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Let me get this straight. I agree it's a good idea to remove tld's from US controll to avoid being controlled and manpiulated by such a large and powerfull political entity that coulnd't care less about my rights online. Anyone else see the irony here?

    1. Re:That's worse than the US by singpolyma · · Score: 1

      Let me get this straight. I agree it's a good idea to remove tld's from US controll to avoid being controlled and manpiulated by such a large and powerfull political entity that coulnd't care less about my rights online. Anyone else see the irony here?

      Ya, really, the US really cares about anything outside it's borders :P The Internet is safe in their hands because they don't know there IS anyone else, but what if they find out? :O

      --
      - Singpolyma
  30. The UN -- who else? by koi88 · · Score: 1

    I think the internet definitely shouldn't be in the hands of a single government.
    While I think a multi-national non-profit organisation should be founded to control the internet, the UN might be the next-best choice.

    --

    I don't need a signature.
    1. Re:The UN -- who else? by McFly777 · · Score: 1
      I think the internet definitely shouldn't be in the hands of a single government.
      But "the internet" isn't in the hands of a single government. Each country has its own TLD to do with what it wishes. If people dont want to go to foo.co.UK, and instead prefer to go to foo.com, then it is a marketing issue. For that matter, with IPV6, there are enough addresses to give each country its own block and let them assign them however they want. (That would make it simpler to filter with too!)
      --

      McFly777
      - - -
      "What do people mean when they say the computer went down on them?" -Marilyn Pittman
    2. Re:The UN -- who else? by delong · · Score: 1

      I think the internet definitely shouldn't be in the hands of a single government

      So it's better to be in the hands of none/all? The UN is not accountable, and is ruled by concensus in committee. Which means solutions are least-common-denominator.

      Great idea.

  31. When the UN adopts the first amendment... by Len+Budney · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...then maybe. Not before.

    1. Re:When the UN adopts the first amendment... by wyseguy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And the right to defend yourself and your freedoms a la the Second.

      --
      Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity.
    2. Re:When the UN adopts the first amendment... by atomm1024 · · Score: 1
      Well, they do have the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, including free speech/expression.

      Some of their member states may not have adopted it, but if the UN created an official Internet-management agency, I expect it would.

      --
      Signature.
    3. Re:When the UN adopts the first amendment... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the hell? You make it sound like america is the only country with a law like the first amendment. Yes i know the UN isnt a country, but even they have amendments that lay down the absic rights and freedoms people should have, *including freedom speech*.

      Oh, and by the way, IANAL, but if the US is such a free and open country, why is insulting the president technically a federal offence?

    4. Re:When the UN adopts the first amendment... by Len+Budney · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No. The UN pays lip service to the freedom of speech, but clearly states in the charter (have you read it?) that these "rights" are subject to abridgement or revocation by the UN itself. A right isn't a right if it can be taken away. That's why the US founding documents speak of inalienable rights, endowed by the creator. In other words, rights that transcend the power of government.

    5. Re:When the UN adopts the first amendment... by exegene · · Score: 1

      Do you mean when the UN recognises a USA law as binding? Or when the UN recognises those rights guaranteed by the first amendment?

      See the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, in particular articles 18 - 21:

      "Article 18.

      Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion; this right includes freedom to change his religion or belief, and freedom, either alone or in community with others and in public or private, to manifest his religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship and observance.

      Article 19.

      Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.

      Article 20.

      (1) Everyone has the right to freedom of peaceful assembly and association.

      (2) No one may be compelled to belong to an association.

      Article 21.

      (1) Everyone has the right to take part in the government of his country, directly or through freely chosen representatives.

      (2) Everyone has the right of equal access to public service in his country.

      (3) The will of the people shall be the basis of the authority of government; this will shall be expressed in periodic and genuine elections which shall be by universal and equal suffrage and shall be held by secret vote or by equivalent free voting procedures."

      These are compatible with and more or less equivalent to the USA's first amendment:

      "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances."

      So. You were saying?

      --
      exegene refugee memories in hiding
    6. Re:When the UN adopts the first amendment... by randyest · · Score: 2, Insightful

      He was saying, if you'd listen, that those are neither "compatible with and more or less equivalent to the USA's first amendment." The bill of rights enumerates inalienable rights that can't be taken away for any reason. They are bestowed "by the creator" and transcend everything else.

      The UN's charter , however, says (from your link):

      Article 29.

      (2) In the exercise of his rights and freedoms, everyone shall be subject only to such limitations as are determined by law solely for the purpose of securing due recognition and respect for the rights and freedoms of others and of meeting the just requirements of morality, public order and the general welfare in a democratic society.

      (3) These rights and freedoms may in no case be exercised contrary to the purposes and principles of the United Nations.

      So, you get all those rights as long as the UN doesn't decide that they are being "exercised contrary to the purposes and principles of the United Nations." Or that suspension of some or all of your rights is critical to "meeting the just requirements of morality, public order and the general welfare in a democratic society."

      So, yeah. Those rights are subject to the whim of the UN.

      That's what he was saying, smartass.

      --
      everything in moderation
    7. Re:When the UN adopts the first amendment... by Len+Budney · · Score: 2, Insightful

      See the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, in particular articles 18 - 21... So. You were saying?

      Now read article 29: "These rights and freedoms may in no case be exercised contrary to the purposes and principles of the United Nations." In particular, if I exercise my free speech to call for the dissolution of the UN, say, then I've violated article 29, and am not covered by that "right".

    8. Re:When the UN adopts the first amendment... by m50d · · Score: 1

      RTFCharter. Seriously, look at their human rights charter, it's as good as the US constitution. (Better imo, since no right to bear arms, though I can see some people would see that as a bad thing)

      --
      I am trolling
    9. Re:When the UN adopts the first amendment... by randyest · · Score: 1

      You didn't spot the little tecnhicality in Article 29 that makes it very, very much not as good as the US Constisution? Read it again. Slowly.

      If you still don't get it, look up a few posts to get the answer.

      --
      everything in moderation
    10. Re:When the UN adopts the first amendment... by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      Have you READ that document? Don't get sucked into thinking it's good jsut because it has a fancy title or a few good quotable soundbites within.

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    11. Re:When the UN adopts the first amendment... by crabpeople · · Score: 1

      "No. The UN pays lip service to the freedom of speech"

      FUCK YEAH! NO lip service to freedom of speech in the USA! Like how the US doesnt jail reporters for leaking things that the government doesnt want the proles to know. oh wait...

      --
      I'll just use my special getting high powers one more time...
    12. Re:When the UN adopts the first amendment... by smallpaul · · Score: 2, Informative

      Article 19.

      Everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and expression; this right includes freedom to hold opinions without interference and to seek, receive and impart information and ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers.

      http://www.un.org/Overview/rights.html
      United Nations Declaration of Human Rights

    13. Re:When the UN adopts the first amendment... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Insulting the President is not an offense in the USA. A threat of violence against him is.

    14. Re:When the UN adopts the first amendment... by GypC · · Score: 1

      Reporters have no extraordinary privileges that allow them to break the law. Would you like to give us some examples of jailed reporters so I can explain why they are in jail?

    15. Re:When the UN adopts the first amendment... by Len+Budney · · Score: 1

      Article 19.

      Wow, for such a small subthread this is sure turning into a FAQ! I know what article 19 says. Now go read what article 29 says.

    16. Re:When the UN adopts the first amendment... by m50d · · Score: 1

      It doesn't say they can't be exercised against the united nations, just against the purposes and principles of the united nations, which are well defined and not at all nefarious.

      --
      I am trolling
    17. Re:When the UN adopts the first amendment... by MenTaLguY · · Score: 1

      Indeed, in the immortal words of Article 29:

      These rights and freedoms may in no case be exercised contrary to the purposes and principles of the United Nations.

      Er. Wait...

      --

      DNA just wants to be free...
    18. Re:When the UN adopts the first amendment... by six11 · · Score: 1

      Article 29.

      (1) Everyone has duties to the community in which alone the free and full development of his personality is possible.

      (2) In the exercise of his rights and freedoms, everyone shall be subject only to such limitations as are determined by law solely for the purpose of securing due recognition and respect for the rights and freedoms of others and of meeting the just requirements of morality, public order and the general welfare in a democratic society.

      (3) These rights and freedoms may in no case be exercised contrary to the purposes and principles of the United Nations.

    19. Re:When the UN adopts the first amendment... by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      you mean like the reporter who helped cover up people who put a CIA agent's LIFE in danger by revealing her identity?

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    20. Re:When the UN adopts the first amendment... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean the reporter who has a waiver from her source but still elects to keep her mouth shut and sit in jail? And this is the CIA agent who has been on a desk job the past few years? Geesh, I hope her co-workers haven't found out yet. All those other "covert" CIA desk-jockeys she works with might try to kill her!

    21. Re:When the UN adopts the first amendment... by Maian · · Score: 1

      Is this the justification China uses to evade its human rights issues?

    22. Re:When the UN adopts the first amendment... by sita · · Score: 1

      That's why the US founding documents speak of inalienable rights, endowed by the creator. In other words, rights that transcend the power of government.

      Big mistake to involve the creator in your constitution. In case there is none, you are in deep shit.

    23. Re:When the UN adopts the first amendment... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      You must be thinking of the Declaration of Independance, which is not part of our government or legal system at all.

      The United States is founded upon the Constitution, and the Constitution is deliberately not based upon God or religion at all. Such additions were considered and explicitly rejected.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    24. Re:When the UN adopts the first amendment... by Alsee · · Score: 1

      Big mistake to involve the creator in your constitution.

      The prior post gave you an incorrect impression. The US Constuitution does not invoke God or religion at all. See my reply to him.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    25. Re:When the UN adopts the first amendment... by six11 · · Score: 1

      I don't think the government of PRC feels like they need justification. As long as the west does not put pressure on them, they have no need to change.

  32. Screw the U.N. by tjstork · · Score: 1, Interesting

    the United Nations is not competent to do anything. It was a mistake that we Americans thought invented it. Some day the rest of the world will realize it too.

    --
    This is my sig.
    1. Re:Screw the U.N. by stinerman · · Score: 1

      If the UN would keep to doing what it was supposed to do and created to do instead of trying to act as some sort of half-assed world government, then we mightn't have as many conservatives and libertarians wanting us to recall our ambassadors.

      It was originally meant to simply be a place where all the countries of the world could get together in one place and talk diplomacy. Politicians then figured whenever some multi-country undertaking was to take place, it should just be put under the watchful eye of the UN. This was convenient, but made the UN a huge bureaucratic nightmare with the security council and council on human rights, etc.

    2. Re:Screw the U.N. by iCEBaLM · · Score: 1

      The US did not invent the UN, thanks for coming out, you fail at life.

    3. Re:Screw the U.N. by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 1

      The UN is basically a revampled Leage of Nations which was a concoction of Woodrow Wilson.

    4. Re:Screw the U.N. by iCEBaLM · · Score: 1

      "Revampled" in the same way that a Ferrari is a "revampled" horse drawn covered wagon.

  33. Deus Ex anyone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wonder if they will build an Aquinas router to be the hub of the world's communications and write an Icarus AI to monitor the Internet for subversive communication.

  34. wow... by trucker3406e · · Score: 1

    I cant believe those UN idiots think they automatically just get to control everything. We invented it. We control it. Can you believe they want to bring in internet surviallence and .. get this.. TAXES!?!?! Oh yeah.. they're dirty rotten socialist bastards that have to control everything and take your money doing because they no have no real freedoms... They have nothin in thier lives without being able to control or DICTATE over everything...

  35. Right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is the UN CCIE certified?

  36. Great by brucem4179 · · Score: 1, Funny

    This has all the markings of a disaster. Either a) Leave it with the US and watch countries like China break away and leave us with good and bad "internets". Or b) Give it to the UN, the very people who couldn't organise a piss up in a brewery.

  37. ignoring problems comes next by wardk · · Score: 3, Funny

    so if the UN runs the internet, I suppose that attacks against 3rd world computers will be ignored until millions of computers are slag. then when they do intervene, it will be half-hearted with the help unable to actually help, just stand around watching shit burn.

    1. Re:ignoring problems comes next by HD+Webdev · · Score: 2, Funny

      so if the UN runs the internet, I suppose that attacks against 3rd world computers will be ignored until millions of computers are slag. then when they do intervene, it will be half-hearted with the help unable to actually help, just stand around watching shit burn.

      I see your point. The UN will act just like Microsoft does now.

      --
      This is not a dream, not a dream...we are transmitting from the year 1-9-9-9.
    2. Re:ignoring problems comes next by WarmNoodles · · Score: 1

      When Microsoft patches things DO get fixed.

      When The UN patches, we get millions of dead Rowandans, we get Oil for food corruption, we get special little jobs for family members.

      Last time I checked Microsoft was doing Business not letting ten of millions die and suffer horribly.

      Its a pain in the Ass to be true to have to rebuild your machine or network but very seldom does Microsoft take your subscription MSDN fees and give it to terrorists and let solution providers Die in hunger camps.

    3. Re:ignoring problems comes next by HD+Webdev · · Score: 1

      When The UN patches, we get millions of dead Rowandans, we get Oil for food corruption, we get special little jobs for family members.

      That's called NOT PATCHING. It's also known as 'making empty statements and waiting for things to go completely out of control unless there's $$$ to be made (or the chance they will be lost)'.

      The UN, like Microsoft, does things that have to do with $$$ more than they do it out of being nice people.

      People complain about the USA having too many guns and that's why we're the murder capital of the world. But, that's disinformative. I'm 30 times more likely to get my brains blown out by a firearm in Africa than I am in the USA.

      What's the UN doing about that? Not much. Their Club Members aren't interested in that because there isn't as much profit as there is elsewhere in the world.

      --
      This is not a dream, not a dream...we are transmitting from the year 1-9-9-9.
  38. That'll solve all the problems! by SC_shooter · · Score: 1

    There's not many problems that can't be made worse with UN involvement. Get US out of the UN and get the UN out of the US!

  39. Let them get their own. by McFly777 · · Score: 1

    I hate to sound this way, but as I recall "The Internet" was invented, etc. here in the US, and this is why US organizations are in control of it. (Not that advances haven't come from everywhere around the world, but the original addressing system and naming system started here.)

    If the UN wants to control/tax/etc. the network, let them design their own protocol, with its own addressing system etc. (IPv8 anyone?) If there is ever anything worth while on it, I am sure that somebody will create a gateway to it, at which point the appropriate taxes, etc. can be collected.

    --

    McFly777
    - - -
    "What do people mean when they say the computer went down on them?" -Marilyn Pittman
  40. ICANN is plenty broken by Wesley+Felter · · Score: 1

    They seem to do little but stir up new controversies; and that's only for DNS. Imgaine if they started trying to "improve" IP address allocation, "fix" spam, or "ensure" universal access.

    I haven't seen any evidence that the UN would be any better, though.

    1. Re:ICANN is plenty broken by Chibi+Merrow · · Score: 1

      The point is, however, that following ICANN's 'recommendations' is still completely voluntary, as it should be. We don't need Internet overlords passing binding legislation deciding what can and can't be done, we need the people who actually run the damn thing getting together and agreeing on voluntary standards and practices on how things will be done. If enough people disagree with the "standard" way of doing things, it won't happen. End of story. Giving the UN the power to force people to do things one way or another goes against the entire history of how things have been done on the Internet. I mean, heck, the so called "Internet Standards" are RFCs, Requests for Comment, meaning anyone can have a hand in shaping them and you're not bound by them if you think they're braindead!
      All this will amount to is a money grab. They're even admitting that upfront.

      --
      Maxim: People cannot follow directions.
      Increases in truth directly with the length of time spent explaining them
  41. The Internet is now a global network by Idimmu+Xul · · Score: 1

    The Internet is now a global network, whether you Americans like it or not, which is why, and how, so many of your American companies get dossed by kiddies in Romania.

    The comedy 'the Internet is ours' replies are killing me!

    --
    The problem with slashdot is that most of its users were bullied and stuffed into lockers as kids!
    1. Re:The Internet is now a global network by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "All your Internet are belong to us!"
      or should I say:
      "All your Internet are belong to UN!"

      We are entitled to it you silly Americans because we didn't invent it, didn't build the bulk of it, but use it. How is that for comedy?

    2. Re:The Internet is now a global network by delong · · Score: 1

      The comedy 'the Internet is ours' replies are killing me!

      And the comedy of the second-stringers demanding ownership of something they did not and could not invent on their own is the height of comi-tragedy.

      The UN is ruled by the envious and the impotent.

    3. Re:The Internet is now a global network by isotope23 · · Score: 1

      Question for you,

      If you buy an airplane ticket from point A to B,
      do you then expect to own the Airplane?

      So why do you expect to own the internet?

      Simple solutions:
      1) The UN starts their OWN root service.
      (If people are truly interested, the major providers would then link and resolve from it)

      2) The UN starts its own internet.

      3) The EU and whomever else is interested can set up their own and mandate that Euro ISPs use it.

      We (the USA) owe you NOTHING. The only thing we as a country need to do is to respect your right to self-determination, and you OURS. (Frankly I am distressed that the US has forgotten this and is now caught up in playing empire...)

      I am not interested in paying taxes to an unelected, non-representative body, that I have no say in either. I have no interest in globalization. If you do fine, as long as it is voluntary be my guest.

      --
      Service guarantees Citizenship! Questions Guarantee GITMO.... Amerika Uber Alles!
    4. Re:The Internet is now a global network by sillybilly · · Score: 1

      So the UN should be ruled by the potent? How about an insect master race?

      "Ladies and gentlemen, uh, we've just lost the picture, but what we've seen speaks for itself. The Corvair spacecraft has apparently been taken over -- 'conquered' if you will -- by a master race of giant space ants. It's difficult to tell from this vantage point whether they will consume the captive earth men or merely enslave them. One thing is for certain: there is no stopping them; the ants will soon be here. And I for one welcome our new insect overlords. I'd like to remind them that as a trusted TV personality, I can be helpful in rounding up others to toil in their underground sugar caves."

      The UN shouldn't be "ruled". The World shouldn't be "ruled." Even "governed" is a strong word. Ruled by the ruled, governed by the governed is perhaps the way to say the opposite meaning of it.

  42. If they've got an idea for stopping SPAM... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... please give them a go at it!

  43. Simpsons Reminder by olu · · Score: 1

    Principal Skinner: Order order, do you kids wanna be like the real UN, or do you just want to squabble and waste time?"

  44. The UN is laughable by dmeranda · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Why in the world would anybody want to turn over this control to such a corrupt and bureaucratic organization. The address assignments is not a very defendable reason, it's more likely the other types of control they could start imposing. Like even more outrageous copy controls, censorship, taxes, and other forms of non-democratic social engineering, or anything to further progress on the anti-American movement. That's all the UN is about these days, and we've already surrendered too much of our (US) freedom to the UN already.

    1. Re:The UN is laughable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amerikans make up a small portion of the world population...

      Your county 'created' the UN to force it's will upon the rest....(consensus on a Jewisch state for example)

      Now if the UN would have some 'teeth' your worst nightmare would come true.
      The end of US domination...cause the the opinion of 'the rest' would also 'count'.

      UN is made up of mostly 'elected leaders'....so how is that undemocratic?

      The way you talk/type is even more undemocratic.....A bunch of (right religious) whities are in control of the white house by a minority vote!!!

      (what makes U think U can force your way of life upon the rest????......Well Weapons Of Mass Destruction for example will do that, as your country is currently doing)

      It is the US that is laughable....I wish I could laugh...but people are dying......U know..dead & stuff??

    2. Re:The UN is laughable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do realize that most of what you complain about is exactly why most of the rest of the world doesn't like the US right now, right?

      The effect of US foreign and economic policy is profoundly anti-democratic om The Americas, South and East Asia, Africa, and Sub-Saharan Africa.

      Both the conflict between US Media Culture and Islamic Culture, and the conflict between US Neo Conservatives (crypto-fascists) and Pan-Arab Social Democrats and Socialists have been profoundly anti-democratic in North Africa and south-west Asia.

      The Arabian Peninsula has it's own problems mostly due to the triumph of the wahabist House of Saud over Sherif Hussein ibn Ali.

  45. Well, we know they can run programs.. by BawbBitchen · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ..very well, just look at the Oil For Food program. That was very well run. No corruption there. Or the Human Rights Commission. I mean what better members are there then China, Sudan, Zimbabwe....

    It is funny. After the fall of the USSR I made a bet with a friend that we would see a strong unified world governing body within the next 50-75 years. At this point I have changed my tune. The US should leave the UN and form an organization of like mined democracies.

  46. Typical UN Resolution by robocrop · · Score: 5, Funny
    Resolution 30357A - Illegal File Traders:

    We will give you 1 year to take down your website, before 'more drastic' measures will be taken.

    One year later ...

    Resolution 30357B - Illegal File Traders:

    Oh, did we say one year? We meant two. Take two years. But take it down! Don't make us unleash the fury!

    Two years later ...

    Resolution 30357C - Illegal File Traders:

    We at the UN can't help but notice that you haven't taken your site down. We strongly disapprove of your actions. So much so that we're giving you three more years to do it. But you'd better believe that when those three years are up it's clobbering time. Seriously.

    Three years later ...

    Resolution 30357D - Illegal File Traders:

    It seems you are still running your illegal website. We downloaded several Chingy tunes today (thanks for the UN discount!). But you seriously need to take that site down. Seriously. To show you how serious we are, we're going to start a plan of denying aid to people not in any way affiliated with you. Yes we know this won't affect on you personally, but it makes us look like bad-asses. Five more years! That's all we can give you. Then out come the meat hammers!

    Five years later ...

    Resolution 30357E - Illegal File Traders
    - Rider A: Condemnation of Israel for refusing to just fucking disappear like the Mayans
    - Rider B: Pay-raise and trips to Disneyland!

    Maybe it's us. Are we doing something wrong? Is there something we could give you to make you take that site down? Because, seriously, we're all pussies here at the UN and don't want to do anything drastic like follow through on our empty resolution statements. So why don't we go ahead and give you as many years as you like to take that site down. Just keep those kickbacks coming! And remember, we are the world's last resort for justice!

    1. Re:Typical UN Resolution by CosmeticLobotamy · · Score: 4, Funny

      Resolution 30357F

      The US is making us do this again. Sorry. So, *sigh*, this is probably your last warning. First of all, thanks for taking that copy of Herbie: Fully Loaded off your site. But if you don't provide proof that you're not operating another server somewhere in some way we can't detect, we're going to come get you.

    2. Re:Typical UN Resolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hans Brix.. is that you?

    3. Re:Typical UN Resolution by Yankel · · Score: 1

      Resolution 30357E - Illegal File Traders
      - Rider A: Condemnation of Israel for refusing to just fucking disappear like the Mayans
      - Rider B: Pay-raise and trips to Disneyland!


      Hear hear! *That* is why the UN shouldn't govern the Internet.

      I mean, seriously, the UN has enough things to run itself in circles about. Besides, the rest of the world can always take the Open Source approach... if you don't like the way it is now, fork off.

      --
      --- Dan
    4. Re:Typical UN Resolution by hyfe · · Score: 1
      You know, I'll take that over:

      ---
      You're hiding MP3's!

      No, I am not. Come see.

      You're hiding MP3's! We just can't find them!

      Erm?

      I'll shoot you! Botswana, Korea and Cayman Islands will agree! That is almost everybody! *BANG*

      *silence*

      Oh, no mp3's here.. but that guy sure was evil. It was for the better!
      hmm.. I wonder if he had any evil neighbours...

      ---
      I don't how the story ends yet though, when this story dupes in a few years I'll complete it.

      --
      "" How about taking the safety labels off everything, and let the stupidity-problem solve itself? """
    5. Re:Typical UN Resolution by jjp5421 · · Score: 1

      I thought the final phase of the UN sanctions process was a sternly written letter (on UN letterhead).

    6. Re:Typical UN Resolution by robocrop · · Score: 1
      You know, this was never intended to be a serious discussion of the flaws of the UN (or the concept underlying the UN), but I have to say: what you are actually declaring is that catastrophe due to inaction is more acceptable to you than catastrophe due to action.

      The number of people who hold that exact same position amazes me. For example, that people all got together to wave their signs and protest the war but nobody protested the embargoes and sanctions that were starving families in Iraq for years. Or the gassing of the Kurds. Or the massacre in the Sudan.

      Everybody seems okay with turning their heads away from the disaster. It's getting your hands dirty that pisses people off. Which calls the whole UN thing into question - if we're not supposed to be the world police, what are we supposed to do? Is the purpose of the organization limited to being the stereotypical high-society dame of the world, haughtily lifting her nose at the perils of the world and disclaiming, "Well, I never!".

      Polite statements of disapproval has never stopped tyranny. But apathy is rocket fuel.

      Of course the whole situation is incredibly complex and would take much more than a few glib responses on Slashdot to fully resolve. So bring on the jokes!

    7. Re:Typical UN Resolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First of all, thanks for taking that copy of Herbie: Fully Loaded off your site. But if you don't provide proof that you're not operating another server somewhere in some way we can't detect, we're going to come get you.

      for this analogy to be valid, Iraq would have had to actually deliver WMDs to the UN. But there was never any evidence of ANY WMDs since the FIRST resolution.

      Get out of your neoconservative dreamworld and face REALITY.

    8. Re:Typical UN Resolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what you are actually declaring is that catastrophe due to inaction is more acceptable to you than catastrophe due to action.

      But there wouldn't have been a catastrophe. There were no WMDs. The UN was verifying this when the US went "oh crap! If they prove there are no WMDs, we'll have no excuse for invading! Better go now!"

      nobody protested the embargoes and sanctions that were starving families in Iraq for years.

      I certainly have seen MANY people protesting the sanctions, even (especially?) those anti-iraq-war. You should get out more and stop watching FOX.

      Or the gassing of the Kurds.

      Evidence of this didn't come out until years later. And what's the point of protesting in the united states against something another country did that everyone agreed was wrong? Preaching to the choir?

      Or the massacre in the Sudan.
      Again, see above point: no need to PROTEST this, as it's not something OUR COUNTRY is doing. There is need to TAKE ACTION about it. Get your head straight.

      Sheesh.

    9. Re:Typical UN Resolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is this an Onion story? It really made my day! :)

    10. Re:Typical UN Resolution by robocrop · · Score: 1
      But there wouldn't have been a catastrophe. There were no WMDs.

      Oh, if only we all had your startling prescience and could see into the future to have known this. Funny, if there were no WMDs where is your righteous indignation against all the children starved to death under UN sanctions against those very nonexistent WMDs?

      The UN was verifying this

      You're engaging in revisionist history. The UN wasn't verifying this, because the inspectors did not have the freedom they needed to verify it. But don't let the facts get in your way.

      I certainly have seen MANY people protesting the sanctions, even (especially?) those anti-iraq-war. You should get out more and stop watching FOX.

      It is people like you who ensure that those who watch FOX will continue to rule the nation. Because any time that someone questions your shaky logic, porous reasoning, and self-centered world view, you jump to hyperbole and generalization. "You don't agree that the US is 100% evil? You're a ditto head!" Pardon me if I see the crazy need to actually back my positions with logic and reason.

      Here's what I saw, on CNN, the BBC, CBC, and numerous other news channels: thousands of carefully orchestrated, televised protests against the US-led invasion of Iraq. Zero over the sanctions. Zero over the fact that the UN left the Iraqi rebellion to die horribly after the first Gulf War. Maybe if you weren't so busy selling yourself your own choice line of BS you'd have seen this.

      And what's the point of protesting in the united states against something another country did that everyone agreed was wrong? Preaching to the choir?

      How about motivating the member countries of your esteemed UN to actually do something about the situation?

      Sorry, I forgot who I was talking to. You just sit back and pass judgment on everyone else's actions. Actually doing something is for people of lesser intellect.

      no need to PROTEST this, as it's not something OUR COUNTRY is doing. There is need to TAKE ACTION about it. Get your head straight.

      Um, sure. Because protest is not about motivating people to action.

      If there were an award for most idiotic comment of the year, you'd be giving your Michael-Moore-approved acceptance speech right about ... now.

      Remember, I'm just 'booing the booers'.

    11. Re:Typical UN Resolution by Munra · · Score: 1

      Is this followed by the US invading the homes of the illegal file traders, before discovering that they hadn't actually traded any illegal files?

      Manta

    12. Re:Typical UN Resolution by cpghost · · Score: 1

      I thought the final phase of the UN sanctions process was a sternly written letter (on UN letterhead).

      Yes, but it has to be ISO A4 paper, according to ISO 216 and related norms and regulations.

      --
      cpghost at Cordula's Web.
    13. Re:Typical UN Resolution by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      Oh, if only we all had your startling prescience and could see into the future to have known this.

      No prescience required. Common sense and logic is all it takes. Something the proponents of war were all clearly short on, but quite long on adrenaline, lust to kill and self-righteous belief in their own infallibility. And they all have been proven wrong. So now you pretend that this prediction was somehow un-imaginably unlikely to be made correctly. Amusing to watch, but no one is buying this crap, and you know it.

      Funny, if there were no WMDs where is your righteous indignation against all the children starved to death under UN sanctions against those very nonexistent WMDs?

      Many of us (myself included) opposed the sanctions as ineffective and poorly targeted. The very same people however, who later were chief proponents of war, were insisting on the sanctions. US and UK hard-ons for Saddam were so large that they began stopping shipments of food and medicine, hoping to starve Iraq into revolt, and prevented charity organizations from sending relief. This alone tells everything one has to know about the fake concern of war proponents for the "Iraqi people". Were it not for stranded Indian workers, the resolution 666 would not have passed due to this vicious US and UK attitude and not even the crude, corrupt and unwieldy "food-for-oil" program would be in place.

      Unless of course you claim that the UN proved to be too easily influenced and not resistant enough to belligerent US and UK pressure. In which case I do concur.

      You're engaging in revisionist history. The UN wasn't verifying this, because the inspectors did not have the freedom they needed to verify it. But don't let the facts get in your way.

      Quoth Scott Ritter:

      I bear personal witness through seven years as a chief weapons inspector in Iraq for the United Nations to both the scope of Iraq's weapons of mass destruction programs and the effectiveness of the UN weapons inspectors in ultimately eliminating them.

      While we were never able to provide 100 percent certainty regarding the disposition of Iraq's proscribed weaponry, we did ascertain a 90-95 percent level of verified disarmament. This figure takes into account the destruction or dismantling of every major factory associated with prohibited weapons manufacture, all significant items of production equipment, and the majority of the weapons and agent produced by Iraq.

      With the exception of mustard agent, all chemical agent produced by Iraq prior to 1990 would have degraded within five years (the jury is still out regarding Iraq's VX nerve agent program - while inspectors have accounted for the laboratories, production equipment and most of the agent produced from 1990-91, major discrepancies in the Iraqi accounting preclude any final disposition at this time.)

      The same holds true for biological agent, which would have been neutralized through natural processes within three years of manufacture. Effective monitoring inspections, fully implemented from 1994-1998 without any significant obstruction from Iraq, never once detected any evidence of retained proscribed activity or effort by Iraq to reconstitute that capability which had been eliminated through inspections.

      Revisionist history indeed. Your specialty, may I add.

      Zero over the fact that the UN left the Iraqi rebellion to die horribly after the first Gulf War

      Right. I see. So the UN should have amassed an army and rolled over Iraq, helping the Shia, bringing "prosperity", "freedom" and "democracy" and to be, in return, showered with

    14. Re:Typical UN Resolution by jjp5421 · · Score: 1

      Not A4, that is some harsh 5h17!

    15. Re:Typical UN Resolution by robocrop · · Score: 1
      No prescience required. Common sense and logic is all it takes. Something the proponents of war were all clearly short on, but quite long on adrenaline, lust to kill and self-righteous belief in their own infallibility. And they all have been proven wrong. So now you pretend that this prediction was somehow un-imaginably unlikely to be made correctly. Amusing to watch, but no one is buying this crap, and you know it.

      Rather than engage in a long-winded reply, as you do to attempt to obfuscate and conceal your ignorance, let me just point out that Iraq was under more than 10 years of constant UN inspection, sanctions, and threats. If the UN honestly believed there was no problem in Iraq, this wouldn't have been the case. Even Annan said that he didn't feel they were being forthright about their weapons stashes, and Annan's son was taking money. So your whole argument is just Monday-morning quarterbacking.

      Many of us (myself included) opposed the sanctions as ineffective and poorly targeted.

      And you're evading the question - the question was why weren't there massive, organized protests against these problems? Why weren't you on your poorly-informed soapbox screaming that things had to change? Because it wasn't sexy, it wouldn't be televised, and you don't really give a shit. You're just bandwagoning.

      Quoth Scott Ritter:

      Quoth Time:

      Scott Ritter was the UN's top weapons inspector in Iraq until 1998, when he resigned claiming President Clinton was too easy on Saddam.

      Quoth the BBC:

      In early 1998 an inspection by Mr Ritter's team led to the most serious confrontation between Baghdad and the UN since the Gulf War, and eventually to Unscom leaving Iraq. In August 1998, Mr Ritter resigned from his job, accusing the Security Council and the United States of caving in to the Iraqis.

      Sounds to me like he wasn't sure what he believed. And, again, the _entire_ UN seemed quite convinced of Saddam's weapons holdings.

      Right. I see. So the UN should have amassed an army and rolled over Iraq,

      Since the UN is supposed to protect the world from dictatorial human-rights abusers, and Saddam had just declared war on a sovereign nation and would undoubtedly exterminate the rebellion in Iraq which helped the UN - YES. Unequivocally.

      If the situation is un-fixable by available means (i.e. the cure is worse then the disease), all one can do is peripheral work, sadly.

      The problem with your type is you always see the cure as worse than the disease. Because cure requires you to actually do something. Disease lets you sit back in your comfortable chair, typing your disapproval for every action. Which is why your type never accomplish anything, and never make policy.

      O.K. Let me make this as simple as possible for you ... [remainder snipped]

      If by 'simple' you meant 'skewed', you are correct. Simply casting the situation as one of an incurable terminal disease which nobody can do anything about immediately biases it to your side. If this is truly how you see the world - they're all sick, we should just let them die - then your problem is much, much bigger than the US.

      And bonus: it also sheds the light on the "lesser intellect" which you so kindly brought up.

      I guess I just wasn't prepared for you being so comfortable in that spotlight. But then again your type are all about attention. Look at me! I told you it was a bad idea. Look at me! I said do nothing, and you did something, and now bad stuff is happening. Look at me! I can't offer any constructive ideas, or any solutions, but I can sure criticize everything you do! It's sad, and I mean that in a pathetic way.

    16. Re:Typical UN Resolution by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      let me just point out that Iraq was under more than 10 years of constant UN inspection, sanctions, and threats.

      ... sponsored by the US and the UK as I already mentioned in detail. UN is a weak organisation, hoplessely kept hostage by the security council members, US particularly. I find it especially amusing that people like you were the ones twisting the arm of the UN to keep the sanctions on and now you are using the keeping of the sanctions as an argument to support your arm-twisting! How delightfully circular, something that can only come from a bunch of delusional retards.

      If the UN honestly believed there was no problem in Iraq, this wouldn't have been the case.

      No it would have been vetoed by US and UK. Sanctions were kept at the explicit demand of those two. Any attempt to remove them = veto. The rest is just inconsequential fluff. Simple enough for you?

      And you're evading the question - the question was why weren't there massive, organized protests against these problems?

      I admit it, I failed to coordinate 6 million people to show up on the streets in 12 countries at noon Tuesday. My bad. The fact that there are volumes written on oposition to sanctions, entire organisations set up, people like Galloway getting expelled from his party over that by crooks like you falsifying Saddam's paperwork, etc, etc, is just too small an effort in your books. And the fact that people have to priorize gigiantic demonstrations aiming at the most important, of multiple, related, causes -- stopping the war was #1 -- as they can only be held rarely due to extreme logistics, is also absolutely beyond you. Which somehow does not surprise me in the slightest.

      Why weren't you on your poorly-informed soapbox screaming that things had to change? Because it wasn't sexy, it wouldn't be televised, and you don't really give a shit

      Oh, I was doing that, on this here very Slashdot even. I would have pointed you to my old posts but I am not a subscriber and only can see my last 20 or so. I tried to Google but it appears to be a very fragmentary record with only a small number out of my 900+ posts listed. Perheaps if you subscirbe yourself ...

      Quoth Time, BBC

      These are secondary sources, which did not get it quite right. Quoth Scott again:

      And now you have a situation where Iraq says, What are we supposed to do? If we cooperate, it doesn't matter, it doesn't matter. And now they start looking at UNSCOM, now there's an implementor of Security Council policy, but actually, as an organization designed to create confrontation, that gives the United States an excuse to maintain sanctions, we became not just an inconvenience, we became the bad guys. And it's the United States that's to thank for that. Madeleine Albright's mindless policy. And that's the beginning of the end for UNSCOM.

      I love that meme the media were somehow duped into using: "He resigned claiming US was not tough enough" while the actual reason was "The US did not support UNSCOM's mission" -- because US wanted to use UNSCOM as a prop for regime change. A wee little difference.

      Since the UN is supposed to protect the world from dictatorial human-rights abusers, and Saddam had just declared war on a sovereign nation and would undoubtedly exterminate the rebellion in Iraq which helped the UN - YES. Unequivocally.

      You make me laugh. The cognitive dissonance must actually be audible to your neighbours as a high pitched whine. I will skip for the moment the obvious "catastrophic success" uncanilly resembling the present situation which this would have produced, although it would have allowed for you to pretend that your bood stained, murderous paws are clean -- UN ratified action and all that. I will ignore the fact that the UN is only specifically authorized in its charter to deal with international law violations, such as the Kuwait attack, which it dealt

    17. Re:Typical UN Resolution by robocrop · · Score: 1

      .. sponsored by the US and the UK as I already mentioned in detail. UN is a weak organisation, hoplessely kept hostage by the security council members, US particularly.

      Your stupidity is astounding. You don't even realize that this completely undermines all your arguments for the UN becoming a more influential body. If the US controls the UN, how is this a good thing? Did you forget what you were arguing amidst all your self-righteous blather?

      No it would have been vetoed by US and UK.

      ... and all the other nations who believed that Iraq had dangerous weapons - a group which, again, included Annan. Interesting that you not only chose to ignore this point, but completely snipped it from your summary.

      I admit it, I failed to coordinate 6 million people to show up on the streets in 12 countries at noon Tuesday.

      I guess mocking the question is easier than answering it. So you've conceded that people only got together and protested the war because, like you, they are attention-seekers? That you don't really have a position except to be against whatever position your government takes? Good to know.

      These are secondary sources, which did not get it quite right.

      Yeah. I'll trust your journalistic credentials over the BBC.

      That is because your kind of "cures" almost always are.

      Since we've already established that this is how you see the world, the fact that you believe this really isn't surprising. I'm certainly glad you weren't around in WWII, so you could tell us all 'let that Jew problem sort itself out'.

      And we were right this time. Again.

      "We"? Feeling a bit cranky, Sybil? Or do you mean you and your parents, with whom you probably still live, typing your Unabomber-type missives on pointless bulletin boards?

      Cures are hard to come by for many problems. Subsequently having one is more rare then not.

      And just because you don't see it as a cure doesn't mean it isn't one. Cures may have side effects, they may seem harsh or shocking. To cure cancer one has to irradiate the body. To cure some venereal disease doctors would give their patients cyanide. The world is much more complex than your junior high school philosophy classes might have led you to believe.

      I was under the impression that it was you blathering and whining in your comfortable chair, in order to make others die for your delusions. I cannot help but wonder why are you not enlisted and in Iraq.

      This is, quite possibly, the most obvious and tiresome argument to come from your pussified, granola-chewing, patchouli-oil, hippie faction: that if you aren't out fighting the war, then you shouldn't be speaking in support of it. I'll join the army as soon as you fly to Iraq and join a human chain in front of those 'freedom fighting' Sunni Muslims. Seriously, walk right up to them and start blathering about how you're 'one of the good ones'. Hopefully they catch your demise on tape - the world could use more comedy.

      But you are the wrost sort of scum there is, a chikenhawk, a whiny little voice crying "kill them all!, with us or against us!" and hiding behind others, whose lives you deem "expandable" and "collateral damage".

      The most interesting part of your paranoid delusion is that, of course, I never said anything of the sort; in fact, it is you furthering this position. You are the one saying 'let them starve under sanctions, I won't lift a finger'. You are the one saying 'let them die under brutal dictatorship; let them stone their rape victims and gas their minorities ... I have nothing to say'. You are the most base form of life that exists: a coward who lacks the courage of any form of co

    18. Re:Typical UN Resolution by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      You don't even realize that this completely undermines all your arguments for the UN becoming a more influential body.

      Those are in your mind only as I argued no such thing. UN is influential sometimes, sometimes it is just a puppet of those who can shrewdly manipulate it and it sports an impressive bureaucracy. Its primary effectiveness lies in coordination of various international activities, primarily technical such as the ITU, but sometimes even military such as the Kuwait affair. It is in dire needs of reforms, democratic ones to begin with, in order to lessen the influence of the Orwellian newspeak named "Security Council" and the veto holding petulant 10-year olds otherwise known as the US and the UK.

      and all the other nations who believed that Iraq had dangerous weapons - a group which, again, included Annan. Interesting that you not only chose to ignore this point, but completely snipped it from your summary.

      Even if they were such, which I doubt, and even if Annan believed so, which I doubt as you don't quote him, all of this would have been based on "uranium yellow cake" and similar fabrications by the US and UK "intelligence", the same folks who tried to pervert UNSCOM to their ends. Besides, as those who insisted on sanctions in the first place, US and UK vetoes are the only ones pertinent to this conversation. People like you in the US administration were directly responsible for the sanctions and for their abuse.

      So you've conceded that people only got together and protested the war because, like you, they are attention-seekers?

      I will repeat it as simply as possible because its whizzing over your head again: the logistics of mass demonstrations is such that they can be only held rarely, and thus are held in extraordinary circumstances only. The cause which was deemed the most important of all Iraq related causes was stopping the war. Enter mass demonstrations. The other ones did not attain the required level of outrageousness and time specificity. Therefore they were dealt with in print and other types of activity. As most causes are. You would like to dismiss every cause there is because there are not 20 million people on the streets demonstrating every one of them -- and when they do they are "attention seekers". Which prompts you to dismiss them. Damned if you do, damned if you don't. This sort of "logic" can only work for your damaged cranium. Which, as I pointed out, is consistent with "I am right no matter what" reasoning you are so fond of.

      Yeah. I'll trust your journalistic credentials over the BBC.

      My "credentials" are of no import, you twit, I gave you the primary source, i.e. Scott himself. And since he contradicted all your fabrications about UNSCOM handsomely, you are trying to divert attention to my "journalistic credentials". Pure comedy.

      I'm certainly glad you weren't around in WWII, so you could tell us all 'let that Jew problem sort itself out'.

      This probably will come to you as a great shock, since your "education" (I assume coming from some Zionist summer camp) is somewhat lacking: the WWII was not fought over Jews. Not even over the whole concept of Holocaust, vile as it was. It was fought because Germany, aided by Japan and Italy, invaded other countries, who fearing defeat, allied against it. The ending of the Holocaust was a side-effect of WWII not its primary cause. 6 million Jews was but a small fraction of the vast rivers of casualties on all fronts, over fifty million in all. And if Saddam was in the process of invading all his neighbours and was in the slightest capable of the industrial and military power on the scale of WWII Germany, I would be cheering for an UN action myself, complete with a draft here if needed. That is what UN is quite capable of, in those circumstances, as UN did this in WWII (UN being merely a post-WWII formalization of the Alliance)

      So you can end your posturing about Jews as the planet does not revolve around them

    19. Re:Typical UN Resolution by robocrop · · Score: 1

      UN is influential sometimes, sometimes it is just a puppet of those who can shrewdly manipulate it and it sports an impressive bureaucracy

      Again, I couldn't ask for a better summarization of the stupidity of your position: the UN is a good organization when its actions agree with your viewpoint. When they do not, you ramble on for pages about how corrupt, US-influenced, and pointless the whole affair is. The term for this is 'sour grapes'.

      Even if they were such, which I doubt, and even if Annan believed so, which I doubt as you don't quote him

      I apologize for presuming you had the knowledge and capability to find his statements on your own. Since you evidently don't actually know how to use a search engine, let me clip some of Annan's statements for you:

      Until the inspectors report, I think we pretty much can't make any judgment - Kofi Annan, 12/31/2002. Obviously he felt that the continued inspections were necessary.

      Chief U.N. weapons inspector Hans Blix has said Iraq had failed to provide evidence in its declaration to prove that it no longer has weapons of mass destruction - CNN, 12/31/2002

      The UN Security Council and Secretary General Kofi Annan declared August 6 that Iraq has violated the Gulf War cease-fire agreement by unilaterally suspending cooperation with UN weapons inspectors - USIS. Annan felt that Iraq was concealing weapons, and still felt so in 2002.

      But don't let the facts sway you. It was evil America! Eeeeeeviiilll America!

      I will repeat it as simply as possible because its whizzing over your head again

      The only thing whizzing here is me pissing on your parade. Nobody takes action against sanctions. Nobody takes action against suffering inside a country. People only take action against military maneuvers, because since the 60's this has been the sexy issue to protest. You're a product of a carefully engineered counter-culture brainwashing. Face it, you're a puppet.

      WWII was not fought over Jews

      And this war was not fought over the Kurds, or the Shiites. However in both cases, entire sections of humanity would be the victims of your 'let 'em all die, as long as I don't have to lift a finger' mentality.

      You can end your posturing about Jews as the planet does not revolve around them

      And now another facet of your delusional mentality emerges: your anti-Semitism. No wonder you're so anti-US! You're part of the group that backs the Arab-controlled security council, which routinely passes laws in favor of Palestine and then refuses to pass the same laws for Israel. Given your intrinsic anti-Semitic bias, and racist beliefs, no wonder you're against the war in Iraq. And no wonder you don't want the people to win, and are happy that terrorists blow up children and civilians there.

      Nor does it imply there is one as you would want everyone to believe.

      And that's the best response you could think of? The full-sentence equivalent of 'fraid not!'. What next, I'm rubber and you're glue?

      Quite true, but all of these imply research, scientific knowledge, reasoning, accurate assessment of the disease etc.

      I hate to break it to you, but there is actual precedent for what is being done in Iraq. The US created the democracies which exist and thrive in both Germany and Japan. Does that grind at you, too?

      I might lend moral support to those who try to rebuild it and expose the warmongers for what they are.

      You're delusional. That's the only possible explanation. You lend 'moral support' by posting your fevered rantings to Slashdot? As opposed to the men and women actually over there

    20. Re:Typical UN Resolution by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      the UN is a good organization when its actions agree with your viewpoint.

      UN is merely an organization like any other. Not a divine entity. Its aims are noble (on paper) but its effectiveness is spotty. Sometimes they do a good thing, sometimes they get pushed around. I know this is too difficult for you to grasp, in your black and white universe, where UN is universally evil, but your delusions have no impact on reality.

      Until the inspectors report, I think we pretty much can't make any judgment - Kofi Annan, 12/31/2002. Obviously he felt that the continued inspections were necessary.

      No, he is merely covering his ass as any politician does, reserving his "judgment" till the "report" comes out. It could as well have been a report on the cafeteria expenses or the cost of washing windows at the UN HQ.

      Chief U.N. weapons inspector Hans Blix has said Iraq had failed to provide evidence in its declaration to prove that it no longer has weapons of mass destruction - CNN, 12/31/200

      This is actually Colin Powell speaking in one of his misinformation sessions. I know, it must be really hard to keep track of your useless props.

      The UN Security Council and Secretary General Kofi Annan declared August 6 that Iraq has violated the Gulf War cease-fire agreement by unilaterally suspending cooperation with UN weapons inspectors - USIS

      This is Annan merely informing on the legal status of the inspections, as pertaining to the US sponsored inspection regime. Yes, after discovering that UNSCOM was a prop for regime change and an extension of the CIA, as Ritter explained in detail, Iraq threw them out. Which violated the "agreement". Which prompted Annan to make that announcement. It says nothing about Annan's "opinion" on the usefulness or need for the inspection regime in the first place.

      None of these quotes (the ones actually belonging to Annan) say anything about that.

      Any more attempts at misinformation in that vast vault of yours?

      Nobody takes action against sanctions.

      Right.

      Nobody takes action against suffering inside a country

      Uh huh.

      However in both cases, entire sections of humanity would be the victims of your 'let 'em all die, as long as I don't have to lift a finger' mentality.

      It didn't register. Again. WWII was not fought to "stop em from dying". It was fought for self-preservation by all participants. The saving of persecuted minorities came as a bonus. But do not let this rather major difference between this and your alternate reality universes bother you.

      And now another facet of your delusional mentality emerges: your anti-Semitism.

      Woohoo! I did it! I actually managed to get you to call me an anti-semite for refusing to grant Jews the central role in the universe! So I take it, in order to not be an "anti-semite" one has to accept that central role and bow before the superior ones? As opposed to just demanding that we are all equal. In which case one is "anti-semite".

      Brilliant! This explains everything. Whatever Israel does is by definition superior, because it is a country controlled by Jews, and they are, according to you, central and superior in the universe. Them nasty Arabs need to be pacified for the greater cause. US yearly tithe to Israel is just a normal course of events, and every nation should be paying it. Crystal clear. I got it.

      And it also explains your attitude, because I am beginning to suspect that you are a proud holder of an Israeli passport and a card carrying member of Likud.

      You're part of the group that backs the Arab-controlled security council, which routinely passes laws in favor of Palestine and then refuses to pass the same laws for Israel.

      Whoa! Wow! I never knew I was so powerful! Lemme see, who did we plant

    21. Re:Typical UN Resolution by robocrop · · Score: 1

      UN is merely an organization like any other.

      Exactly! So they are capable of being wrong, and were wrong for a. not continuing with the invasion of Iraq after the first Gulf War and b. not following through on their resolution to attack Iraq after weapons inspections failed. Thanks for pointing that out!

      No, he is merely covering his ass as any politician does

      Read: you are attempting to discredit a quote which obviously debunks your position, since you cannot support your position directly. Result: you lose.

      This is actually Colin Powell speaking in one of his misinformation sessions. I know, it must be really hard to keep track of your useless props.

      Actually quoted from CNN. So far you've claimed to know more than both CNN and the BBC. Pardon me if I disagree.

      Your debate style is pathetic - when your ignorance is illustrated you either attempt to misdirect the conversation, claim to know more than the source that is being cited, or just go on ad hominem attacks.

      Nobody takes action against sanctions. Right. Nobody takes action against suffering inside a country Uh huh.

      Interesting that you equate taking action with simply issuing a mission statement. I have seen a petition circulating the Internet to boycott Microsoft. So I gather you believe that is all that should be done to fight their monopolistic practices?

      The fact of the matter is nobody was taking out full-page ads, picketing in front of embassies, marching on Washington, calling their Congressmen, or burning flags over sanctions. Your type are bandwagoners and opportunist America-haters, and only speak up when the camera is aimed at you.

      WWII was not fought to "stop em from dying". It was fought for self-preservation by all participants.

      What an ignorant world view you have. Perhaps you can explain why the US and Canada both provided materiel for the war before the US was attacked? Must be more of that 'self preservation' you're talking about.

      In fact, if the US were as evil as the fantasy you whack off to, wouldn't we have sided with the Germans? After all, then we could have had Anglo control of the world, including all the oil.

      Face it, the actions of the US don't mirror the bizarre fantasy you have about our implicit corruption, greed, and narcissim. You simply find these traits in every one of our actions because you're predisposed towards that world view - you suffer from oppositional defiant disorder. You disagree with everything that you don't, yourself, think of - and since you never actually think of anything, that doesn't leave much with which to agree.

      I actually managed to get you to call me an anti-semite for refusing to grant Jews the central role in the universe!

      Actually, no. See, while there is definitely truth to the position that one can speak ill of a group without being racist, one has to look at the motivations of the person who is doing the speaking. You can say 'Jews aren't the center of the universe', in that the statement itself is certainly not racist. But your motivation for saying it is racist. I never claimed Jews were the center of the universe - you simply leaped to that conclusion because of your anti-Semitism. I'll let the rest of your rant on this matter speak for itself.

      You know you only make yourself look more nutty by the minute with these patently false, easily disprovable wild conspiracy theories

      Perhaps you should read more:

      Israel has withdrawn its UN 'test resolution' calling for the protection of Israeli children from terrorism following an Egyptian-led attempt to turn it into yet another anti-Israel motion. - AP

      Nearly two-thirds of all General Assembly and S

    22. Re:Typical UN Resolution by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      So they are capable of being wrong,

      Yup.

      and were wrong for a. not continuing with the invasion of Iraq after the first Gulf War

      Err.. nope.

      and b. not following through on their resolution to attack Iraq after weapons inspections failed.

      Nope. Not only there was no such resolution (to "attack" Iraq) but they was clearly no reason to do so, as I have shown conclusively, multiple times, thanks to Mr. Ritter. Iraq was actually in the right to throw UNSCOM out after it has become a CIA operation and the UN knew it.

      Not to mention all the other repercussions and highly unlikely positive outcomes of any such nonsensical military invasion.

      Read: you are attempting to discredit a quote which obviously debunks your position, since you cannot support your position directly. Result: you lose.

      The only thing this "obviously debunks" is your sanity. Beyond that, this is not a game and you are not a referee. Reserve these "You lose", "I am telling Mom" and similar missives for your fellow kindergarten classmates.

      Actually quoted from CNN. So far you've claimed to know more than both CNN and the BBC. Pardon me if I disagree.

      The CNN also disagrees with you. I am not sure if you realize this but quoting Powell from CNN and then insisting you are quoting Annan tells volumes about your mental state.

      Your debate style is pathetic - when your ignorance is illustrated you either attempt to misdirect the conversation, claim to know more than the source that is being cited, or just go on ad hominem attacks.

      Ah, another classic. Accuse your opponent of employing your own tactics. Do you really think this is going to work?

      Interesting that you equate taking action with simply issuing a mission statement.

      There were actual demonstrations which followed. The one I pointed you to was in New York, October 1, 1998 at the Times Square. Since you claimed that no protests occurred, even one example disproves your claim. If you think I will dig up every demonstration that occurred since then until the invasion, you are sorely mistaken. Google yourself.

      The fact of the matter is nobody was taking out full-page ads, picketing in front of embassies, marching on Washington, calling their Congressmen, or burning flags over sanctions.

      I am not sure about flag burning and full-page ads but the rest was definitely done. Multiple times.

      Perhaps you can explain why the US and Canada both provided materiel for the war before the US was attacked?

      Canada being part of the British Empire had little choice (I find that air of proprietorship of yours in regards to Canada telling by the way). As to the US, it did so at first for profit. There was absolutely no appetite for joining any silly European wars in the US. As a matter of fact, Herr Hitler had a number of admirers in high places in the US. But there were piles of money to be made on shipments of arms and supplies. Some were quite confused as to which side the shipping was to be made to. The business bonanza was followed by growing panic due to massive losses of -- then "neutral", even though they were carrying weapons and ammunition to war -- US merchant ships as they encountered U-boats. Lend Lease was not enacted until March 1941 after Hitler already occupied most of Europe and a good chunk of Africa. Followed by Pearl Harbor few months later. Which changed everything.

      In fact, if the US were as evil as the fantasy you whack off to, wouldn't we have sided with the Germans? After all, then we could have had Anglo control of the world, including all the oil.

      US is not essentially evil. There are

    23. Re:Typical UN Resolution by robocrop · · Score: 1

      Nope. Not only there was no such resolution (to "attack" Iraq) but they was clearly no reason to do so

      Your insanity is remarkable:

      On November 8, 2002, the UN passed Resolution 1441 urging Iraq to disarm or face "serious consequences". The resolution passed with a 15 to 0 vote, supported by Russia, China and France, and Arab countries like Syria. This gave this resolution wider support than even the 1992 Gulf War resolution. - Wikipedia

      Hans Blix and Mohamed ElBaradei presented several reports to the UN detailing Iraq's level of compliance with Resolution 1441. On January 30, 2003 Blix said that Iraq had not fully accepted its obligation to disarm. - Wikipedia

      You're demonstrably wrong again. But I know that won't stop you.

      The CNN also disagrees with you.

      Actually, no they don't. You're quoting a different article. Another pathetic attempt at misdirection.

      Since you claimed that no protests occurred, even one example disproves your claim.

      An example of the type of idiotic thinking that pervades your mindset. So if you claim that rape is not sufficiently prevented, I can debunk your position by showing that law enforcement stopped one rape last year? The fact of the matter is that there was no serious, organized effort to stop sanctions, or to find some other solution to the Iraq problem. Because, once again, your type don't really care. You just look for every opportunity to rant against the US.

      Canada being part of the British Empire had little choice (I find that air of proprietorship of yours in regards to Canada telling by the way). As to the US, it did so at first for profit. There was absolutely no appetite for joining any silly European wars in the US.

      Another basic flaw with your argumentative style: you mention one of the possible reasons for something, then jump to the conclusion that it is the cause for the action. You do so without any proof. For example in this case you state that the US agreed to provide war materiel to its allies 'for profit' - something which you know you cannot prove.

      In fact, if you knew anything about history, you would know that Roosevelt and Churchill were quite close, and that the Roosevelt adminstration was actually quite keen to bring the US into the war in Europe. Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor is widely regarded by historians as a blunder which served as the perfect pretext to bring the US into the war.

      Again, I don't expect facts to sway you, as the basic thesis underlying each and every one of your 'arguments' is that the US is greedy. You approach every argument from this angle, and refuse to actually look at any of the facts. Your mind is already made up.

      I am by nature opposing nearly everything, everywhere

      Do you know why a magician doesn't do the same trick twice for the same audience? Because magicians have the common sense to realize that eventually the audience will cotton on to what is going on behind the scenes. Some sneaky move, some pause in delivery will give away the gimmick behind the effect.

      You lack the common sense to use this type of judgment and continue to employ the same predictable artifice, over and over and over. You take a very specific, targeted argument and rather than answer the argument you generalize it, then attack the generalization which you made. It's rather silly.

      But, to again show you how real reasoning works: your oppositional defiant disorder is actually quite targeted. You are anti-Western. More specifically, you are anti-American. You start every one of your arguments from a biased position: that the US is either evil, greedy, or corrupt. Then you extrapolate your own truth from that position.

      Contrast that with my position. I make a statem

    24. Re:Typical UN Resolution by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      "... serious consequences."

      And that means "invasion" in your books. No other options like, say, targeted action against the leadership? Of course not! It could have only meant a bombing campaign followed by an invasion which the likes of you had a hard-on for for a very long time, no?

      You're demonstrably wrong again. But I know that won't stop you.

      Let's dwell on this one for a minute as it is a cornerstone of your "thinking". You quote some piece from the web, which can have multiple interpretations, sometimes even different, contradicting, versions, following which you claim that it proves only one: yours. When I point out the alternatives, you claim that I am "generalizing it" in order to attack some strawman I created. Does this method of "polemic" work for you very often with people you can't shoot when they disagree?

      So coming back to the first disingenuous assault of yours again: UN threatens "serious consequences", leaving itself all sorts of doors open, and yet people like you start jumping up and down screaming "Kill!! Yea! They want us to go in and start shooting everybody who disagrees! Yeehah!". And you call it a "reasonable behaviour"?

      Actually, no they don't. You're quoting a different article. Another pathetic attempt at misdirection.

      See? Here you go again. I dug up your quote, which you insisted was Annan's, and found it to be attributed to Powell by the very CNN you cited as your source. So what do you do? You claim that because I am quoting "a different article", that somehow nullifies the obvious fact that the quote you provided is at least suspect, and since my article was later then yours, most likely Powell's as CNN corrected itself.

      So if you claim that rape is not sufficiently prevented, I can debunk your position by showing that law enforcement stopped one rape last year?

      Here we go! Yes! This is how you build a proper strawman! Nice one! Let's analyse: you claim that, quote, "Nobody takes action against sanctions" (emphasis mine). Note the term "nobody". That means not a person. Not a single one. Yet when I provide an example of a group of people doing so, you then turn around and produce this "allegory" of your position (putting me in a position of a proponent, no less): "... rape is not sufficiently prevented ... " (emphasis mine). Note the difference: an absolute claim of no action in one and a claim of insufficient action in the other. Building and attacking mis-representations of your opponents position has a name: "attacking strawmen". Which you excel at, may I add!

      The fact of the matter is that there was no serious, organized effort to stop sanctions, or to find some other solution to the Iraq problem.

      This depends on your subjective interpretation of words "serious" and "organized". Was it not "serious" enough that people demonstrated? Wrote letters, editorials, books even? Was it not organized for these demonstrations to occur? What you are complaining about is that from your subjective perspective there were, nebulously, "not enough" of both, to exceed some arbitrarily set by you level, for your satisfaction. This is again a crucial element of your "psyche". You assume that your arbitrary perceptions are the only way things could possibly work and thus anything not fitting your delusions must be wrong. In your "mind", if you decide there was "not enough" of something, this automatically becomes an objective, universal, humanity-wide determination and thus anyone disagreeing must be mad.

      Another basic flaw with your argumentative style: you mention one of the possible reasons for something, then jump to the conclusion that it is the cause for the action.

      A beauty of a strawman here again. Your request was (quote): "Perhaps you can explain why the US and Canada both provided materiel for the war before the US was attacked?". To which, regarding Canada, I provided the explanatio

    25. Re:Typical UN Resolution by robocrop · · Score: 1

      And that means "invasion" in your books

      It means 'invasion' in the books of the UN. This was the intent behind the statement.

      I dug up your quote, which you insisted was Annan's, and found it to be attributed to Powell by the very CNN you cited as your source

      No you didn't. You simply restated the quote I provided, and attributed it to Powell yourself. Doesn't change the facts.

      At this point you quickly devolve into severe irrationality and delusional behavior. Let me illustrate that by quoting all the times you say 'strawman':

      attack some strawman I created

      This is how you build a proper strawman!
      A beauty of a strawman here again
      Brilliant example of a strawman
      Another beauty of a strawman!
      Strawman alert!

      You then spend the majority of your response addressing your own statement that my arguments - which, again, are all backed by facts which have been cited, unlike your wild accusations and paranoid delusions - are strawmen.

      So I thought you might be interested to know the actual definition of the term 'strawman'. Given you have some mental problem which prevents you from actually checking anything you say before you excrete it from your less attractive end, I figured it could only help:

      strawman: a weak or sham argument set up to be easily refuted

      Let's look at this, shall we? You have accused me - six times no less! - of creating weak or sham arguments for you to easily refute. Interesting. So you are claiming that I am purposefully making weak arguments for you to defeat? Even taking your insanity into account, doesn't that seem a bit silly?

      I believe what you were actually trying to claim is that I am using 'red herring' arguments, not 'strawman' arguments. It's okay, by this time I've grown used to educating you. Since you incorrectly dismiss most of the valid arguments I have made as 'strawmen', your reply makes very little sense. Perhaps you'd like to try again? Until you do we'll have to assume that you concede every point you misidentified as a 'strawman'.

      Now that I've completely destroyed your idiotic 'strawman' position, let's move on to the arguments you actually, pathetically, try to make:

      Who failed to monitor this.

      That would be more harmful if it hadn't been proven to be a hoax. The story most people site for this came from a group called the 'Inter Press Service', which is hardly a reputable news agency. Other articles cite 'rumors' that food rations would be withheld if the people in an area did not vote. However, many people did not vote - fearing terrorist violence by your heroes - yet they still receive food rations today.

      Again, I don't expect facts to deter you in the least. But you should realize the stupidity of your position - you believe any anti-US propaganda from any backwater hole in the world. Any rumor, any innuendo. And then you try to actually take on a person who uses facts and reasoning? No wonder you look so ridiculous.

      Ah, yes, facts. Absolutely amazing things, aren't they?

      Oh, my. Your most ridiculous mistake yet - and that's saying a lot. From the article you cite:

      The survey was carried out by the UK-based Iraq Body Count and Oxford Research Group - which includes academics and peace activists.

      Feel foolish yet? If not, let me explain it to you: the Newsweek article to which I linked explicitly debunks the statements of "Iraq Body Count". Perhaps you should have read either source before hastily posting your non-rebuttal and making such an ass of yourself.

      My desire is for Iraq to regain stability and for its citizens to be happy and prosperous.

      Bullshit. If that were the case, you would be sp

    26. Re:Typical UN Resolution by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      It means 'invasion' in the books of the UN.

      That is why it was worded as "serious consequences" instead of "military action" for example, no?

      This was the intent behind the statement.

      I guess my little exposé of the illogic of claiming to know hidden "intents" behind plain statements which do not convey them went over your head. I suppose then, that you had in depth conversations with the UN ambassadors, at which, behind the closed doors, they did explain to you what they really meant by "serious consequences", so that someone of such cosmic importance to the world as yourself would not be so needlessly kept in the dark, no? Or, alternatively, a position I humbly subscribe to, you just made shit up to fit your supremacist fantasies.

      No you didn't. You simply restated the quote I provided, and attributed it to Powell yourself. Doesn't change the facts.

      In response to your quote of:

      Chief U.N. weapons inspector Hans Blix has said Iraq had failed to provide evidence in its declaration to prove that it no longer has weapons of mass destruction

      I pointed out this CNN article titled "Powell lays out path in Iraq dispute", which contains your text verbatim. Word "Annan" does not occur there even once. You on the other hand, did not provide a link to your source. This is the example of your "arguments ... all backed by facts which have been cited, unlike your wild accusations and paranoid delusions".

      Perhaps that procedure of yours of breaking bricks with your forehead before typing anything, which you employ to get your "thinking juices" going, has some side effects?

      So I thought you might be interested to know the actual definition of the term 'strawman'.

      Sure. Here is one. And another. And another. I was even as generous as to provide you with a clarification of the particular definition I was referring to, quoting myself: "Building and attacking mis-representations of your opponents position ", about which Wikipedia states that "Some logic textbooks define the straw-man fallacy only as a misrepresented argument".

      You on the other hand, as expected, dug up some poor approximation, quoted it and promptly misunderstood it. Another example of your "informed" position.

      You have accused me - six times no less! - of creating weak or sham arguments for you to easily refute. ... So you are claiming that I am purposefully making weak arguments for you to defeat?

      Your lack of comprehension (or desperation to deceive) is truly of heroic proportions. Let me repeat again: "Building and attacking mis-representations of your opponents position ". As in, you are doing both the building and attacking. Like, oh I don't know, when accused of "building and attacking your opponent's position" you then proceed to pretend that it means you building the representations and then me attacking them ... and go down hill from there.

      Stawman Fallacy! Remember these words, because that is what you do most of the time. At least now you know that your bullshit has a name. Which must hurt, because, judging by your general attitude, you probably "thought" you invented that crap all by yourself.

      I believe what you were actually trying to claim is that I am using 'red herring' arguments, not 'strawman' arguments.

      "Strawman" argument is a specific type of "red herring" argument. Close but no cigar.

      It's okay, by this time I've grown used to educating you.

      You must mean you have grown used to being educated by me, as this example clearly shows

    27. Re:Typical UN Resolution by robocrop · · Score: 1

      That is why it was worded as "serious consequences" instead of "military action" for example, no?

      Your ignorance knows no bounds. This is political speak, in which no specific action is ever promised. Again, I will illustrate your idiocy with a specific example.

      In 1990 when Iraq invaded Kuwait, the UN went to war to push Iraq back. However the resolution that set the stage for this war - UN Security Council Resolution 660 - does not specifically mention war or military action. Quoting:

      The Security Council,
      Alarmed by the invasion of Kuwait on 2 August 1990 by the military forces of Iraq,
      Determining that there exists a breach of international peace and security as regards the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait,
      Acting under Articles 39 and 40 of the Charter of the United Nations,
      1. Condemns the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait;

      2. Demands that Iraq withdraw immediately and unconditionally all s its forces to the positions in which they were located on 1 August 1990;

      3. Calls upon Iraq and Kuwait to begin immediately intensive negotiations for the resolution of their differences and supports all efforts in this regard, and especially those of the League of Arab States;

      4. Decides to meet again as necessary to consider further steps with to ensure compliance with the present resolution.

      So to again visit your shadowy world of paranoia and delusion - obviously there was no war to push Iraq out of Kuwait because the words 'war' and 'military action' never appear in the statement. What a genius you are.

      I pointed out this CNN article titled "Powell lays out path in Iraq dispute", which contains your text verbatim. Word "Annan" does not occur there even once.

      Ah, now I see the problem. You're retarded. See, I didn't attribute that quote to Annan. I attributed the statement to Hans Blix. Which is why the name Hans Blix appears in the quote. Yet you still try to claim that this is some misinformation campaign by Powell. Amazing.

      You on the other hand, as expected, dug up some poor approximation, quoted it and promptly misunderstood it. Another example of your "informed" position.

      Um, sure. You, as expected, hunted around until you could find a loose enough definition to attempt to pretend that you meant something else entirely. You made a mistake. Just admit it.

      Interestingly you seem to think that your attempt at misdirection worked. But it didn't. So we will now assume that you have conceded the following points:

      - The United States assisted Europe in WWII for reasons much more complex than 'profit'
      - Constructed Democracy is a proven and workable goal
      - You are an anti-Semite
      - You are a reactionary who is not interested in truth, facts, the future of Iraq, or anything except condemning every action of the United States - even when you have to lie or misrepresent the truth to do it

      The thing I find most amazing about your anti-Semitism is that it is based on such astounding ignorance that you can't even make a coherent argument for it. For example, there is a lot of reason to suspect Israel is involved with the recent spate of terror attacks, not the least of which is history. I suggest you look up the Lavon Affair. Don't thank me, it's a freebie. I'm hoping next time we cross paths you will be smarter.

      Unlike mine which contained an actual link to an article by a reporter on the ground who wrote for that "Inter Press Service" which is a news service.

      You quote one disreputable source - one! - and refuse to examine all evidence given that the rumors you so blindly believe have been soundly disproven. It's ok, it's a wonderful example of paranoia and helps further illustrate your mental instability.

      Tell you what - since you're so anxio

    28. Re:Typical UN Resolution by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      In 1990 when Iraq invaded Kuwait, the UN went to war to push Iraq back. However the resolution that set the stage for this war - UN Security Council Resolution 660 - does not specifically mention war or military action.

      And it does so for a good reason as it was NOT authorizing any such thing. Not until resolution 678 an authorization for war was given.

      From there:" Authorizes Member States co-operating with the Government of Kuwait, unless Iraq on or before 15 January 1991 fully implements, as set forth in paragraph 1 above, the foregoing resolutions, to use all necessary means to uphold and implement resolution 660 (1990) and all subsequent relevant resolutions and to restore international peace and security in the area;" (emphasis mine)

      This is what an authorization to go to war looks like. Note the resolution numbers: 660 for the initial nebulous warning (such as "serious consequences") versus 678 (via 661, 662, 664, 665, 666, 667, 669, 670, 674 and 677) where finally an authorization is given to use "all necessary means".

      You are such a retard that it is beyond description.

      So to again visit your shadowy world of paranoia and delusion - obviously there was no war to push Iraq out of Kuwait because the words 'war' and 'military action' never appear in the statement. What a genius you are.

      "authorizes" and "all necessary means" do appear in resolution 678. Note these words "authorizes" and "all" as in: including "war" or "military action".

      Also note the lack of any such authorization for this latest little Crusade of yours in Mesopotamia.

      See, I didn't attribute that quote to Annan. I attributed the statement to Hans Blix.

      Quote you: "let me clip some of Annan's statements for you: " followed by, three italicized and indented quotes. And in between of two Annan quotes: "Chief U.N. weapons inspector Hans Blix has said Iraq had failed to provide evidence in its declaration to prove that it no longer has weapons of mass destruction", which implies Annan speaking of Blix.

      That peanut of a "brain" of yours must be turning into jelly by now, as it appears you are no longer able to even keep track of your own lies and misrepresentations.

      Yet you still try to claim that this is some misinformation campaign by Powell.

      Powell is a rank amateur, compared to your mighty powers of distortion.

      You, as expected, hunted around until you could find a loose enough definition to attempt to pretend that you meant something else entirely. You made a mistake. Just admit it.

      I love this comedy. Even the definition you dug up, is correct, although imprecise. Even by that definition you were wrong. Not only was I not mistaken, but you did get exposed (again) as an illogical imbecile that you are, beyond any doubt whatsoever. So now you come back blustering again as if nothing happened, trying to brush off the entire thing after having run out of hot air to blow.

      So we will now assume that you have conceded the following points:

      You can "assume" safely that you are a cretin. Thats given. As to the points, let's see:

      The United States assisted Europe in WWII for reasons much more complex than 'profit'

      Your question was, quote "Perhaps you can explain why the US and Canada both provided materiel for the war before the US was attacked" implying that "self-preservation" (earlier mentioned by me) was not the driving cause. To which I gave you the primary reasons, conceding that "profit" preceded "self-preservation" time wise. You now pretend that you advocated some third, previously not mentioned position, that of "reasons" being "more complex then 'profit'" and pretend that I had disagreed with it, which incidentally I never did, quote "Well, while the fact is that there were indeed many reasons for USA's beahviour, you did not ask me to speci

    29. Re:Typical UN Resolution by robocrop · · Score: 1

      Also note the lack of any such authorization for this latest little Crusade of yours in Mesopotamia.

      Again you mistake what you think is the point for what is the point. As you very clearly illustrate, both resolutions were following the same path. However when it came time to declare actual war on Iraq - when this last resolution was defied - it was obvious that many members of the UN did not want to follow through on the consequences promised by the UN. So, in essence, the UN failed.

      Since the point was that the UN felt Iraq was a threat (which they clearly did) and had threatened Iraq with the same 'consequences' language used during the first Gulf War (which they clearly did), then it follows that the UN failed in not following through on its resolution. Again I have clearly proven my point. You just can't admit you're wrong.

      which implies Annan speaking of Blix.

      My mistake again for believing you would have the intelligence necessary to understand that a quote attriubuted to Hans Blix was made by Hans Blix. In the future I won't repeat the mistake of assuming you have a brain.

      And again, all your misdirection and attempts to create a 'strawman' argument about what was attributed to whom does not undermine the point that I have proven: the UN felt Iraq was a threat.

      Not only was I not mistaken, but you did get exposed

      You have a very rich fantasy life. Perhaps you could stop daydreaming and respond to the questions? In any case, any point you attempted to dismiss as a 'strawman' is one conceded by you.

      You now pretend that you advocated some third, previously not mentioned position

      Nice try. I pretend nothing - I simply thoroughly debunked another one of your asinine statements. Let me quote you:

      WWII was not fought to "stop em from dying". It was fought for self-preservation by all participants.

      Now, obviously, this statement is false if I can show that at least one party fought for the preservation or benefit of someone other than themselves. Which I have. So, again, you are wrong and cannot admit it.

      Strawman. Burning.

      Ignorant metaphor. Stretching.

      Constructed Democracy is proven under conditions vastly different from Iraq in all areas that matter (many of which I listed) . It is a "workable goal" only if these conditions are met.

      This is a lie in that you make a statement - "it is a workable goal only if these conditions are met" - without any proof whatsoever to back up your claim.

      Thanks, but no, thanks.

      And again I'm not surprised. Information doesn't seem to appeal to you.

      Ah, the unmistakable smell of straw burning.

      Ah, the unmistakable smell of shit being shoveled. Let's analyze how you try to turn opinion into fact:

      All I am out to "prove" is that there are allegations that the UN failed to monitor all aspects of the election

      Followed quickly by:

      UN appears to have failed to comprehensively monitor the elections

      In one sentence you attempt to leap from 'allegations' to substantive proof. Unfortunately in the real world that doesn't work. You are basically admitting that you don't know what you're talking about. Which pretty much anyone reading your rants knows anyway.

      As I already mentioned, it is an opinion piece, not an actual in-depth analysis of the Iraq Body Count data.

      Okay. Let's tally up here. You know more than the CBC, the BBC, CNN, the AP ... and now Newsweek! Every time you attempt to discredit a news source which has done research with your tin foil hat

    30. Re:Typical UN Resolution by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      However when it came time to declare actual war on Iraq - when this last resolution was defied - it was obvious that many members of the UN did not want to follow through on the consequences promised by the UN. So, in essence, the UN failed.

      The actual explanation accepted by just about everyone but the warmongers is that the UN members, after realizing that they had been had by the US/UK and that UNSCOM ended up being a CIA front, had no desire to assist any further neocon idiocies. But since an amalgamate of Neocon crap with supremacist White Man's Burden ideology is your entire philosophy, I find it as no surprise that you would foam at the snout about how "UN did not want to follow through on the consequences promised by the UN".

      "Since the point was that the UN felt Iraq was a threat (which they clearly did)"

      No, UN was strong armed into going along with what US wanted, and yes indeed, US thought "Iraq was a threat", a great, gigantic, world-destroying, cosmic, shiver-in-your-fallout-shelter with duck tape and pissing your pants from dread, Armageddon, get minutemen ready because Iraqis are at the shore of New Jersey type threat, which always was a total baloney. And other UN members knew that, following which they refused (perhaps with the exception of UK) to cooperate past the point of demanding that Iraq be "inspected" to placate the US based madmen like you. Which I already described. End of story.

      "and had threatened Iraq with the same 'consequences' language used during the first Gulf War (which they clearly did)"

      They had also "threatened" Israel with the same language, which, based on your own "logic", must result in invasion of Israel any day now.

      "then it follows that the UN failed in not following through on its resolution."

      No, UN merely did not follow on it the way you would like. Which of course, given your absolute egoism and self-assuredness, "must" lead to the "conclusion" of total "failure" by anyone who does not immediately implement your suggestions. You should try that approach with some cops. That would be a comedy I would pay to see.

      "Again I have clearly proven my point"

      Was that the point that the UN security council is quote, "arab-controlled" or the point that, quote "It means 'invasion' in the books of the UN. This was the intent behind the statement." followed by "However when it came time to declare actual war on Iraq ... it was obvious that many members of the UN did not want to follow through" (emphasis mine)?

      My mistake again for believing you would have the intelligence necessary to understand that a quote attriubuted to Hans Blix was made by Hans Blix.

      Actually, no, your mistake was to hastily cut and paste a quote without bothering to check the context. Following which, when faced with rather obvious evidence of your error, you then proceeded to evade, distort and posture in order to avoid admitting even this, rather minor, mistake. I just used it to demonstrate the diseased nature of your "psyche", which prevents you from admitting to be wrong on anything, no matter how minor, lest your whole universe will collapse.

      Does not undermine the point that I have proven: the UN felt Iraq was a threat

      We've been there already, you are going in loops. Quote me, "It (the quote) says nothing about Annan's "opinion" on the usefulness or need for the inspection regime in the first place. None of these quotes ... say anything about that"

      In any case, any point you attempted to dismiss as a 'strawman' is one conceded by you.

      Oh dear, that ego of yours is getting really out of hand, soon it will eclipse the sun for the entire state. So now, not only do you pretend to be right, even when conclusively demonstrated wrong, but on top of that you are attempting to set the rules of the discussion?! So all the logic experts, on whose advice I began demonstrating all those

  47. From My Cold Dead Hands by gcatullus · · Score: 1

    Cue the Charlton Heston voice - They can take my Internet from my cold dead hands.

  48. I don't agree with this, but... by mrRay720 · · Score: 1

    what happens if the US decide to be all freaky n stuff? Go all isolationist, or attack all the rest of the world, they get nuked to feck and back
    by china, or whatever else?

    They should at least have such a system ready so the rest of the world can carry on regardless. Relying on one country for something so important to the world is one of the suckiest ideas ever.

    1. Re:I don't agree with this, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      They should at least have such a system ready so the rest of the world can carry on regardless.

      It's called Internet Protocol.

    2. Re:I don't agree with this, but... by delong · · Score: 1

      They should at least have such a system ready so the rest of the world can carry on regardless. Relying on one country for something so important to the world is one of the suckiest ideas ever

      Anyone can start new TLDs whenever they want. Iran does. If the root servers go poof, you start new ones, issue new root hint files, and voila.

    3. Re:I don't agree with this, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are ABSOLUTELY RIGHT --- I am sure that everyone left will be flocking to eBay to trade supplies and radioactive collectibles after we have a nuclear armageddon...Surely the Internet should survive along with the cockroaches....

    4. Re:I don't agree with this, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the US & China go and start lobbing nukes around everyone that isn't burried in a deep deep bunker is going to have a whole hell of a lot more important things to wory about than resolving DNS. Like maybe their skin and teeth falling out.

    5. Re:I don't agree with this, but... by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 1

      If the United States starts lobbing multi-megaton thermonuclear bombs around, the last thing you have to worry about is DNS...

    6. Re:I don't agree with this, but... by halcyon1234 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, you know... if WWIII starts, I don't think the biggest worry on people's minds will be getting the latest issue of Penny Arcade.

  49. It's either the UN or some Corporations by Travoltus · · Score: 1

    that'll control the internet. Whether it's the UN that implements surveillance or corporate ISPs that submit personal information in a clandestine manner, the UN that taxes us or ISPs that hit us with secret bandwidth caps and usage fees, we're still doomed.

    The UN will fail here, no doubt about that (and thank God), but as with all things Communism, we find ultimately that we can beat the Government but we can't stop ourselves from being blind sided by the big money industries.

    The moral of this twisted post? I'm watching the UN but I've got eyes in the back of my head regarding those handful of megaconglomerates that run the US media industry and are close to controlling the Internet, too.

    --
    --- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
  50. Peace Keepers on the Net "a-la Farscape" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They are probably going to cause more $h1T then prevent it.

    FYI: "Peace Keepers" in Farscape were the "Bad Guys"

  51. Re:Huh?: Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Linking computers and creating networks wasn't invented by an American. But this has nothing to do with who is the "owner". The UN is not trying to pwn your internet. It is trying to get more grip on "their" internet. I hope not the way China does it but any way, people in Europe have a vote here. Remember the EU discarding the Software Patents law? I (and appearently a lot of other people) spammed the living crap out of our EU parliament members. I received mail from pretty much every one of them telling me that they have changed their minds due to the reactions of the people that voted for them. That's real Democacy.

  52. US citizens, help eachother by deft · · Score: 1

    Hey guys... just real quick.

    If any of you stop laughing at this idea let me know, so I'll have a rough idea of when I'll stop laughing.

    Thanks!

    --

    There's nothing Intelligent about Intelligent Design.
    1. Re:US citizens, help eachother by Apuleius · · Score: 1

      I'm down to a low level giggle.

  53. I can see it now.. by Brando_Calrisean · · Score: 1

    .. the 'Oil for Bandwidth' Program, run by Kojo!

    --
    Don't call me a cowboy, and don't tell me to slow down!
  54. Queue crackpots with UN is bad jokes by Danuvius · · Score: 1

    Of course, the point (quite obvious from the summary as well as from the most basic aspects of common sense) is: it doesn't matter what the US thinks or what random American crackpots want to be the status quo with the internet infrastructure.

    The Internet is global. The infrastructure is fully "internationalisable". If the will is there, it will be done.

    At that point, I suggest Americans rip themselves off from the global internet so as to retain control "their property".

    Really, it's okay... we won't cry a river.
    Buh-bye!

    --
    Akarsz Magyar Gentoo fórumot? Akkor
    1. Re:Queue crackpots with UN is bad jokes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I don't mind the idea of a global internet organization, I'm not completely sure the UN should be it...

      That being said, I can see why people would take the possesive ideas shown here. It can be likened to buying a van, offering to drive people in your community to places, just because, and then having them band together and demand community control of the van because they worked their lives around your service.
      Doesn't sound very fun that way, and I can also say that I wouldn't like the internet being placed in partial control of governements who are currently censoring large swathes of it to control their citizens.

  55. Serious thoughts and questions.. by Loco3KGT · · Score: 1

    1) How much do you think the UN would end up taxing everyone for using "their" Internet

    2) How long would the .tw TLD hang around once China starts bitching?

    3) How long until New/Old/Middleaged/whatever Europe tries to legislate speech on the Internet much like they heavily do in their own countries?

    --
    Blessed be he who reads this post, Cursed be he who tells my boss.
    1. Re:Serious thoughts and questions.. by FhnuZoag · · Score: 1

      1. How much do you think the US charges everyone for using their internet? 2. How long do you think a cuban domain name would last? 3. How long do you think until the US tries to legislate against the existence of anti-war websites? Problems are unchanged. The good thing with the UN is that it is less likely for them to get their act together and change things, leaving the internet pretty much as it is today.

    2. Re:Serious thoughts and questions.. by Loco3KGT · · Score: 1

      The good thing with the UN is that it is less likely for them to get their act together and change things, leaving the internet pretty much as it is today.

      Which includes improvements.

      --
      Blessed be he who reads this post, Cursed be he who tells my boss.
    3. Re:Serious thoughts and questions.. by philipgar · · Score: 1

      1. What do we charge for use of the TLDs? Someone likely charges access to the tier 1 networks, but thats different. If you think too much is charged for IP addresses and domains, I'd still say they're reasonable.

      2. Uh, there is already a .cu domain name. Has been for a while, and I haven't heard of any action about their to try and remove it.

      3. There's been no talk of it yet. There are tons of anti-war websites out there (sometimes I feel slashdot is trying to become one). There has been no effort to remove them. Maybe efforts by people to dispute their claims, etc. However those are completely different. Also we do have a 1st ammendment. . . unlike certain international organizations who think china has a better human rights record than the US.

      Saying the problems are unchanged is a joke. You gave 3 examples, all of which HAVE NOT HAPPENED in the lifetime of the ineternet so far, and there is no reason to believe they will. And the UN might not change these things, but then again I have no reason to believe it wouldn't. I have no reason to believe the UN will act fairly, no reason to think the UN wouldn't tax it for their own purposes ($$$), no reason to think they wouldn't want to censor it, and no reason to think they wouldn't ban countries they dislike.

      Of course if you could give me reasons to trust the UN (that are legitimate) I might consider the idea of changing who owns the internet. .. . Oh that and specific examples of what ICANN has done so poorly.

      Phil

    4. Re:Serious thoughts and questions.. by FhnuZoag · · Score: 1

      "You gave 3 examples, all of which HAVE NOT HAPPENED in the lifetime of the ineternet so far, and there is no reason to believe they will."

      Exactly. But the same is true of the examples grandparent gave. The motivation of the US to make the moves given above is equivalent to the motivation of the UN to make such moves, and the fact that a single nation with far less inertia does not make such moves shows that grandparent's claims are a load of BS paranoia.

      The suggestion that such a clampdown on the internet CAN even happen is unproven. The suggestion that resolutions to initiate such a clampdown will ever pass UN decision making processes is unproven. Incompetence is a decent case to make, but the tinfoil hat claims being made here are just silly.

    5. Re:Serious thoughts and questions.. by philipgar · · Score: 1

      Well I have reasons to believe those 3 might happen.

      For reason number one about taxes on the internet, read the article. It said they are considering adding that. And knowing the UN's track record it would likely be a tax on developed nations to help build less devloped (ie often tyranical, undemocratic and socialist/communist) nations build network infrastructure (all the while lining the pockets of those in charge).

      For reason number 2, disallowing countries... I don't know how this would work, but lets say china doesn't want taiwan recognized as a nation. They can lobby to bring it down. China may also want to stop american ISPs from blatantly trying to get around firewalls to post information that is pro-freedom. Now they have power to really stop it.

      For reason number 3... The UN has no rules protecting freedom of speach. Most countries on this planet have no protection of it. The few we think of that do are vastly outnumbered by the many other countries no one really cares about. Even democratic countries in europe often censor things (not to say the US is perfect but we have yet to go all out on censoring politically motivated speach, most of the cases for free speach that have been disputed here are related to claims of obscenity which is not protected by the constitution).

      Comparing the motivation of china, libya, korea, etc to those of the US to enact these things is not a valid argument. I don't need to be paranoid to think that the Chineese don't have american interests at heart. Saying these are tin foil hat claims is absurd. It is valid to worry about how the UN would handle something when they put countries like Libya in charge of the committe for Human Rights. The UN is full of PC crap that would make a disaster.

      If you can give me an example where the UN took on a responsibility as large as this, and acted fairly I might understand your argument. However I can't think of any. How many UN projects have involved every nation working to better every nation? Most involve some or most nations working to better other nations, and even many of those are massively corrupt.

      Our government may be corrupt, but its managable. It has accountability to our citizens, and our businesses, so there is a limit to the corruption. Plus the constitution still stands behind the government. Sure the activist judges on the courts are working hard to erode those rights, but thats a different matter altogether.

      Phil

    6. Re:Serious thoughts and questions.. by Apuleius · · Score: 1

      1. You get one guess. It's a very round number.
      2. There already is a Cuban domain. .cu
      3. A very long time. There's this First Amendment thing.

  56. Stick with the devil you know by BobandMax · · Score: 1

    "Internet surveillance, 'consumer protection,' and perhaps even the power to tax domain names to pay for 'universal access.'"

    If you think the U.S. is heavy-handed and autocratic, wait until the U.N. get their hands on this. The above quote provides three excellent reasons to keep this as far from the U.N. as absolutely possible.

    If those are not convincing, read the quotes from Ghana, Brazil and Syria. Does anyone really want Islamic religious or Chinese political agendas shoved down their throats?

    --

    "Computers are useless. They can only give you answers."
    -- Pablo Picasso
  57. Tax it? by NeuroAcid · · Score: 1

    Did I read that right? The UN wants to tax the internet?

    --
    "I don't need drugs to enjoy this, just to enhance it" - Otto
  58. treaties by Rydia · · Score: 1

    As another poster said, the UN is a treaty organization.

    So would it not then be ideal for this sort of job? After all, what is a global telecommunications network if not a large number of countries entering into legal agreements to connect/share/whatever resources? So, then, what happens when a dispute arises between the US and another country or countries about it? Right now, we would just tell them to shove off, and that works reasonably well. For now.

    While we may have made the internet and control most of it, but that won't stand up forever. By divesting some amount of control, however, we can effectively create a hedge against someone else's complete control and make sure any of our interests are properly protected.

  59. Bush the Seer by justforaday · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I'm beginning to think Bush might've been prognosticating when he mentioned "the internets."

    --
    I'll turn into a supernova and burn up everything. Well I'll turn into a black little hole and you'll turn into string.
  60. Absolutely not. by Canthros · · Score: 1

    Tax on domain names? Are you kidding me?

    Look, the UN is the bureaucracy's bureaucracy, and has serious corruption problems besides. Given their track record on everything else, you just know that China, Cuba, and Saudi Arabia would be given prominent positions on some sort of Internet monitoring council. And you're worried about privacy now?

    --
    Canthros
  61. for a better internet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I've said this many times but I'll repeat once again, this general purpose net connection stack tcp/ip has to go. In its place a large defined set of protocols can allow broadcast style networking for the internet savvy consumer, and if Microsoft had the lead in engineering this, you can be sure that most computers would be compatible, and Microsoft could also sell "Microsoft Gateway" products to let Apple participate.

    This set of protocols could allow trusted machines to receive properly licensed and authorized content but still filter out other less useful but more dangerous content/extentions like exe's, zips, tar.gz's, bz2, py, and iso's, and additionally any encrypted content, and the major webserver venders would have to outlaw application/octet mime types to regain control of the internet-turned-piracy haven that the thieves like warez groups and gnu have perverted, not to mention all the pornography and child molesting an open internet produces.

    Its time to make the net safe again for our families and businesses.

    1. Re:for a better internet by jjp5421 · · Score: 1

      God I am glad that you are not in charge!

  62. Win for UN, loss for US by Theovon · · Score: 1

    Pretty much, the UN exists only to suck money and power away from the United States (and a few other countries with stable economies). Lots of little, greedy countries with their hands out for stuff, and the US is the one who foots the bill.

    I'm all for globalization. I'm not bigoted against other countries or peoples, but I am "bigoted" against many of their governments. I'm tired of all these "poor" countries who aren't smart enough to run their own economies coming to the US for hand-outs. Really. And just as often, they take action to try to take some sort of resource, power, or right away from the US so that we're beholden to them and have to give them MORE money.

    This attempt by the UN to take control of domain names is NOT an attempt to globalize it. If it were, I'd be in favor of it, but by definition, actions taken by the UN are designed to take money from the US. This is just another example of foreign governments trying to take something away from the US so that we have to give them lots of money. Just you wait. The instant the UN gets their grubby hands on it, the price for owning a domain name is going to sky-rocket, and not only that, but the effort involved in actually obtaining ones will become so Bysantine that the cost of doing business on the Internet will become prohibitive to many small businesses. And guess which country has the most businesses on the Web! Of course, they'll justify the extra cost by marking the money that goes into that as "aid", which is just another word for "taking money from the US and giving it to stupid governments who can't manage a stable economy."

  63. So opt out by glenfahan · · Score: 1

    The rest of the world opted into our network. They should be grateful we provided the framework for third world countries to gain communication channels to the rest of the world. We should not give up something we developed just because the rest of the world doesn't like us right now. If they don't like the internet, they can opt out and start their own. All the poor analogies aside, this isn't like anything else. Stop trying to boil down a complex issue to the lowest common denominator.

  64. Wait a minute... by TheUnknownCoder · · Score: 1

    Did Al Gore authorize all those other coutries to use his invention??? I mean, he holds a patent, right?

    --
    Uncopyrightable: The longest word you can write without repeating a letter.
  65. More valuable than Lagrange points=US will keep it by team99parody · · Score: 3, Interesting
    The internet is way more valuable than the Lagrange Points way out in space somewhere. I don't think the US'll let this go away that easily.

    My bet is Bush'll nominate someone anti-UN to the UN to make it ineffective so this UN thing isn't an option. Oh....

  66. China would get a vote by ByteMangler_242 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think we need to remember that the internet, although global, has many freedom based goals inherent to it. Just remember, /.s favorite internet blocking country China would now have a say in the final product. If that idea fails to scare you, then I can't reach you.

    Call us cowboys, but a lot of the world doesn't want our freedoms, and would be more than happy to stop them for all of us. I don't think the spirit of the internet could survive a bunch of unelected corrupt dictators setting the rules.

    --

    Rule of the open mind
    People who are resistant to change cannot resist change for the worst.

    1. Re:China would get a vote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      ...a bunch of unelected corrupt dictators...
      You mean some of those US usually refer to as the best friends?
    2. Re:China would get a vote by periol · · Score: 1

      Just remember, /.s favorite internet blocking country China would now have a say in the final product. If that idea fails to scare you, then I can't reach you.

      Sure, that idea is terrifying. But the DMCA (and international pressure to adopt miniDMCAs) shows that the U.S. can be just as terrifying in its management of internet "freedoms".

      Your statement is xenophobic in the extreme. An organization is not inherently bad or inherently good just because China is involved. Things will not automatically fall apart just because China is involved. Who knows? In ten years, we may *wish* that China was involved.

      The rest of the world says the same thing about the U.S right now. Twenty years ago we would have been saying that about the U.S.S.R. and sixty years ago we would have been saying this about Germany. A global medium should have international oversite.

      That said, it's impossible to honestly critique this (there is nothing actionable in the article, just lots of talk) - there are valid points on both sides. I think it would be possible to set up an organization that can handle the high-level technical issues without getting into many of the "freedom" issues that worry you - I also think it would be possible to thoroughly screw this thing up.

    3. Re:China would get a vote by Alcilbiades · · Score: 1

      You are an idiot. Both Germany and U.S.S.R. were defeated one by force the other by economics because the West I.E. The US, Britain and sometimes france. Granted the US has problems with our Intelectual Property laws but how would you like a bunch of Islamic fundi's making pacts with china dictating what could be placed on the web. First site they would take down would be /. and other blogs. No free exchange of ideas that could be negative to Allah or Mao.

    4. Re:China would get a vote by Politburo · · Score: 1

      Call us cowboys, but a lot of the world doesn't want our freedoms, and would be more than happy to stop them for all of us.

      Oh please. This is just ridiculous.

      Look. Americans aren't special. We just aren't. I know that we were raised to think that we are somehow so much better than the rest of the world, but it simply isn't true. People do outrageous things that we would never consider just to try and get into this country. To say that "a lot of the world doesn't want our freedoms" is pathetic.

    5. Re:China would get a vote by periol · · Score: 1

      boy, i never realized ICANN could dictate what could be placed on the web. i must be an idiot.

    6. Re:China would get a vote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I find it pretty hillarious when someone from the country with the highest prison population in the developped world, with the harshest drug laws and with a horrible freedom of press rating, just to mention a few, talks about "freedom".

      Sorry, you guys are not even close to as free as we are, so stop talking about it and try to catch up to the civilzed world.

    7. Re:China would get a vote by PsiPsiStar · · Score: 1

      First site they would take down would be /. and other blogs. No free exchange of ideas that could be negative to Allah or Mao.

      The first step to this kind of censorship has almost always been a type of intellectual isolationism. Saudi Arabia or China build 'their own internet' and wall it off from the rest of the world. How often does the reverse happen, where several countries band together to enforce censorship on the rest of the world?

      --

      ___
      It's the end of my comment as I know it and I feel fine.
    8. Re:China would get a vote by wgaryhas · · Score: 1

      "a lot of the world doesn't want our freedoms"

      should probably read

      "a lot of the world's governments don't want their citizens to have our freedoms"

      Makes a lot more sense that way.

      --
      "For every complex problem, there is a solution that is simple, neat, and wrong." - H.L. Mencken
    9. Re:China would get a vote by Deliveranc3 · · Score: 1

      China has shut down only 1/1000th of the sites the U.S. has shut down with anti piracy anti hacking and other directives.

      Remember that American corperations are subsidary branches of your government.

      China would probably be better able to not police the internet then the U.S. with millions of little companies getting upset about anything.

    10. Re:China would get a vote by merdark · · Score: 1

      Do you not understand the idea of democracy? A few countries with weird ideas will easily be outvoted by the majority in the UN. Also, as a non-american I consider YOUR country to be oppressive (ip laws, attacking science (evolution), biased political views, etc). I don't want the US one day using the domain name registry to influence others.

    11. Re:China would get a vote by einar2 · · Score: 1

      How comes that the same people who are speaking so elaborately about freedom do so easily reject 20% of the world their vote.

      Just because you do not like their opinion?

    12. Re:China would get a vote by coolGuyZak · · Score: 1
      And where, pray tell, are "we" from?

      No, seriously. I'm thinking about getting off this rock.

    13. Re:China would get a vote by Alcilbiades · · Score: 1

      ip laws are in effect in lots of countries that aren't just because of the US. Perhaps if other countries were leading the edge in development they would be able to set IP laws. When it comes to Evolution you are truely retarded. There are a couple of states i.e. Kansas and Kentucky that have some activist groups wanting to teach Intelligent design in the class room. Which is a far cry form a lot of the brain washing that goes on in Chinese schools about how great some of their historical chinese leaders were or some Islamic fundi governments that teach islam as fact instead of Philosophy. Keep your petty bigotries about the US to yourself. If the US starts denying countries the use of the web freely or starts imposing weird laws about nothing negative about the and that type of Censorship then that will be the time to move control out of country. Until then piss of mate.

    14. Re:China would get a vote by Alcilbiades · · Score: 1

      when lots of countries collaborate the standard thing is to only allow what all can agree to. Otherwise the UN would have more power. The UN has only what powers all members agree to give it. Now if the UN controlled the internet either they would have 0 power to do anything on it or the regulations would reflect only what the governing countries could agree on. Which would probably end up being the weather channel online WOOT!!!!

    15. Re:China would get a vote by merdark · · Score: 1

      Japan has been leading the US in development in many areas for years. Get off your high horse. The US has become FAR less free than it ever has been. You don't care because as yet, the new state powers have not been overly abused.

      Comparing to China is just stupid. There are far more countries out there than the US and China and the existence of worse countries like China does not rule out the existence of better countries in terms of freedoms. The US has already thumbed it's nose at other countries in other respects (world court, trade rules, etc). Do I trust the US not to abuse it's power over the domain names? Not for an instant.

      Besides, there are already cases of censorship in the US. Take for instance the musicians who spoke up against the Iraq war. They got taken off the air. There was no public vote on it, no poll, nothing. No government is infalliable, this is why the UN exists, a democracy of governments in theory.

    16. Re:China would get a vote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me tell you, kid. My earliest memories are of the Korean War and I majored in Sino-Soviet studies in the 70s. (Disclaimer - dropped out 3rd year)

      Until a few short years ago China was a threat. Don't scoff, I don't just mean economically or competitively, I mean on the level of the old Soviet Union at their worst. They were an immediate threat to their neighbours (Vietnam, Korea, Burma/Myanmar, India, Taiwan - almost everyone) and they were actively trying to sabotage the US, UK, Canada, and our allies.

      There is a lot that could be said in defense of their strategies just by virtue of their level of development in comparison to the West. But the fact remains that their goals were counter to the democracies at the time. That means your parents, friends, most everyone you know in the English-speaking (or European/Japanese) world.

      The Soviet Union collapsed. China reinvented itself. America has trouble trusting Putin because of his background and not-so-subtle heavy thumb. But Russia is a much more open place now - it's relatively transparent, and there's no turning back from it's democracy in the immediate future. China remains a mystery. The CCP is opaque and cryptofascist. Even today, the English-language state press regularly comments how the "Chinese people" aren't ready for the information overload of direct satellite TV or Internet. That strikes me as being repressive.

      (Flashback - was Tiananmen Square really so long ago for you kids?)

      I for one do not want a repressive authority to control any major aspect of the Internet. Even if China always dealt fairly with the West in that regard, their refusal to do so for their own citizens is hypocrisy that I cannot accept.

      When China gives their 20% "their vote" THEN you can make the argument that we should not reject it.

    17. Re:China would get a vote by MenTaLguY · · Score: 1

      Do you not understand the idea of democracy? A few countries with weird ideas will easily be outvoted by the majority in the UN.

      You'd expect that, yes. But then how does stuff like Libya or Cuba being voted to head the UN Human Rights Comission happen?

      --

      DNA just wants to be free...
    18. Re:China would get a vote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a fact that government flows from the people. That most people are not free is emperical evidence of his view point. Consider the murder of the VJ in Afganistan, perhaps by her two brothers, for being too western. The opinion of the supreme court of Afganistan is that people doing what they want and watching old music videos will destroy their country and make them the laughingstock of the world. Appearently the brutal senseless murder of teenaged girls will prevent this.

      These people can't be redeemed by hugs. Freedom is better. And if they don't like it, they can go fuck themselves, until it's cheaper just to kill them. That's the price of freedom. The willingness to violently, and permenently end the aspirations of other people's tyranny. Make your peace with that, or prepare to live a life cowering on your knees.

    19. Re:China would get a vote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're an idiot. Those musicians who were "taken" off the air were not pulled by the government, moron.

      The market place pulled them. If I disagree with the politics of a performer and I let the media outlet know and I'm the only complainer nothing will happen. But, if I bitch and lots of others bitch to the same media outlet things happen. I have the right to complain and the right to tell said media outlet that I will stop listening. And you wsnt to deny me that right.
      You are a twat.

    20. Re:China would get a vote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, you grew up in the cold war and you did not make one step forward since then. Impressive.

    21. Re:China would get a vote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I watched China's "Great Leap" forward and I was not impressed. It's a shame kids don't study more history these days. Not that you'll ever come back and read this but you really don't know squat about China - do some research kid.

    22. Re:China would get a vote by Alcilbiades · · Score: 1

      There you are wrong again. The singers were taken off the air not because of censorship but because their fans did not agree with their political statements and stopped listening to radio stations which played them. Name 1 country that has more freedoms than the US. The US snubs world courts because there are some political decisions we make that upset rival countries interest in different areas around the globe and to get back at us they take us to court or one of our officials. Until the UN stops using the US and US military as their primary source of both revenue and military backbone you can just get off your high-horse.
      On another note the term High-horse refers to knights back in the middle ages having multiple horses but 2 different types 1 was their smaller horse they rode between battles and their other was their High-horse otherwise known as their war horse. I did not engage you in battle with a lance or a tank so learn a little bit about the english language and stfu.

    23. Re:China would get a vote by merdark · · Score: 1

      Approximately 50% of your population agreed with those artists. There was no time to gauge if 'people stopped listening to the stations' as they were pulled immediately.

      The US snubs the world court because, among other things, they were accused of international terrorism. The US has done many despicible things. They brought mass murdering dictators such as Pol-pot, Saddam, even Osama bin Laden, into power. You may not know these things because they are not talked about in your media. But read some of Chomsky's documents. He is a US academic that looks into the truth of these things.

      High horse is a common modern statement meaning 'stop thinking that you are all powerfull'. I'm glad you read up on its origins, but that has nothing to do with modern reality. Sorry.

    24. Re:China would get a vote by einar2 · · Score: 1

      No, I was curios how the thread would continue and so I am back :-)
      I gave up some years ago (more than you seem to give me but there is no need to get personal) to try to argue with people from different cultures about what we consider to be true. Myself, I think it is more helpfull to ask questions.
      Picking up the cold war theme, I have to confess that my picture of the US during this period is not much better than that of other super powers. It is better, but not much.
      So my question is, the history knowledge you gained did it come from sources inside your own culture? Or to ask more bluntly, have you ever heart of a culture (except the Germans) providing a history book where they confess that they were wrong?
      We cannot fairly judge recent history by the sources that are available. Only some future time will have the distance to look unbiased at our time. So why do we not follow Russel in his argument that we should just try to avoid what is obviously wrong. I think excluding other peoples from an overall democratic process because we consider ourself superior is obviously wrong.
      Can we at least agree on this?

    25. Re:China would get a vote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't take my style personally, most everyone is a kid to me.

      I think we should involve more countries in the democratic process, so I agree with you there. However, the UN isn't made up of democratic countries and I wouldn't trust non-accountable governments to be involved in such an important facet of the West's economy. But others have made that point.

      The problem is the movers and shakers in China during the 90s and (to a lesser degree) 80s are still in power, or at least extraordinarily influential (look at the history of chairmanships in the CCP for the best examples - I would cite the recent ascension of Hu but I'm afraid of misspelling names). The Chinese haven't written an apologetic version of their history like Germany but I think they're coming to grips better with it than the Japanese (eg the Mao museum is pretty ground-breaking in its scope and accuracy).

      The West is indeed an empire, during the Cold War (militarily and foreign policy-wise) and to a lesser extent now (economically and culturally). I try not to think of our "culture" as intrinsically superiour *but* I do think democracy trumps totalitarian regimes anyday. China isn't really communist, nor ever was (China is eternally Chinese and a unique society) so I don't fear its ideologues. However, it still sends shivers down my spine when a Chinese general threatens nuclear war (see CNN/BBC/NYTimes).

      The settling of the Taiwan issue may be enough to lay the groundwork for regime change (not ala Iraq but ala Turkey/Greece/former-Soviet-republics) or changes in governance (like Vietnam). But until then I would rather Canada, New Zealand, EU, *any* other democracy take control of the Internet. Not out of disrepect to China but out of respect for the importance of the Internet to the rest of the world.

      To answer your question, most of my knowledge of history comes from English language books and periodicals (propaganda from my own empire, I'll admit). But I also studied the Chinese and Soviet takes on history. Winners do write the history books.... the encylopedias I had growing up (dating to the 50s) came right out and said "communism is an evil ideology that only works by invading and consuming neighboring nations". Obviously there are many shades of grey and we can't speak in good and evil (most everyone sees themself as good and their rivals as evil (or misguided)). When I tell /.ers to read history, however, I refer to recent history that *I've lived through*. I've seen China's actions (through the news, not firsthand of course) and they do not strike me as altruistic. I can let anyone live in peace but I cannot withhold judgement when agressors threaten it.

      So, basically, it's from this background that stems my distrust of the current Chinese government.

  67. Taxation by PacketScan · · Score: 2, Insightful

    They only reason the U.N. wants control is so they can TAX it. That and survailance. "Consumer Protection" how can that ever happen if we use software with vulnerabilities. I for one am Completely againts the un haveing control. For crying out loud look what happened with oil or food, it turned into oil for nothing ( and your'll like it).

  68. Re:Invent it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, actually: you didn't read that right.

    One CNet hack "columnist" fantasizes that the "UN wants to tax the internet."

    Major difference.

  69. ARPANET and Links by tonsofpcs · · Score: 1

    Ok, ARPANET was created in the USA. Others wanted to link to it. The USA allowed others to link to it. Others now want to take control of it.

    My ISP created its own subnet. Customers wanted to join it. The ISP allowed customers to join it. So if the UN succeeds in taking control of ARPANET, can I take control of my ISP?

  70. CERN by canineK9 · · Score: 1

    Please correct this if I'm wrong. The internet protocols were "invented" in Switzerland and promulgated by CERN as an instrument for sharing of academic projects. ARPNET was the US miltary net that was similar to but not the same as the CERN net. Al Gore wrote legislation that put the US portion of the early net into non-miltary/non-governmental control (that's right, as in PRIVATIZATION). US dominance is partly a historical accident and partly due to the foresight of people like Gore and those at MIT and Cal Tech able to use capitalism to jump-start the web(sorry to all you sons of Bush's out there).

    1. Re:CERN by Holi · · Score: 1

      Correction. CERN (via Sir Tim Berners-Lee) was responsible for HTTP and the world wide web, but the web is not the whole of the internet. It is just one application that runs on the internet. There are many others, some have died, such as gopher. Others are thriving, Like email, Some continue on in obscurity, NNTP and IRC, and new ones are coming along all the time, VOIP... (i'd list more but my head hurts).

      But the initial development of the distributed TCP/IP network called the internet was funded by the USA.

      --
      Sorry, teleporters just kill you and then make a copy. A perfect, soul-less copy.
  71. Rescue the World's Starving Children First by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The UN needs to be in the business of reconfiguring corrupt governments that starve and abuse their denizens, not routers

  72. ha by speel3k · · Score: 1

    we pwn!

    --
    Life is like a bag of chips you never know whats next
    Speel
  73. My comments by Antony-Kyre · · Score: 1

    Some say the United Nations is too corrupt right now. Plus doesn't the U.S. government have veto power?

    What I'd like to see is a new organization, a national one, where each country has a single representative sent to it with one unit of voting power. Let them run it that way.

  74. "Oil for Food" = American/British Corrupt by Danuvius · · Score: 1

    Are you writing from a mental hospital?

    The monitoring was done by American and British ships. So either the respective governments were allowing illegal activity, or their militaries' representatives were corrupt or incompetent. (Or, the most likely: all three at once.)

    There's a saying: "It's better to be thought a fool, then to open your mouth and remove all doubt." Well, don't worry, there's always next time for you.

    --
    Akarsz Magyar Gentoo fórumot? Akkor
    1. Re:"Oil for Food" = American/British Corrupt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, that's right -- it was the Americans that were behind Kojo's payments from a Swiss firm.

      And wow -- they can monitor financial records from ships? Read anything about the scandal? Ah - didn't think so.

      Time to spend less time collecting clever quotes / brooding over the West, and more reading the news.

      Experiment: Google 'Kojo Annan'. Tally up the stories about the evidence against his corruption.

      Welcome to reality, fucktard!

    2. Re:"Oil for Food" = American/British Corrupt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Are you writing from a mental hospital?"

      Always better to be clinically insane rathar than completely fucking ignorant of the issue. At least he has an excuse in the hospital, what's yours?

  75. A false assumption here by PapayaSF · · Score: 2, Interesting

    since the internet is global you really need a global entity to be ultimately responsible for it.

    Air travel, news, food, and Earth's economy are just as "global", and yet there are no global entities in charge of those areas. Not only does there not need to be, there are good reasons to not have global (i.e. centralized) control of such things. 20th century history is full of examples.

    One big reason to fear UN control beyond taxes: how long before they try to crack down on "hate speech," which will mean criticism of certain governments and certain religions? I leave it as an exercise to the reader to guess which ones the UN would not want criticized.

    --
    Q: What does the "B." in Benoit B. Mandelbrot stand for? A: Benoit B. Mandelbrot
    1. Re:A false assumption here by m50d · · Score: 1

      If it doesn't need central control, then the US should give up control and let everyone make their own root servers.

      --
      I am trolling
  76. Give to the monkeyboy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes! Let Monkeyboy and his UN cohorts take control. They did such a good job with the oil for money program I don't see why we shouldn't trust them. Monkeyboy & son will probably put a tax on the internet to help all the governments in Africa keep control so they can treat their people like crap so the U.S. will have to send more money for the governments to stay in power to treat their people like crap....

    The UN is worthless so give everyone a bananna and tell the to shut up!

  77. Hey, knucklehead... by haakondahl · · Score: 1

    ...and I mean that in the nicest possible way. This ain't about our baby going out into the world. This is about her getting into that metal-flake gold 1976 Delta 88 with leopard print plush seats and a Cadillac badge stuck on it what just rolled up in my driveway and played "brick............HOUSE!" on the horn for God's sake, with that hairy-chested (I can see it from here, Marge!) refugee from the P-Funk Mothership.

    And she AIN'T GOIN'!

    --
    Don't trust anyone under thirty.
  78. A question of Rights by Thunderstruck · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Were the UN to assume such regulatory authority over the internet, what assurances would citizens of a United State have that the rights they exercise now, via the internet, would be continued?

    Right now if I want I can spew all the hate-speech I like on the internet.

    Right now I can arrange the sale of firearms over the internet.

    Right now I can play addictive text-based MUDs that waste more lives than either of the above.

    Will these be preserved by a governing body who disapproves of all three?*

    (*number three was a joke)

    --
    Trying to use sarcasm in text-based forums does not work.
    1. Re:A question of Rights by m50d · · Score: 1

      Try reading the UN's human rights charter?

      --
      I am trolling
    2. Re:A question of Rights by MenTaLguY · · Score: 1

      I did. Article 29, especially paragraph 3, gives me the willies. No thanks, man.

      --

      DNA just wants to be free...
    3. Re:A question of Rights by Apuleius · · Score: 1

      Read it all the way through. It has a Humpty Dumpty Clause in the end.

  79. Is control uyp to the UN by 91degrees · · Score: 1

    Or the US?

    The internet uses ICANN solely because all the ISPs accept that they are responsible for assigning names and numbers.

    But each country has its own organisation responsible for aspects of the internet in that country, atleast handling domain name CCTLDs. These are usually representative of the ISPs and other major internet organisations in the given country.

    It's quite feasable for representatives of each country to agree to set up their own DNS system. With support from some major US ISPs as well, they could set up a new de-facto internet authority. This would be an extreme option, but technically feasable.

    The people in charge only rule with the permissionof those they rule.

  80. US Internet spying by br00tus · · Score: 1
    One thing that should be remembered is that US intelligence agencies like the NSA spy on the Internet, which which includes commercial espionage. The Echelon system is used for much of this.

    Then there are things that are less known...the NSA used to "grep" for certain 800 numbers from machines it had "sniffing" the Internet, that were in very good locations to do such a thing. Once I myself was reading a web site in Australia about CIA involvement in a sort-of coup d'etat they had there (the prime minister, who wanted to get Australia out of the Vietnam war, and who was beginning to establish relations with "Red" China was thrown out by an antiquated dominion law by a man who had CIA conenctions). Shortly after doing so I received an odd SNMP query to my IP address requesting information about my machine. If I didn't have my machine especially set up to log everything coming in, I never would have seen it (my machine did not respond witht he asked for information). The requesting machine was some US army information intelligence outfit in Quantico, Virginia, I suppose it was the Army equivalent of the Air Force OSI or something. One odd aspect was I was doing this from the US, so the Army would have been spying on me, as a US citizen, which it shouldn't be doing, although there are loopholes out of this I guess. It's unfortunate I have to go to other countries web sites to read about stuff like this, but that's how it is, the USSR had it's samizdat as well, and its KGB trying to track down who was distributing and reading it.

  81. Re:My comments updated with additions by Antony-Kyre · · Score: 1

    I should have mentioned. No one who has ever held political office would be eligible in my idea. No one who has ever sought political office as a candidate, even if he or she has failed to win. No one who has any honory title, royal title, or whatever, like how Bill Gates has the title KBE.

  82. Screw the UN by CitznFish · · Score: 1

    We invented the internet. (Thanks Al Gore!) We should control it. I'd be for no control before UN control. The UN can't even save starving children.

    --
    'mmmmmmmmm.... forbidden donut'
  83. It belongs to the Brits! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We invented the computer, so we own it -- get over it.

    Oh, and the Germans invented cars, so they own all the US roads -- suck it up.

    As arrogant and ridiculous as Americans claiming ownership of the net.

    1. Re:It belongs to the Brits! by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 1

      The US government circa World War II is calling, they want Europe back.

  84. ^^ MOD THIS UP ^^ by ByteMangler_242 · · Score: 1

    [include mod_point_excuse]

    Most of the world does not share our love of freedom of speech. Bash the US all you want, just remember that you can feel free to bash it precisely because of the first amendment. A value the UN sorely lacks

    --

    Rule of the open mind
    People who are resistant to change cannot resist change for the worst.

    1. Re:^^ MOD THIS UP ^^ by djmurdoch · · Score: 1

      Bash the US all you want, just remember that you can feel free to bash it precisely because of the first amendment. A value the UN sorely lacks

      You're wrong about that. The UN certainly values bashing the US.

    2. Re:^^ MOD THIS UP ^^ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right, that's why you score place #20something in the freedom of press ranking. God, you're a country of naive fools.

  85. UN Competent? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    China: "We feel that the public policy issue of Internet should be solved jointly by the sovereign states in the U.N. framework...For instance, spam, network security and cyberspace--we should look for an appropriate specialized agency of the United Nations as a competent body."

    UN? Competent body? Yeah, that's the solution.

  86. looking for someone to run the net? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    hey, don't get your panties in a twist... I'll do it.

  87. Actually it is run by a incompetent politicians by Augusto · · Score: 4, Interesting

    In Panama, the UNICEF money was a great source of wealth for politicians. UNICEF had not good mechanism of auditing and keeping track of the money, and ensuring that it was actually spent on children.

    --

    - sigs are for wimps.
  88. Who cares what the US wants? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who cares what the US wants or if the US invented it or currently controls the backbone?

    If every other country in the world (or the vast majority) would rather the internet be controlled by the UN then it will be controlled by the UN. The US has demonstrated itself unstrustworthy and unreliable on the politicial scene, even to its own allies and treaties to which it has agreed. No nation state in their right mind, or even north korea is going to want to leave management of these things to such an entity.

    The other example of similar problem is GPS. Yes, the US controls GPS, yes the US government decides its precision blah blah blah. Well the EU got sick of that, and they're going to build their own.

    The only body that can and will ultimately control the internet is the UN. In the process the internet itself may be somewhat recreated or dramatically changed, which is the painful way, or the US can pass it off nicely. But this is why every other country has governments, so they aren't ruled from washington.

    1. Re:Who cares what the US wants? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      come and get it frenchy

    2. Re:Who cares what the US wants? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah? You crap and fall back in it too. Posession is the 9/10's of ownership. We paid for it's development. We invented it. We own it. And it's ours. Period. Pedal your socialist tripe elsewhere commrade.

  89. China by slapout · · Score: 1

    China is a member of the Security Council. Do you want their censorship-based policies involved in controlling the internet?

    --
    Coder's Stone: The programming language quick ref for iPad
  90. Short Summary of Parent by Danuvius · · Score: 1
    I am "bigoted"
    Only in America can people be found who are educated enough to realise you can be bigotted against governments but love their countries and peoples with all your fluffy little American heart, so long as they STAY IN THEIR DAMN PLACE: the gutter, and SHUT UP.
    --
    Akarsz Magyar Gentoo fórumot? Akkor
    1. Re:Short Summary of Parent by Theovon · · Score: 1

      Only on Slashdot will you find people who will defend any government, as long as it's not the US government.

      The fact of the matter is, I'm just as glad the US Congress has stayed away as I am that the UN hasn't gotten hold of it either.

      Governments are greedy. Period. I don't care who or where they are. This has nothing to do with staying in one's place.

    2. Re:Short Summary of Parent by Trumped · · Score: 0

      Read Danivus's earlier comment about how it was the Americans and British who are at fault for the Oil for Food Program scandal. It will clue you in to how "informed" he is. Only on Slashdot ...

  91. U.N. looking for a source of Revenue? by rgremill · · Score: 1

    Can't you just imagine the U N collecting a domain tax on behalf of the poor?

    This is another reason for the US to cut U N funding. Why are we paying dues to this group?

  92. Re:Huh?: Wrong by dustinbarbour · · Score: 1

    I hope not the way China does it but any way

    You're awfully optimistic, eh? When it comes to the UN, you must remember that the UN is a group of countries with their own perrogatives and agendas. That means China and other countries with an interest in censoring the Internet are going to push for such measures. And to quote Eddie Izzard, my favorite comedian, "fuckin' Jihad on that!"

    Seriously.. Thus far in US hands the Internet you so enjoy has remained open like a cheap hooker. You can say ANYTHING you want on the Internet. That includes talking about democracy and freedom, forward-thinking ideas that China and other totalitarian governments would like to ban/hide.

    The UN is a bad organization.. ineffective and lame. They couldn't handle the Internet.

  93. net hackers by SolusSD · · Score: 2, Interesting

    An elected group of unpaid net hackers would be the best group. Make sure the position is unpaid as to stifle selfish intent. Make it a position that serves the community.. like an open source project board (ex. debians leaders)... but not debians leaders. ;)

    1. Re:net hackers by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      It's funny that unpaid is supposed to add a nutral bias. The idea of paying elected oficials wa originally to make it for open and lessen the bias.

      I'm not saying your right or wrong, just that it is interesting how things have changed.

      Also for all intents and purposes our (US) representitives and senators are unpaid (compare what John Edwards made as a lawyer to as a Sentator). How do you prevent this group from being currupted by lobbyists? not paying them certainly won't help.

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    2. Re:net hackers by Mikkeles · · Score: 1

      Poorly paid, but licensed to loot!

      --
      Great minds think alike; fools seldom differ.
    3. Re:net hackers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please change your spamming .sig. Thank you.

  94. Jawohl, Herr Secretary-General! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And if the human rights committee membership is any indication, China will be on the committee charged with determining what content is acceptable on the net.

  95. U.N.-reachable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    c:\> ping www.google.com
    pinging 64.36.21.34 ...
    network U.N.-reachable

    sorry... couldn't resist

    1. Re:U.N.-reachable by HeliumHigh · · Score: 1

      "c:>"
      Of course its unreachble. Your using windows!

      (I acutally made a nice little batch script to make cmd look like xterm.. more or less :) )

  96. Who governs the Internet now? by dfn5 · · Score: 1
    U.N. To Govern Internet?
    Why do we need anyone to govern the internet? It works fine in it's current state of lawlessness.

    Oh wait. I think you really mean DNS. Article title == -1 Troll.

    --
    -- Thou hast strayed far from the path of the Avatar.
  97. you meant to say 'international' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    a 'national' organization is one which involves only one government.

    regardless i don't think you really understand the implications of what you're asking for....

  98. US way BETTER!!!!! by Danuvius · · Score: 1
    Can't you just imagine the U N collecting a domain tax on behalf of the poor?
    This is another reason for the US to cut U N funding. Why are we paying dues to this group?
    You're right. We should do what the US does. Give economy-crippling loans while pretending it's "foreign aid" in exchange of permission for US companies to buy up anything worthwhile in the country.

    That's what the poor need!! Lazy gits!
    --
    Akarsz Magyar Gentoo fórumot? Akkor
  99. Great. What next? by corporatemutantninja · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I expect those whiny Euro poofter-weenies will next want us to turn the GPS system over to the U.N., too. Maybe Al Gore didn't invent the Internet, but the U.S. did. The rest of y'all are welcome to use it, though. Don't say we never did anything for ya.

    --
    Actually, I was trying to be Insightful, not Funny.
  100. You'd think, with the supposed technical chops... by kclittle · · Score: 1
    ... of the prototypical /.'er, that someone would have mentioned the ITU by now. (A) The U.S. invented the phone (ok, true, it was some Canadian named Alexander, but he did it in the US); (B) But, the phone system protocols of the world are governed by the ITU, not the U.S. government. The ITU has done a reasonably good job of making the worlds phone systems interoperate!

    However, the 'internet taxes' thing is right out -- no one in their right mind is going to allow the U.N. to start collecting taxes of any kind.

    --
    Generally, bash is superior to python in those environments where python is not installed.
  101. UN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Internet to UN?
    Let UN to deal with "FOOD for Hunger" program not with "root" servers. UN has nothing to do with the Internet because it has nothing to do with most part of the world.
    Like, UN has nothing to do with Obesity, which is not a common problem.

  102. Ha ha ha by retro128 · · Score: 1

    Let them try to take control of the Internet. We have nothing to worry about because all they will do is write carefully worded letters.

    Seriously, why does the UN need to be involved? I thought that each country had control over its own TLD, and assigned number authorities are assigned to each continent. . The root servers themselves are located all over the world.

    AFAIK, the only thing the US really has a "monopoly" on is the .com, .net, and .org domains, as well as anything else ICANN may want to create. But for the UN to use that as a pretext to take over the ENTIRE Internet? I don't think so. Besides you only have to take one look at their track record to extrapolate the doom of the Internet should they somehow push this through.

    --
    -R
    1. Re:Ha ha ha by Teancum · · Score: 1

      The country TLDs are still run by ICANN, but are non-controvercial because they are directly related to the ISO naming scheme for country codes. If you want to get a new country code, you submit the request through the ISO country code committee. This happened with the Soviet Union (.su) became Russia (.ru), and still happens as political circumstances change throughout the world.

      ICANN does, however, allocate the IP addresses and organize the network topology, so this becomes a huge project in allocating Class A,B,& C networks (I know... /8, /16, & /24... but you know what I'm talking about if you are nitpicking at this fine points.) In theory ICANN could deallocate all of China from the internet by chaning routing tables to redirect IP addresses elsewhere. In practice, however, that would (probabally) never happen.

  103. Internet -vs- IP network by ikegami · · Score: 1

    The US manages their own IP network, the Internet.
    My employer manages their own IP network.
    I manage my own IP network.
    What's stopping the UN from starting their own IP network instead of taking over US's?

  104. Moreover.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Modern computers are largely dependent on the modern number system, which in it's modern form was developed by the Indians.

    So you can't have it both ways....either give back the number system to them and keep your Internet, or learn to share and share alike.

  105. UN-effective and neutered, by WarmNoodles · · Score: 1

    The Un is about as effective as moldy wet bread. Ask the million plus Rowandans about Effective. If they can't stop telivised mass genoside what makes you think the UN will do any better with Cyber Squatters, issues of world censorship, and taxation. I can see it now, we must tax the US more to provide for internet in the impovished nations. If they want to grow nations responsably they have to stop acting like Mexican Federali Police first.

    1. Re:UN-effective and neutered, by KarmaMB84 · · Score: 1

      As if they'd collect the taxes. We barely pay our dues and owe them at least a billion, maybe 2 in debt. This is probably because our government has realized that paying them is a waste of taxpayer dollars. We pretty much only pay them enough to make them STFU about it.

    2. Re:UN-effective and neutered, by Presidential · · Score: 1
      The Un is about as effective as moldy wet bread.


      Umm...have you ever heard of a thing called penicillin?

      Maybe a better metaphor for your comment would have been "as effective as moldy wet lasagne."
      --
      Whenever Mrs. Fitch breaks wind, we beat the dog.
    3. Re:UN-effective and neutered, by WarmNoodles · · Score: 1

      I think the metaphor fits.
      1) Penicillin cells are pencil-shaped when you look at them under a microscope (very suspicious)
      2) Eating moldy bread will NOT cure your ear ache -- or anything else. (The UN is just as Non-effective with curing)
      3) Bacteria that don't have cell walls are immune to penicillins ( We need to throw up more Walls, no less walls ahaaa.)
      4) Most bacteria do have cell walls, but many have changed their wall-building systems so that penicillins can't interfere ( Does this sound familiar?, Bacteria for food for Oil!)
      5) We first started using penicillin in the 40's and 50's, most bacteria could be killed by plain penicillin ( Back in the day the UN was effective now its corrupted and just as ineffective as penicillin)
      The UN was founded April 25th in San Francisco ( And they been Flamboyantly trying to live it down ever sense)
      6) Side effects include rashes, allergy and hives ( the Un will just make you vomit these days.)
      7) The scariest -- side effect is "anaphylactic" allergy SHOCK, in which your airway swells up you wish you were dead, then you die like a Rwandan in a Greek tragady ( Because that is the script the UN cast for you)

      The UN as more in common with moldy bread than they do with charity, compassion, courage, heroism or intelligence.
      PS and I sure dont want them running any protocols the internet relies on, especially Root TLD's

      Wet lasagne... Ewwwwueee Gross! :)

  106. Ignore their stated goals. They want censorship. by ishmalius · · Score: 1

    The goal is, and has always been, to control content , stifle dissident voices, and provide a business-friendly, user-harsh Internet for their downtrodden masses.

  107. ...other suggested responsibilities... by MobyDisk · · Score: 2, Insightful
    ...Other suggested responsibilities for this new organization include Internet surveillance, 'consumer protection,' and perhaps even the power to tax domain names to pay for 'universal access.'"
    I was fine up until that part. ICANN does not and should never have the power to do any of the above things. They could at least PRETEND to be legitimate. But when they start off by suggesting that they could have power way beyond the scope of what is reasonable, right away, it becomes pretty clear that this is a bad idea.
    1. Re:...other suggested responsibilities... by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 1
      The UN is a broker of peace between nations, it is not a form of government, it is not a regulatory authority. Thinks like Radio spectrum usage, International Maritime Law, bans on biological and chemical weapons, etc are handled by treaties and conventions.

      This attempt to mold themselves into a regulatory agency is a power grab where none is needed. The NET runs just fine, and IPV6 will take care of many of the contentious issues that crop up with IP address allocation.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
  108. TLD for food program by brian6string · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Let's play this out. The U.N. takes over assigning TLDs, etc. How long would it be before someone at the U.N. (Kofi Annan) is accepting bribes, or he hires his son, or daugther, or the son of the guy who cuts the grass at the U.N. to oversee this. And then $$$ or euro's if you prefer start getting redirected to someone's personal account.

    As a forum for international discussion, dialog and negotiation, the U.N. is a fine organization. The U.N. as a body is, though, not actually accountable to anyone. This is why the U.N. should not be thought of as a government, or even a meta-government (a government of governments). Any body that is not accountable to (as in, risks being voted out of office or power), eventually becomes corrupt.

    How much money went to Sadaam Hussein in the oil for food program? How much was actually used for food? Little if any. How much money was skimmed off the top by people at the U.N.? A lot, but we can never know how much because these people neither represent my (or your) interests, nor are they accountable to me (or you)!

    1. Re:TLD for food program by xouumalperxe · · Score: 1

      Are the people in the USA that control these things accountable to anyone OUTSIDE the USA? Accountability is all nice and fine, but don't use it as an argument when you can't offer it yourself.

    2. Re:TLD for food program by Stauf · · Score: 1

      The U.N. as a body is, though, not actually accountable to anyone.

      By the same logic, all democracy collapses. The goverment of the U.S. is accountable to its citizens, the the same way the the U.N. is accountable to its members. It's power comes from agreement between its member states, and is not vested in it by some higher authority.

      You must understand that in a democratic organisation, such as the U.N., the power comes from those being governed, and therefore, if those being governed decide they don't like those doing the governing, they simply remove them. It's the ultimate form of accountability - it exists by consensus and therefore can be destroyed by consensus.

  109. Like WTO not UN by amightywind · · Score: 1

    Beyond the usual levers of diplomatic pressure and public kvetching, Brazil and China could choose what amounts to the nuclear option: a fragmented root.

    China effectively already has one. No loss there. China isolating itself in this way will put it at a competative disadvantage to India. What is motivating Brazil is harder to understand. Perhaps something like the World Trade Organisation is in order. Its charter should be very narrow. Handing this to the UN is a terrible idea. Not only because it is a political body, but because it is thoroughly corrupt and discredited.

    --
    an ill wind that blows no good
  110. you forget the USA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i think, quite arguably, the closest thing we have to a global government is the united states.

  111. Why the UN bashing? by Munra · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think a lot of people need some slight perspective with regards to the recent problems that the UN has faced.

    It's not overly effective in some respects (stopping invasions, oppression) but that's a fault of the countries involved not the organisation itself.

    Without the UN, there might still be apartheid in South Africa. There would be lots more people starving to death. There would likely still be smallpox. Free and fair elections would be unavailable in many countries. AIDS (and tuberculosis and malaria) would be far greater problems. Those accused of warcrimes might not be tried.

    While it's easy to knock the UN following recent scandals, get a sense of perspective. It's extremely difficult to coordinate things on a world scale without any real authority but the UN does do an extremely admirable job.

    Whether it would handle the root servers well or not is a separate issue but don't critise out of a hand an organisation that has saved millions of lives.

    Manta

    1. Re:Why the UN bashing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is atleast some with sense on Slashdot.

    2. Re:Why the UN bashing? by Alcilbiades · · Score: 1

      You have some good points but what people fail to realize is the actual function of the UN. The UN isn't a governing body. It is a forum for countries that hate each other to have open conversations with a vast number of 3rd parties present to help avert wars. The original concept was President Woodrow Wilson's idea of the World Organization.

      That said many of the good branches of the UN is just countries with like interest creating a co-pay to fund humanitarian aide. So, WHO is a good organization because industrialized countries that want to keep the problem of rampant diseases from imigrating to their own doorstep create a governing body to distribute funds to blunt diseases and keep them in underdeveloped parts of the world and try to help alleviate the problems that the disease causes 3rd world gov'ts.

      So lets all just realize the the UN isn't a government. It is just a open forum for debate and some of its members have more authority dictating how and what is debated.

    3. Re:Why the UN bashing? by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      Even with the U.N. in existence, the number of genocides, and the number of people killed by them has reached beyond staggering numbers, many more in the last half of the 20th century than in the first half. The organization seems to either not care or to be too bogged down in politics to understand its own mission, where it is all talk for two years, and if the genocide is still continuing, they finally roll in.

    4. Re:Why the UN bashing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well said. I still have some concerns about UN control of the root servers. To put this in perspective, consider that the control of root servers is not a traditional UN function. It does not involve public health, war, or medicine. At most, it (sometimes) involves laws and IP protection. But mostly, it involves questions of speech. Whether the Falun Gong group (sp?) in China is allowed to have a website is a free speech issue, and is my right to post pictures of my cat, or your right to download radical Nazi or Islamo-hate literature.

      I do not trust any goverment to protect the rights of individuals to speak freely. I think that sometimes, the governments will protect the IP rights of companies, but that's about all they can be really trusted to do well. If the UN controls the TLDs, then sites like Falun Gong, freedom fighters, even relgious nuts might not have a place in the world. The concerned countries will appoint representatives to the UN governing body that will seek their removal from the Internet, based on national interests.

      Oh sure, they might be protests, and the little guys might win a few high profile battles. But there will be countless instances of silence oppression.

      So I don't think the government has any role in regulating what is fundamentally speech. I don't trust the US government, and I trust the UN government far, far less, since it does not have a 1st Amendment to control its actions. (There are principles and statements concerning free expression that the UN should follow, but there's no mechanism to enforce this.)

      So overall, I like what Al Gore/Clinton started for the Internet: move away from government control, and get it into public/private hands. These groups will perform their own crimes, but at least the playing field is not as tilded as when a government seeks to shut you down.

      I also worry about the definition of the problem they seek to remedy. Why should ICAAN go? What will the UN do better? I think DNS has worked smashingly well, and with secure protocols, things can only go better. I think name allocation has not gone well, and I daresay that national interests are a poor substitute for the corporpate interests that now dominate the name game. The objections raised by member states like Syria boil down to (a) policy concerns (they don't like spam), and (b) security/oppression concerns (they need centralized control to crush opponents, just like they used car bombs in Lebanon.)

      When it comes to medicine, food and such, the UN is a great organization. When it comes to policy, we have some rather absurd situations, like Syria and Libya on the UN human rights commission in the 1990s. That does not mean the UN is broken. It just means that we should not expect much more than states advancing their national interests.

      Right now, the ICAAN advances corporate interests. This is not good. But Syria and China, if given control over the internet, will advance only their own national interests. At least with the corporate control of things, you stood a chance. Folks, I'm all warm and fuzzy about the UN, believe it or not. They do good work in many human-assistance areas. Believe me, this is not an area that government control is useful. Our founding fathers in the US warned us about government involvement in speech issues, and we should not forget this.

    5. Re:Why the UN bashing? by mcgroarty · · Score: 1
      I think a lot of people need some slight perspective with regards to the recent problems that the UN has faced.

      It's not overly effective in some respects (stopping invasions, oppression) but that's a fault of the countries involved not the organisation itself.

      The UN -is- the countries involved. Further, a look at which countries the UN appoints to commissions protecting human rights, governing economic aid, etc demonstrates plenty of problems with the organization itself. It consistently appoints the worst examples in each category to lead the category.
    6. Re:Why the UN bashing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The UN is what the members countries make it. You seem to think that the UN have some kind of power by itself.

      The US has by far the most influence in the UN and is thus by far the most responsible for it's actions.

    7. Re:Why the UN bashing? by stlhawkeye · · Score: 1
      Without the UN, there might still be apartheid in South Africa. There would be lots more people starving to death. There would likely still be smallpox. Free and fair elections would be unavailable in many countries. AIDS (and tuberculosis and malaria) would be far greater problems. Those accused of warcrimes might not be tried.

      The UN cherry-picks its battles based on the financial interests of its primary governers. This is why Germany, France, and Russia all condemned any activity in Iraq by anybody, not just the Americans. The UN manages to sometimes accidentally benefit people as a side affect to lining the pockets of its overseers.

      We can bash Bush to our collective hearts' delights over his blundering and bungling of the Iraq public relationships campaign, but what was the UN doing about villages full of slaughtered Kurds? Mass graves? Political opponents fed into plastic shredders? People speaking against Hussein thrown off buildings? What did they do about WMD use in Iran-Iraq? The UN is happy to sit on its collective hands and let the world's petty dictators do whatever the hell they want, and if anybody decides to give the UN the one-finger salute and go do something, they're mercilessly attacked for it. This isn't a pro-America flag-waving penisfest, either, it's happened to every major western power. Britain and France have both been exposed to this on various levels. The UN is just not interested in serving the human condition, and it is ultimately beholden to nobody, which is fine, really, since it's incapable of taking any kind of action against misbehaving member states, beyond issuing stern warnings over furrowed brows and narrowed eyes.

      It's extremely difficult to coordinate things on a world scale without any real authority but the UN does do an extremely admirable job.

      It's difficult to so much as get my roommates to pay their damn rent on the 1st of the month, I think we can all appreciate the complexity of the UN's job. I think the political structure of the organization is mutually exclusive with its own charter. Part of the problem is that the UN is full of petty dictators and does not set strict enough membership requirements. If the UN had a simple requirement that all members states must adhere to a minimum recognition of human rights, have a transparent process in place that met UN requirements for verification of those rights, we might get somewhere.

      Whether it would handle the root servers well or not is a separate issue but don't critise out of a hand an organisation that has saved millions of lives.

      And cost millions as well. I rarely see such logic used to defend American and British activity in the Iraq on these grounds. It's not because people can't recognize that lives might have been saved, but that the issue, in American political terms, is polarized between "George Bush is the fountain of black water from which all evil in the world spews" and "George Bush is the second coming of Jesus Christ." People have failed to abstract the reality of international, extensional issues such Iraq from their intensional representation of the leadership involved in such issues. This phenomenon is an error in symbolism and abstraction, and epidemic to the human species. Regardless, we've evolved to the point where organizations like the UN must exist to put such political squabbling behind enacting sensible policy to advance the human condition.

      I engage in petty UN bashing here and there, largely because the organization appears to be impotent and corrupt. Now, government is corrupt by nature, to some degree, but we have plenty of sovereign governments that are less corrupt than the UN, and it is upon the premises of those types of political structures that the UN should be organized. That's an ideological and practical criticism.

      It's not that I don't or can't appreciate the good that has come about because of the UN, or that I wish the organization never existed.

      --
      "I have never won a debate with an ignorant person." -Ali ibn Abi Talib
    8. Re:Why the UN bashing? by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1
      the UN does do an extremely admirable job.

      You are thinking of your father's UN. THEY did the things you are talking about and they did a great job for the most part. Today the UN is infested with a bunch of leftists and criminals - or people that do a great impression of leftists and criminals. They are out of control and they are incompetent. We would be rid of polio if they didn't fumble in Africa a few years ago. Too busy with their oil for food kickbacks I guess.

      If you are in the EU, you had better watch out. Even though countries have already voted against the EU Constitution, they are trying to force it on you anyway. Soon your country will be subjected to whatever Brussels demands. The British Parliament for example would be a rubber stamp. Someone will rule Europe by paper instead of yet another war. Soon resistance will be futile.

    9. Re:Why the UN bashing? by Apuleius · · Score: 1

      Because it is a corrupt organization responsible for horrific scandals (such as the "sex for food" debacles all over Africa), that gives equal legitimacy to countries whether they are civilized or barbarous, that has no mechanisms in place for holding anyone in the higher echelons responsible for incompetence or corruption, that is protecting the government of Zimbabwe while Mugabe plays Pol Pot Version Two, that took weeks to do anything about the 2005 Tsunamis long after the Aussies and Kiwis pitched up to do a damage survey and then joined with the Yanks to provide relief. The UN is a farce.

    10. Re:Why the UN bashing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The UN bashing is a sympton of the brain-washing that goes on in the United States.

      An American kid grows up seing foreigners represented in movies as barbarians, caricatured creatures. Just watch blockbusters in the last 20+ years (the "communists", the Chinese, the Latin-Americans, more recently the Arabs - terrorists, invariably - the North Koreans (in Bond movies), just about any non-Anglo group has been depicted as "primitive").

      He grows up smug in comsumer land and mall strips, not reading a paper, uncultured. In school, by 8th grade and high-school he know very little about History and Geography. He will never have read the Communist Manifesto, even though it spurred changes and inspired millions - even though you might find it wrong. Because, well, it was "communist."

      When finally he reaches adulthood, he most probably won't speak a foregin language, he is too lazy and without interest to do it. He most probably won't read a newspaper, even though he has a very high income.

      This is America for you.
      No respect for anybody, anyone, not caring about international law, other peoples, other cultures. Then, Anglos wonder why is it that somebody wants to blow you up.

    11. Re:Why the UN bashing? by brpr · · Score: 1

      What did [Europe/the UN/the bad guys] do about WMD use in Iran-Iraq?

      Erm, they got rid of the WMDs in Iraq. That's why the US didn't find any after it invaded, remember?

      --
      Freedom is not increased by mere diminuation of government. Anarchy is freedom for the strong and slavery for the weak.
    12. Re:Why the UN bashing? by toiletmonster · · Score: 1

      An American kid grows up seing foreigners represented in movies as barbarians, caricatured creatures. Just watch blockbusters in the last 20+ years (the "communists", the Chinese, the Latin-Americans, more recently the Arabs - terrorists, invariably - the North Koreans (in Bond movies), just about any non-Anglo group has been depicted as "primitive").

      gosh you are right, the mao, stalin, terrorists, and kim are all real bastions of civilization.

      He grows up smug in comsumer land and mall strips, not reading a paper, uncultured. In school, by 8th grade and high-school he know very little about History and Geography. He will never have read the Communist Manifesto, even though it spurred changes and inspired millions - even though you might find it wrong. Because, well, it was "communist."


      have you read adam smith's wealth of nations? the communist manifesto inspired millions of murders.

      When finally he reaches adulthood, he most probably won't speak a foregin language, he is too lazy and without interest to do it. He most probably won't read a newspaper, even though he has a very high income.

      40% of americans are hispanic. i think a lot of those people probably speak spanish. not to mention all the other groups that live here. ...ok really not sure why i bothered to respond to such an immature troll.

    13. Re:Why the UN bashing? by Vitamin+P · · Score: 0

      40% of americans are hispanic. i think a lot of those people probably speak spanish. not to mention all the other groups that live here. .. And who the fsck are you in saying that which "40 percent of that population; Which I dispute but am not going to try and argue." Unfortunately corporations are only looking at the bottom line... if I can hire 10 people that will work for x amount of hours. (it doesn't matter if they can speak english then I can just hire a translator or spend a bunch having all our companys documents translated to then I will be a profitable company.) hmmm there is a problem with that. Having to convert documents to another language costs $ and you eventualy end up spend more money on conversion of documents than you do if you had originally hired an English/German/Swahilli insert language of the day. But you say I am saving 30 cents an hour on hiring people but you are spending more on what you're saving on what it "actually" costs to train and retain workers. Sure you can hire 10 illegal immigrants to do the work and save $ but the savings are eaten up by having a translator on staff/the time or effort having all your documentation available in other languages. I have worked in a place that couldn't/wouldn't fire someone unless there was a translator around. When there wasn't that person wasn't fired not even notified that there was a problem. Therefore they didn't know there was a problem and couldn't improve or explain that there was a valid reason that work performance wasn't acceptable.

  112. Standardization by Trippee · · Score: 2, Informative
    Assigning Internet authority to the UN would not only benefit in the short term, but would have gigantic benefits in long term global communication. The benefits from a continual standardized network is beneficial beyond our recognition.

    I for one don't want to end up 10 years down the road and be unable to communicate with a business client overseas because CHINANET isn't compatible with USANET1 or EURONET.

    We're already going to face enough problems down the road from ridiculous program such as "the great firewall of China", and we must fight seperation of the internet into smaller, and completely pointless smaller networks.

    UN standardization is critical to maintaining a healthy and unified balance in the internet for the benefit of the global economy.

  113. Kids, stop fighting by Squeedle · · Score: 5, Interesting

    First, unfortunately for the rest of the world, the US is in control of ICANN and doesn't have to do a damn thing if it doesn't want. Unfortunately for us, that leaves open the option that the rest of the world does take their toys and goes home, i.e. "invents" a new internet and leaves us out of it. I was about to say that neither extreme seems very likely, but given the current political climate I'm not so sure.

    I'm sorry to have to agree though, the idea of the UN controlling the Internet is scary, for exactly the reasons that people have mentioned. It's currently largely unregulated (another word for that is "free", get it?). The comments from UN reps in other countries (e.g. Syria) revealed amazing ignorance of how the internet works, and an explicit desire to exert firm control over content. The complaint by Brazil about the .xxx TLD was really stupid - such a domain could make it easier to filter out porn sites if one wanted - because they are NOT going away. I like the internet just the way it is, thank you very much.

    So far I have yet to hear either a good technical or policy-based argument against leaving it in US hands. I'm willing to be convinced, but so far all the arguments against US control have boiled down to, "we don't like you and/or don't want you to have it." Not good enough for me, sorry. I'm going to write my Congresscritters and ask them not to turn it over.

    --
    Love, Squeedle
  114. Great.... by mgranit11 · · Score: 1

    I am sure those cyber terrorists are going to be really scared when the UN creates a resolution condeming them. And I am looking forward to any internet issue being Israel's fault.

  115. over my dead corpse by Mez420 · · Score: 1

    Great, so now the UN will levy international taxes for internet usage? Gee, I wonder who will end up paying the biggest share? Oh, and don't forget, contentious words like "freedom" and "democracy" will have to be avoided. . .

  116. Gah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Someone said something along the lines of "The internet is global, so a global organization should run it".

    That's complete bull! WE invented the internet. It's OURS.

    Since Windows affects people globally, should we hand the rights to it over to the UN as well? (Might end up better, but that's not the point).

    1. Re:Gah by rappo · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry but "we" didn't invent the Internet, a few people working on Defense projects did. You (and I) could never have existed and the Internet would still be here, so don't act like you have ownership of it simply because you live within specific man-made borders.

  117. UN never said Iraq had no WMD ... by AHumbleOpinion · · Score: 1

    Weapons of mass destruction inspections? What do you know,they were right!

    The UN never said Iraq had no WMD, the were not "right". Up to the beginning of the war they were saying we don't know and need more time to work, please let us continue. Your portrayal is quite distorted and revisionist.

    1. Re:UN never said Iraq had no WMD ... by larkost · · Score: 2, Informative

      They were saying: "there is no evidence of WMD, give us time to prove that there is nothing". In contrast the Bush administration said that they had "compelling evidence" (sometimes using the word "proof") that they could not share for security reasons.

      Turns out they had no evidence, let alone proof, because there was no weapons of mass-destruction program worth mentioning in Iraq. Oh... and the only ones who were saying that there was were the ex-Iraqis who everyone but the Bush administration had already written off as either delusional or having too much of an agenda to trust.

    2. Re:UN never said Iraq had no WMD ... by AHumbleOpinion · · Score: 1

      They were saying: "there is no evidence of WMD, give us time to prove that there is nothing". In contrast the Bush administration said that they had "compelling evidence" (sometimes using the word "proof") that they could not share for security reasons. Turns out they had no evidence, let alone proof, because there was no weapons of mass-destruction program worth mentioning in Iraq. Oh... and the only ones who were saying that there was were the ex-Iraqis who everyone but the Bush administration had already written off as either delusional or having too much of an agenda to trust.

      The above is erroneous. The UN said Saddam had WMD at the end of the Gulf War. Saddam agreed to get rid of it in the Gulf War cease fire. He failed to do so under UN supervision and effectively told everyone to "take his word for it" that it was gone. It was not only the US that said he still had WMD. The British, the Russians, the Germans, the Egytians, etc, all said that he still had it. Don't let an anti-war agenda revise history. Believing that Sadaam still had WMD was a very reasonable and prudent belief. Believing that there was an immenent danger and invasion was warranted right now is a separate debate.

    3. Re:UN never said Iraq had no WMD ... by MCraigW · · Score: 1

      Did the Kurds have evidence?

    4. Re:UN never said Iraq had no WMD ... by larkost · · Score: 1

      I don't know about Russian Intelligence (just what the politicians were saying, which was anything but what the Bush administration was saying). But the German press was full of the reports from German intelligence, which was that there was nothing there.

      You are correct that Iraq did not document the destruction of its Weapons of Mass destruction. But we went to war on the promise by the Bush administration that Iraq was actively in the process of building up an arsenal that could find its way into Al Qaeda hands.

      We now know for facts that there were no real connections between Al Queda (at least less connection than currently exists with the Saudi government), and that there was not only no real program to make new weapons, but that there was effectively no useable WMD in the country. So how many people have died for what?

    5. Re:UN never said Iraq had no WMD ... by PedanticSpellingTrol · · Score: 1

      Indeed, if you look at the Charlie Rose interview on the Bowling For Columbine DVD, MICHAEL MOORE said Saddam had WMD's.

    6. Re:UN never said Iraq had no WMD ... by Archangel_Azazel · · Score: 1

      Sadly, this is probably going to get shot down because I've only read about these things offline and don't have handy references for all to see. I'm attaching my name on here simply because I won't hide behind AC.

      On the subject of the whole Kurdish incident. Yep, as far as I can tell, he did it. Also, as far as I can tell, we sold him the equipment and processes and training to be able to manufacture those chemicals.

      Here's a salt shaker. Take a grain and pass it around.

      --
      Your mind is like a parachute. It works best when it's been opened.
    7. Re:UN never said Iraq had no WMD ... by AHumbleOpinion · · Score: 2, Informative

      But the German press was full of the reports from German intelligence, which was that there was nothing there.

      That is not my recollection. I think people are confusing what was said by politicians and by spooks, and what was said before and after the issue of invasion was brought up. A quick google found something that sounds familiar:

      "I mean, an alternative view is one presented by people like Christopher Heachins [spelled phonetically], the journalist who says: look, if you look at Germany, where the political leaders were against the war, German intelligence was still producing these alarming reports about Saddam Hussein being a moments work away from producing a nuke, for instance. You can't blame that on, you know, serving up the leaders what they want."
      Former weapons inspector, Scott Ritter
      ABC Sydney : Broadcast : 02/05/04

      http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article56 21.htm

      But we went to war on the promise by the Bush administration that Iraq was actively in the process of building up an arsenal that could find its way into Al Qaeda hands. We now know for facts that there were no real connections between Al Queda ...

      These two statements are not contradictory. The fact that Sadaam would not build nukes for Al Qaeda does not mean his nukes would not fall in their hands. The Soviets did not build nukes for them but we are certainly concerned Soviet nukes may be or fall into their hands.

      So how many people have died for what?

      No one will know for another 20 to 30 years whether the aggressive US policy against terrorists and their supporters, of which Sadaam was - just not the Al Qaeda faction, was a good idea or bad. It's hard to understand a war when you are in the middle of it. It often takes years and sometimes decades to sift through the evidence and see how things turned out, for good or ill. President Lincoln was merciless criticized during the American Civil War.

    8. Re:UN never said Iraq had no WMD ... by coopex · · Score: 1

      Iraq was supposed to allow weapons inspectors to verify it had none, as per the UN decision. Instead of doing this, they played games like capracious access to facilities, and taking inspectors to the wrong facilities. That's pretty strong evidence that Iraq was doing something that it didn't want weapons inspectors to know about. I wonder what they could have been doing?

      --
      The road to hell is paved with good intentions.
  118. Global Use != Global Ownership by The+Monster · · Score: 3, Insightful
    The Internet is now a global network, whether you Americans like it or not
    a global network with root DNS servers under the control of USGOV. I think it's great that we let the rest of the world connect to our Internet and all, but that doesn't confer ownership.
    The comedy 'the Internet is ours' replies are killing me!
    Nobody seriously suggests that I 'own' Comedy Central because I watch South Park and The Daily Show. It remains Viacom's property.

    If the rest of the world doesn't want to be a part of our DNS, they can set up their own. But we already have ccTLDs that expressly give such authority to governments. What do you want for nothing, a rubber biscuit?

    --

    [100% ISO 646 Compliant]
    SVM, ERGO MONSTRO.

    1. Re:Global Use != Global Ownership by Darkman,+Walkin+Dude · · Score: 1

      What do you want for nothing

      Err, so where does my domain name registration fee go again?

    2. Re:Global Use != Global Ownership by The+Monster · · Score: 1
      where does my domain name registration fee go again?
      To the registrar. Ultimately, some of it goes to pay for the TLD DNS servers, and a few cents might actually pay for the DNS root servers.
      --

      [100% ISO 646 Compliant]
      SVM, ERGO MONSTRO.

    3. Re:Global Use != Global Ownership by Darkman,+Walkin+Dude · · Score: 1

      So that would make it not, in fact, free.

  119. NPR Slave by sigloiv · · Score: 0, Troll
    Since you wanted to bring up Iraq, just because the UN was mentioned, I'll tell you this: You are seriously lying.

    * There is still no proof that the weapons of mass destruction weren't moved. In fact, there is a whole lot of proof that says they were. Also, chemical agents (such as Sarin nerve gas and mustard gas) were found in Iraq. Read this.

    * It looks like you just reworded "the U.S. went to Iraq for oil." B.S. If they went there for oil, why am I still paying outrageous prices for gas?

    Personally, I think the latest issues far outweigh international agencies that try to curb world hunger, but instead just delay it for very isolated areas across the globe. In other words, they screwed up recently, and I don't trust with the internet.

    --
    Software is like sex. It's better when it's free. -Linus Torvalds
    1. Re:NPR Slave by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seriously, where do these people get their news? More people need to read foxnews for the truth and stay away from special interest sources such as public broadcasting. I mean, clearly foxnews is not biased media - they say "fair and balanced" all the time!

    2. Re:NPR Slave by Phisbut · · Score: 1
      It looks like you just reworded "the U.S. went to Iraq for oil." B.S. If they went there for oil, why am I still paying outrageous prices for gas?

      I will assume that you are living in the US. What's the price for a gallon of gas in the US? $2.29 a gallon according to Gas Price Watch.

      Ever wondered how much people all around the world pay for their gas? How about you take a look. And that doesn't even list Canada, which is so close to the U.S., yet we pay about $3.14 (USD) per gallon. Wanna try moving to Europe where the gallon costs on average more than 4 bucks, and in many cases more than 5 bucks?

      Quit your whining, you are getting your gas at a very low price.

      --
      After 3 days without programming, life becomes meaningless
      - The Tao of Programming
    3. Re:NPR Slave by Armadni+General · · Score: 1

      The world prices are wholly irrelevant to the GP's argument. The point is, before the war we were paying $1 to $1.50 or so, and now, we're paying $2.50. Don't pull this "starving children around the world" act.

    4. Re:NPR Slave by Rei · · Score: 2, Informative


      There is still no proof that the weapons of mass destruction weren't moved

      Except for everything such as ardently pro-war hawk (formerly uberconvinced that Iraq had WMDs) David Kay's inspection report. Except for the fact that there was no infrastructure for any sort of relevant production in the entire country, and the agents degrade.

      Read Kay's report. You'll notice no mention of the "sarin" and "mustard gas" shell finds. Why? Because, like the other several dozen false positives in initial testing, this report was later proven false. If this had been real sarin, the troops would have had a lot more than the "nausea" that they had.

      Of course, it was widely known in the rest of the world (not America) that there were no WMDs in Iraq before the invasion. Why? Because the rest of the world read about Hussein Kamel in their newspapers, actually heard the inspectors refer to the US intelligence on the subject as "**** after **** after ****" and about their chicken coop of mass destruction t-shirts (a reference to the fact that the US kept sending them to inspect Iraqi chicken coops that they mistakenly thought were missile silos), etc. They got to read *why* the aluminium tube claims pushed by the US were so preposterous (one of the reason why the US's motives came so strongly into doubt), the "Uranium from Nigeria" issue blew up in Europe when it was first pushed, etc.

      It was all nonsense being pushed by groups like the INC and their felon head so that they could (successfully) gain power in postwar Iraq. Some of the claims were so ridiculous I can't imagine people who knew what they were talking about keeping a straight face (like the "atomic bomb already tested under a dry lake" one - that cracked me up, as the US heavily monitors for EMP and fallout products of nuclear blasts in suspect nations)

      It looks like you just reworded "the U.S. went to Iraq for oil."

      I did no such thing. That's an idiotic line of argument; oil companies can only produce effectively in stable areas, there is evidence that Saddam offered the US lucrative contracts (among other things) to not invade, and it was the former CEO of the oil company where my father is a president who worked to stop the CPA from selling off Iraqi oil assets.

      The US went to Iraq because Bush believed what he believed and wasn't going to let facts get in his way.

      --
      "/etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit is a gimp plugin and must be run by the gimp in order to be used."
    5. Re:NPR Slave by Just+Another+Poster · · Score: 1
      And that doesn't even list Canada, which is so close to the U.S., yet we pay about $3.14 (USD) per gallon. Wanna try moving to Europe where the gallon costs on average more than 4 bucks, and in many cases more than 5 bucks?

      Gasoline prices are artificially inflated in Europe due to punitive taxation levied on it by the social engineers for the purpose of, among other things, herding people onto mass transit systems where they can be blown up by the Muslim extremists they've given refugee status to.

    6. Re:NPR Slave by m50d · · Score: 1
      There is still no proof that the weapons of mass destruction weren't moved.

      That wasn't what the weapons inspectors said. They said they haven't found any. They said they wanted more time. Your government and mine said that they *knew* there were WMD, my prime minister even said they knew they could be launched in 45 minutes. They have admitted that they did not know, and that they are not certain there are WMDs. Looks like the UN's the one in the right there.

      It looks like you just reworded "the U.S. went to Iraq for oil." B.S. If they went there for oil, why am I still paying outrageous prices for gas?

      Because the corporations can make you pay that much. It wasn't about cheaper oil for american individuals, it was about bigger profits for american companies.

      --
      I am trolling
    7. Re:NPR Slave by mr100percent · · Score: 1

      Cheney said he knew "exactly" where the WMDs were. If he knew, why didn't he have satellites monitor the sites? Hard to miss a convoy of trucks moving tons of material now, isn't it? If there were WMDs, then the Bush administration and the military is grossly incompetent and should be fired for letting them get away.

      Your link is bogus, old news. Yes, a shell with traces was exploded. It's most likely an old shell from the Iran-Iraq war or first Gulf war. The wreckage of tanks are still around, it's not that hard to pick up. Someone took the scrap and built an IED around it. If they knew it had 'traces' of Sarin, wouldn't they put it to better use rather than a shell casing that blew away all the gas in the open wind? That article and incident dates from over a year ago. If there were more chemical agents, how come no more were found? The insurgents are itching to fight, are you going to tell me they are just sitting on the chance to use chemical gas if they had any? I mean, all their opportunities like the election are past by now.

      As for point 2, they're not related in that manner. One of the goals was to stabilize the oil industry and ensure less dependance on Saudi Arabia. However, nobody in the administration was counting on the security failures. The oil fields are left relatively insecure, and it's taking years longer than expected to stabilize the oil industry and harden it from attacks. Oil was A factor, but the plan was botched.

    8. Re:NPR Slave by spun · · Score: 2, Insightful

      * It looks like you just reworded "the U.S. went to Iraq for oil." B.S. If they went there for oil, why am I still paying outrageous prices for gas?

      Many people make this point, indicating that they don't understand what really happened. The US didn't go to Iraq so that you could have cheap oil. It went so that a few greedy bastards could have more control over the oil supply and profit off it even more than they are. Why shoul they care if you have cheap oil? They also went to profit off the war as they never have been able to before, what with all the no bid contracts and military outsourcing of basic services.

      Even if the weapons were there and were moved, which is unlikely, whatever the Republican mouthpieces at Faux News say, you have to admit that before we went, we knew where they were, they were contained in an area far away with little chance of ever being used against us. Now, according to your logic, all we have done by going there is lose track of them. Great!

      You are seriously brainwashed by the right wing media. Yeah, you heard me. The rich own the media, they are right wing, therefore, the media is right wing. No matter how many times you and people like you want to lie about the 'left wing media' there's no such thing. Just more propaganda from the rich, trying to brainwash fools like you into thinking that their interests are your interests so you spread their propaganda, fight their wars, and basically do what you are told so they can keep on profitting off of you. Chump.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    9. Re:NPR Slave by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha, you just said "Fox" and "legitimate" in the same sentence.

    10. Re:NPR Slave by Johnny5000 · · Score: 1

      The first line of the article in your link is:
      "Bush administration officials told Fox News that mustard gas (search) was also recently discovered."

      Oh, the Bush administration officials said it was true? Please excuse me as I piss myself laughing.

      --
      The libertarian solution to the failures of capitalism is to apply more capitalism til the failures are fixed.
    11. Re:NPR Slave by eericson · · Score: 1

      Yes, but the bulk of the cost for Fuel in Europe is taxes (52% in the UK if I remember correctly)

      --
      The evil monkey commands you to dance.
    12. Re:NPR Slave by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You are seriously brainwashed by the right wing media.

      Says the brainwashed liberal lackey. I supposed you belive everything that cBS prints and reports? They'll say anything negative about Bush that comes to what little mind they have regardless of the truth.

    13. Re:NPR Slave by Archangel_Azazel · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Please tell me you did not just link to FoxNews as a legitimate news source. I know that lots of them aren't exactly perfect, but dear god man... FoxNews??!! Words cannot express....

      Why not just link directly to the source??
      http://www.newamericancentury.org/

      My 2c.

      --
      Your mind is like a parachute. It works best when it's been opened.
    14. Re:NPR Slave by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Too funny! :D

    15. Re:NPR Slave by jimi+the+hippie · · Score: 1

      Rich != (Conservative || right-wing)

    16. Re:NPR Slave by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In all of those cases, taxes caused those prices. At least the Americans' government realizes the necessity for travel in cars, considering how shitty their public transportation is.

    17. Re:NPR Slave by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I do not depend on CBS for news, so I can't comment on its validity. That being said, be careful not to assume that a person/media outlet who criticizes the presi-dunce is automatically a liberal. Afterall, there were plenty of moderates/lefties deriding Clinton for his transgressions.

    18. Re:NPR Slave by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cool. So what you're really saying is the Associated Press is not a legitimate news source. Extending that line of thought means that CNN is also not a legitimate news source and other organization that uses the AP for information. Granted, I have been suspicious of AP for some time but I'm glad to hear someone confirm it.

    19. Re:NPR Slave by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      ...herding people onto mass transit systems where they can be blown up by the Muslim extremists they've given refugee status to.

      As opposed to them being stuck in permanent 24/7 gridlock with smog from idling engines so dense that no Muslim terrorists need to bother, since people will drop like flies, coughing their lungs out, all around anyhow. Sooo glad that you identified the root cause of terrorism. Why, as soon as the public transport is abolished, everyone given an SUV and all immigrants taken back and shot, Europe will return to its natural, pure, safe, Arian state, no?

  120. Who? by ShoobieRat · · Score: 1

    Okay, so if we agree that the Internet should have some moderation and force to keep it safe/productive/moving/etc, and we don't want the US to have domain over that (which I agree with to a degree)...who should that moderator be? We'd want someone unbiased and universal, and it would have to be someone with the ability to provide not only the logistical manpower and financial backing, but the power to do the footwork (ie - raids/busts/etc).

    Although I haven't been a UN supporter for a number of years, I'm having a hard time thinking of another non-government body that can do so. If anyone's got any better ideas, please lay them out.

  121. Token control by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I really think it's more token control in the end. Nothing much should or would be changed - just greater world cooperation between the nations of the world.

    Despite the UN's poor track record, I don't think the internet could be tampered with any more than it is. I've heard comments about China. The Chinese are abusing the internet just fine, and they don't even control it. I don't see how that could get worse if they STILL didn't control it. China and the U.S are only two member of the UN. The UN is more than balanced against these 2 nations by other more democratic nations. Also the internet its not a WMD (directly!). Don't panic!

    SO, I really think it's more a token affiliation. The internet should not be controlled by any one country. WWW is not U.SWW.

    How would you feel if Hungary controlled color TV all around the world. It was a Hungarian who invented it. Why can't American politicians get their controlling claws away from the internet. Right now, its the only really free medium. How free it still is or will be I have no idea.. It doesn't REALLY belong to amyone. It is afterall the WWW.

    1. Re:Token control by delong · · Score: 1

      The UN is more than balanced against these 2 nations by other more democratic nations

      The Security Council does not control UN agencies, the General Assembly handles such administrative decisions. And the dictatorships and failed states outnumber democracies in the General Assembly by a considerable number. The General Assembly is the 3rd World Dictator Club.

    2. Re:Token control by sillybilly · · Score: 1

      Yep. This is a core issue with voting - majority opresses minority. One way to become a majority, for the US at least, would be to split into 50 states, each represented separately. GDP as a measure to voting weight isn't fair either. But if you consider it really, it's fair, because even though the US is a single voter, everyone else sucks up to it for cash, so GDP has quite an effect in that picture. Dare you vote against the US?
      Ultimately any forum where you throw world problems openly on the table still comes down to human beings, elders of the tribe, coming together, working together. I for one love to see the UN, where in a room full of 500 "educated" people you can make speeches, though I don't see enough feedback and rebuttals, it should be livened up, with pro and contra speeches to anything, just like in a courtroom. There are always 2 sides to any story, and the jury, the 500 people, need to hear them. If something is horribly wrong with a speech, you should hear roars. However there were no such roars when Collin Powell made his speeches, partly because nobody really knew the truth, and partly because nobody wants to openly roar against the US, because the US has money, and you'd rather have the US as a buddy, than an outright foe.
      So your argument is technically true, that the US gets outnumbered in voting, but it's wrong about its core message, that it's completely unfair, because there is a balancing effect going on here.
      Having the UN beats not having a forum at all, and I don't think the G8 makes a good replacement, because there is no sense of checks and balances there, just power running rampant completely uncontrolled. And doing concerts, and lowballing sweet messages like end poverty in Africa, can only fool people for so long. The G8 is nothing more than a push back toward colonial powers. Perhaps a globally elected body, without being representatives of their own nations, would work better - kind of like jury selection, you get to work on topics where your personal biases cannot enter into the picture. But even with what we have now, when two parties are at disagreement, out of the 500 in the UN, at least you have 498 people looking at the issue at hand with a lot less bias, even though they form these minigangs and coherent packs pushing mini-agendas.

      Extra: Maybe 500 is too many people, and ganging up becomes pronounced - maybe you need 100, or 50, or at least many layers of leadership, one global president, like Kofi Annan, 12 supreme court judges, 29 something else, 55 something else, 200, 500, 1000. The house full of 1000 should be the least noisy, where issues are presented, and laid down for record, from both sides. Then there is a 1 week or 4 week digestion period, then it passes up to the 200's and higher. The 500 would compete directly with the 1000 house, and try to do a better job. The 1/12/29/55/200 should all have veto power over each other, neither having full authority over the rest. Would it be a mess? You bet!

  122. Start your own root servers? by Gordonjcp · · Score: 1
    Don't forget that there is nothing stopping you from running your own DNS. If you set one up, you can declare it the root server.


    Of course this means that anyone wishing to use it will need to adjust what their stuff uses for its DNS, but that isn't necessarily a problem. You could actually cut ICANN right out of the loop by setting your root servers to be something else entirely.

  123. World Bank by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

    "The World Bank Group is a group of five international organizations responsible for providing finance to countries for purposes of development and poverty reduction, and for encouraging and safeguarding international investment. The group and its affiliates are headquartered in Washington, D.C.."

    "Technically the World Bank is part of the United Nations system, but its governance structure is different: each institution in the World Bank Group is owned by its member governments, which subscribe to its basic share capital, with votes proportional to shareholding. Membership gives certain voting rights that are the same for all countries but there are also additional votes which depend on financial contributions to the organisation."

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Bank

    So it's not really the UN.

    When I'm dogging the UN, and I do often, based on how it's fouled up International Peacekeeping and International Relations.

    Bosnia, Sudan, Congo/Katanga, Rwanda to name four places done wrong by the UN. Inclusion on the United Nations Commission on Human Rights of nations, such as Sudan, Cuba and Libya, which demonstrably have abysmal records on human rights, and also Libya's chairmanship of this Commission is idiotic at the least.

    1. Re:World Bank by Rei · · Score: 1

      Technicallyl the World Bank is part of the United Nations system, but its governance structure is different

      vs.

      like the UN has run or otherwise been deeply involved in

      What's the problem with what I stated, again?

      --
      "/etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit is a gimp plugin and must be run by the gimp in order to be used."
  124. Slashdot vs the UN by Stalyn · · Score: 1

    It's funny when an American agenda is backed by the UN it is a "recognized body of the international community" but when it goes against American interests it becomes a "corrupt organization with no right to govern". It's nice to see American unilateralism is alive and well on Slashdot.

    --
    The best education consists in immunizing people against systematic attempts at education. - Paul Feyerabend
    1. Re:Slashdot vs the UN by cpghost · · Score: 1

      It's nice to see American unilateralism is alive and well on Slashdot.

      A lot of countries, not just the US, are against U.N. governence of the Internet. Most of (if not all) Western Europe, Japan, and countries with a high density of nodes are against the UN intervening here. It's the countries with extremely low IP density that are most vocal to put the U.N. in charge.

      --
      cpghost at Cordula's Web.
  125. Re:Ignore their stated goals. They want censorship by WarmNoodles · · Score: 1

    Kofies Anon goal is obvious, a distraction from oll for food and faster uploads of porn for the UN strippers.

  126. UN only good at handing out food and medicine by AHumbleOpinion · · Score: 1

    The UN is only "good" at handing out food and medicine, not with managing contention and conflict. The later is more relevant to managing the net. How many times does the UN fail to stop horrendous crimes, even when UN peace keepers are on the scene. The good work is done by the doctor and others specidialists working, sometimes indirectly, for the UN. Frankly if they were working for Doctors without Borders or other organizations they would do just as much good work, perhaps better. These doctors and specialists are responsible for the success not the UN bureaucrats you want to hand the net to.

    1. Re:UN only good at handing out food and medicine by jjp5421 · · Score: 1

      I think they are good at bashing the U.S. (while taking lots of cash from us, and some great property in NY, NY).

  127. Two things you can bet on... by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 1
    Two things you can bet on:

    One: If the UN gains the ability to tax domain name holders, you can bet that the tax will not be uniform. They will attempt to "punish" the rich while rewarding the perceived "worthy" with vastly different tax rates.

    Two: Much of the money raised will never leave the UN and its employees. Oil-for-food-2 anyone?

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
  128. Re:Great. What next? by over_exposed · · Score: 1

    Exactly what I was thinking.. Wasn't it our tax dollars funding research that led to the modern Internet? Doesn't that kinda mean... I dunno, that it's ours?

    --
    "The object of war is not to die for your country, but to make the other bastard die for his." - Patton
  129. Re:Great. What next? by Blapto · · Score: 1, Insightful
    Are you on something?
    The internet is a group of all the different national and slightly larger scale networks of the 70s and early 80s. It was mainly US inventors who developed TCP/IP, ethernet, etc. but the way you're talking it's a safe assumption you don't share the same intelligence as them, and can't really claim to be associated to them simply because you live in the same country by some random chance.

    Also, the UN is the United Nations. You're probably thinking of the EU, the European Union. The difference is the US actually owns the GPS system, whereas nobody owns the internet, as it's an international cooperation project. Besides, the rest of the world is developing Galileo, a GPS-like system. (Which, BTW, the USAF have threatened to blow up if the rest of the world doesn't comply with what the US wants them to do with it.)

  130. First task by TummyX · · Score: 1


    the U.N. will make a bid for control of such governing functions as assigning TLDs and IPs


    Eliminating ".il" and creating ".pa"

    1. Re:First task by vidarh · · Score: 1
      I assume that's supposed to refer to Palestine? You really haven't been following things, have you? ".ps" was assigned to Palestine in March 2000 by IANA. No need for the UN for that.

      As for eliminating ".il" that wouldn't fly any more than China trying to eliminate ".tw" - in fact, the ISO 3166-1 country code list that is used as one of the main sources for deciding on cc tld's is mostly based on what countries and territories are recognised by the UN for administrative purposes, so why you think the UN would act differently for TLD's than what their other organisations do is beyond me.

  131. BS by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 1
    I really think it's more token control in the end. Nothing much should or would be changed - just greater world cooperation between the nations of the world.

    What a bunch of crap. So basically, and like usual, the small countries want to feel important and play Student Council to inflate their egos while not actually accomplishing anything. Too bad. The internet works fine, it's decentralized, it doesn't need to be centralized, and doing so would defeat the entire point of the internet.

    The internet should not be controlled by any one country. WWW is not U.SWW.

    www != internet.

  132. Screw "universal access" by csoto · · Score: 1

    People in Nigeria need to learn to feed themselves, before they need instant messaging or blogging.

    Think I'm being elitist? Nope. I'm just lucky to have been born in the USA, where food and farm labour is abundant.

    --
    There exists no way of exchanging information without making judgments. --Bene Gesserit Axiom
  133. Think it through... by going_the_2Rpi_way · · Score: 1

    Since the US has a permanent veto, this would never happen against the will of the administration.

    If it's going to happen anyway (i.e. they don't intend to veto) and would be a real competitor, wouldn't the administration force a revisit the issue and use the existing influence/infrastructure of the ICANN rather than risk losing decision making abilities over these aspects of the Internet?

    Maybe they'll set up an international ICANN council where the US has a permanent veto?

  134. If I were elected president of the US.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The first thing I would do would be to cut any and all funding to the UN.

    The population of the United States of America is approximately five percent of the world's six billion people. Yet, whenever there is a catastrophe anywhere in the world, which nation always contributes more than any other, both from public and from private funds?

    The UN has outlived it's usefullness, they need to either reform or just go away.

  135. You've got to love the countries cited by indytx · · Score: 1
    The UN has a great track record for choosing which countries are on different commissions. Take, for instance, the UN Commission on Human Rights. It includes such notable standouts as China and Cuba. Now, China, Syria, and Ghana are cited by the article. This is absurd . . . unless you're China. What better way to keep your masses oppressed and diligently working than to regulate the internet for the entire world.

    We wouldn't want to mess up "China, Inc." with ideas about freedom, democracy, or faith.

    --
    Make love, not reality television.
  136. Fsck that! by kludge99 · · Score: 1

    The American tax dollar invented the internet and led to it's current worldwide deployment. Why would any red-blooded tax-paying American want to just give away it's oversight to a third party? Can anyone say NWO ?

    flames gladly accepted.

  137. The internet should govern itself by i_ate_god · · Score: 1

    Perhaps this is a but of a futurist idea, but why can't the internet have its own government?

    I mean think about it, a lot of the online community can be divided into two groups, locals and tourists. The locals have their own culture of sorts that transcends borders. The locals gather into almost self governing communities (slashdot, fark, SA forums, IRC channels) where ideas and information is shared that could better the community, or the over all internet country.

    Root servers world wide could be moved into embassies for the internet and thus protected from the laws of their respective countries and be the only physical locations of this new country. Businesses that operate solely on the internet wouldn't pay taxes to the internet since thats what paying for an internet connection does.

    Every local on the internet would have dual citizenship of course.

    Now, this wouldn't be feasible because of infrastructure I think. Major corporations owning the actuall wires that delivery packets from point a to point b and so forth. But why couldn't that be replaced with a solely wireless network? Either that, or the infrastructure becomes property of the internet country.

    Another good idea about this is that in order to become a citizen of the internet, you'd have to pass a skill testing exam. Nothing too complex, but something that would at least judge your ability to protect yourself againt most forms of maliciousness that exist on the internet, like protecting yourself against spam, how to install a firewall and an anti virus, what to look out for in emails to avoid running the latest virus attachment, ect. In otherwords, it wouldn't be a network certification or MCSE or anything like that. You don't even have to know how to make a website to be an internet citizen, just be able to protect yourself, which isn't all that hard nowadays anyways.

    Citizens would be able to vote on their preferred leaders, and I guess it would be a series a votes to determine who should actually be in control of the internet. Infact, we could even vote in a group of people to run the internet. And I think it would also be feasible to run an almost true democracy, and be able to vote on most major issues regarding this great country.

    Meh, superficially, it seems like a great idea. Though I'm sure there are many reasons why it can't happen (other than world governments not letting it happen).

    --
    I'm god, but it's a bit of a drag really...
    1. Re:The internet should govern itself by J053 · · Score: 1
      I mean think about it, a lot of the online community can be divided into two groups, locals and tourists. The locals have their own culture of sorts that transcends borders. The locals gather into almost self governing communities (slashdot, fark, SA forums, IRC channels) where ideas and information is shared that could better the community, or the over all internet country.

      Repeat after me: The WWW is NOT the Internet!

      Root servers world wide could be moved into embassies for the internet and thus protected from the laws of their respective countries and be the only physical locations of this new country. Businesses that operate solely on the internet wouldn't pay taxes to the internet since thats what paying for an internet connection does.

      Do you have any idea how DNS works? Take a look at the list of root servers sometime - they are all run - for free- as a public service by various organizations in the US and abroad. And WTF are "embassies for the internet"?

      Now, this wouldn't be feasible because of infrastructure I think. Major corporations owning the actuall wires that delivery packets from point a to point b and so forth. But why couldn't that be replaced with a solely wireless network? Either that, or the infrastructure becomes property of the internet country.

      Right. I'm sure AT&T, BT, Sprint, and all the national PTTs will happily give up control of their infrastructure.

      Another good idea about this is that in order to become a citizen of the internet, you'd have to pass a skill testing exam. Nothing too complex, but something that would at least judge your ability to protect yourself againt most forms of maliciousness that exist on the internet, like protecting yourself against spam, how to install a firewall and an anti virus, what to look out for in emails to avoid running the latest virus attachment, ect. In otherwords, it wouldn't be a network certification or MCSE or anything like that. You don't even have to know how to make a website to be an internet citizen, just be able to protect yourself, which isn't all that hard nowadays anyways.

      Oh, yeah - make everyone take a test before getting online. Just how do you do this? If I have a net connection, how do you make my wife take a test before getting online? What do you do - build this "Internet Test" into every OS on every computer? Sure.

      I'm sorry, but this has to be the most brain-dead steaming pile of crap I've seen in a long time.

    2. Re:The internet should govern itself by i_ate_god · · Score: 1

      repeat after me, IRC is not WWW. Infact, the two have nothing to do with each other. the concept of having an "internet license" is not far fetched. Also, did I say "make a test before someone goes online"? no, I did not. I suggest you reread what I wrote before making stupid comments. the idea of corporations giving up their control is far fetched, but not impossible, and they could be forced to do it. You are just close minded, people like you hinder progress.

      --
      I'm god, but it's a bit of a drag really...
    3. Re:The internet should govern itself by J053 · · Score: 1
      repeat after me, IRC is not WWW. Infact, the two have nothing to do with each other.

      Who said anything about IRC?

      Also, did I say "make a test before someone goes online"? no, I did not.

      These were not your words? "Another good idea about this is that in order to become a citizen of the internet, you'd have to pass a skill testing exam."

      the idea of corporations giving up their control is far fetched, but not impossible, and they could be forced to do it.

      Who is going to force them? It would have to be national legislatures, and if you seriously think the US Congress, for example, is going to force the major US telecom companies to divest themselves of their assets, you are deluded.

      ... people like you hinder progress.

      I simply fail to see how putting an ineffectual organization like the UN in charge of the Internet (whatever that means) can, in any way, be seen to be "progress".

    4. Re:The internet should govern itself by i_ate_god · · Score: 1

      I said something about IRC. I used it as an example. Of course, you don't read so you wouldn't know. You just want to troll.

      These were not your words? "Another good idea about this is that in order to become a citizen of the internet, you'd have to pass a skill testing exam."

      Yes, in order to become a citizen, in otherwords, have certain rights and privileges that simple tourists (who do not need to be tested) would have, including eligibility to vote on decicions that affect the internet as a whole. But again, you don't read what I say so why bother replying? Oh wait, thats right, TO TROLL.

      Who is going to force them? It would have to be national legislatures, and if you seriously think the US Congress, for example, is going to force the major US telecom companies to divest themselves of their assets, you are deluded.

      Wierder things have happened before. It just takes the right minds and the right leaders to get the job done.

      I simply fail to see how putting an ineffectual organization like the UN in charge of the Internet (whatever that means) can, in any way, be seen to be "progress".

      I simply fail to see how this has anything to do with what I suggested. Instead of commenting on things you don't read, just shut up. It makes life easier that way.

      --
      I'm god, but it's a bit of a drag really...
    5. Re:The internet should govern itself by J053 · · Score: 1
      So, in your little world, any criticism of your brilliant ideas must be a troll, because no rational person could possibly fail to be awed by your genius? Sorry, but before you grow up and move out of your parents' house, you should probably grow a bit thicker skin.

      I was just pointing out that in the real world, if you are presenting a proposed solution to a perceived problem, that you have to be prepared to show how it can work, not just squeeze out a little brain-fart and expect everyone to applaud. Even if your ideas were workable, which they are not for reasons I've already stated, they would, if implemented, in so many different ways, suck.

      Since you don't seem able to engage in a civil discussion of the merits of your proposal, I don't have any more time to waste with you. Buh-bye.

    6. Re:The internet should govern itself by i_ate_god · · Score: 1

      your critisisms are invalid because they don't critize the points I made. Reading a few words and assuming the rest is not a good means of bring critical. Thus, you are a troll, and a foolish one at that.

      --
      I'm god, but it's a bit of a drag really...
  138. We get signal.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All your IPs are belong to us...

  139. Here are the new TLDs: by gelfling · · Score: 1

    .fam: famine .bmb: bomb .slv: slavery .shr: Sharia .ter: terrorism .plo: kill the Jews .crp: corruption .isf: islamofascism .ict: inaction .brb: bribery .cya: cover your (own) ass .mgb: Mugabe

  140. An interesting take by kaalamaadan · · Score: 1

    A legal expert in India once made the remark that the internet is like the high seas: quite appropriately so, IMHO.

  141. The UN is the closest thing we have to a global .. by jatfq · · Score: 1

    Many seem to be arguing here that 1) the internet is global, and 2) the UN is the closest thing we have to a global representative body, therefore 3) they should control the internet. So many things wrong with that it is hard to know where to start. To accept that argument one must ultimately accept the UN as the de facto world government. I am certainly not ready to do that. To accept that argument is to choose to believe that the Chinese ambassador to the UN truly represents the interests of the Chinese people. I am certainly not ready to accept that. Ditto for Saudi Arabia, Syria, Sudan and any number of other nations. To accept that argument is to submit to the inevitable end of the internet as we know it, because the temptation to try and solve other world problems by imposing taxes, fees, restrictions, etc. on the internet infrastructure will be more than the typical UN representative or beauracrat can bear. They will not be mere administrators of the internet they will be more akin to overlords. On the plus side of the ledger, at least the UN peacekeepers could make their kiddie pr0n available more easily to their bosses who don't get out into the field.

  142. Fascist Americans by bhima · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    Well, I suppose this is the article where all the hyper-nationalistic americans fascists come out of the closet. I can't say I'm really surprised given then state and mood of america these days but it is disappointing. When I first moved to the US it was a great place but over the years it has really changed and now it seems that the only difference between al-Qaida and the americans is that the americans speak English.

    I'm glad I moved and if you are not a anglo christian reconstructionist you should move too.

    The fact is that all of humanity needs to civilize the world and this will not be accomplished free of charge. I live in comfortable neighborhood (outside of the US) and I pay to keep it that way... because I want to live in a nice place. If globalization has taught anything it is that all of humanity is limited by the poverty and suffering of the masses...It is a sort of least common denominator. Honestly I'd like to live in a world without both terrorism and fascism. Maybe the americans can't see it but the rest of the world can, america is becoming exactly what they fight against.

    --
    Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.
    1. Re:Fascist Americans by brian6string · · Score: 1

      First you should look up the definition of fascism and you'll find it cannot possibly be applied to America or Americans.

      Secondly, I find it quite hypocritical that you pour your personal resources into your "nice neighborhood," while at the same time decrying poverty and suffering of the masses. Since you seem to have a heart for to see this suffering, you should become a peace corp worker, or better yet, an anglo-christian missionary.

    2. Re:Fascist Americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the only difference between al-Qaida and the americans is that the americans speak English ... america is becoming exactly what they fight against



      1. Pack everything you own right now and leave this country.
      2. Seek psychiatric help in your new country.

    3. Re:Fascist Americans by bhima · · Score: 1

      Actually I did look up the definition of fascism and found that it defined current america. I looked into the peace corp years ago and found that they weren't really helping and while I am anglo I am not a christian so the whole missionary thing isn't really appealing.

      --
      Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.
    4. Re:Fascist Americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oh... and when you go, please take a boat, not a plane. thanks. bye

    5. Re:Fascist Americans by bhima · · Score: 1
      Sorry, I missed the 2nd part of your comment...

      We've sort missed ideas so let me clarify: One of the main points of society is that if you want to enjoy the better aspects of it you must contribute to it. I pay my taxes (which are slightly higher than taxes in the US) and in turn enjoy the positive aspects of the society I live in. You could probably bury Africa a meter deep in greenbacks and not significantly change to core problems that they experience because lack of money is not the root of their problems. So whether or not I give money to unwashed masses isn't really the issue. I guess, at this point, I should come out and say that I don't believe that donating money is the right thing to do so I only donate time to my charity of choice.

      --
      Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.
    6. Re:Fascist Americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1 often capitalized : a political philosophy, movement, or regime (as that of the Fascisti) that exalts nation and often race above the individual and that stands for a centralized autocratic government headed by a dictatorial leader, severe economic and social regimentation, and forcible suppression of opposition
      2 : a tendency toward or actual exercise of strong autocratic or dictatorial control
      Do I really need to point out the foundation of our govt. and country or do you retract and admit you are just a troll? Your ignorance in the name of flippancy isn't becoming of one professing superiority.

    7. Re:Fascist Americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you did that without redefining the word "IS"?
      Funny you don't mention your country of origin.
      CYA, right?

    8. Re:Fascist Americans by bhima · · Score: 1

      My Country of origin is U.S.A

      --
      Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.
    9. Re:Fascist Americans by popo · · Score: 1


      Oh please shut up.

      America is the most self critical, free society in the world. Protection of individual rights is stronger here than every country in Europe. (Yes. Europe. Where individual freedoms are very loosely legislated).

      Your statement: because I want to live in a nice place sends shivers of "not my neighborhood", anti-immigration, social controlled Europe up my spine.

      You should study what's happened in France re: individual rights over the last 10 years before you post ignorant crap like that.

      --
      ------ The best brain training is now totally free : )
    10. Re:Fascist Americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forget these folks put their feelings before fact, and therefore consider the laughter and ridicule their idiotic politics provoke as a form of "forcible suppresion of opposition.".

      Without fail, these people think freedom of speech applies only to them. Us "unwashed masses" are supposed to know our place and keep our mouths shut.

    11. Re:Fascist Americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Didn't you hear, its officially called "Eurabia" now.

      Poor bastards.

    12. Re:Fascist Americans by TheGrapeApe · · Score: 1
      This is the most raging and poorly reasoned flame I have ever had the misfortune of reading on Slashdot.
      the only difference between al-Qaida and the americans is that the americans speak English.
      Are you kidding me? You're just going to write that down and not back it up with anything but vague elitist rhetoric about "American Fascism"? ...
      I'm glad I moved
      You know what? So am I!
    13. Re:Fascist Americans by bhima · · Score: 0, Troll

      I salute you! You speak like a true fascist!

      --
      Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.
    14. Re:Fascist Americans by cpghost · · Score: 1

      At least you're free to speak up your mind; even if most of us (including me) strongly disagree with your opinions.

      the only difference between al-Qaida and the americans is that the americans speak English.

      Oh, al-Qaida guys don't speak English?

      america is becoming exactly what they fight against.

      If you're referring to the obsessive focussing on security measures: probably yes, in the long turn. There's a real danger that America may turn into a police state if she doesn't take care. But right now, it is still very^H^H^H^H far away.

      Anyway, that was a very unfriendly rant! May I suggest that you cool down before writing down such inflammatory comments? I understand your anger, but, hey, overgeneralizations, esp. when they are plain wrong, are unfair to the huge majority of Americans who are very friendly, tolerant and and generous people!

      --
      cpghost at Cordula's Web.
    15. Re:Fascist Americans by bhima · · Score: 0, Troll
      When the majority of Americans do not speak up against the militant police state that America has become they give their tacit approval for it, despite the fact that they can be friendly, tolerant or kind.

      Please understand I am not someone who has never lived in America, I have. Not am I someone who does not know Americans, dislikes them even hates them. Also I am not someone who covets the American way of life, I've been there, done it, and I have tee-shirt. If you compare the state of affairs where I live now, Austria, to the state of affairs in America today it is very clear that America is well on its way to becoming a police state(with fascist and theocratic tendencies). It is not a 'long turn' and it is not 'may', it is here and now. I have to tell you I was raised on a diet of how great America is and to see it change like this in my lifetime truly hurts, and I'm glad my father is not alive to see it.

      My point is this: America is no longer the place it used to be 20 or so years ago and the voice of Americans to those who are not Americans is a hateful and condescending one. You are right it is an unfriendly statement and it's is a shame that Americans think I'm angry, or hateful but I'm just showing them the mirror.

      --
      Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.
    16. Re:Fascist Americans by stock · · Score: 1
      "When I first moved to the US it was a great place but over the years it has really changed and now it seems that the only difference between al-Qaida and the americans is that the americans speak English."

      A very interesting remark. Why? lately i viewed the BCC Documentary, "the Power of Nightmares", which indeed reveiled that Al-Qeida is just a name for a organisation which does not exist! the name Al-Qeida is a fabrication by the Federal US Prosecutors in order to get warrent for arrest to nail Osama Bin Laden, a.k.a. Tim Osman within the CIA.

      See also :

      "Al-Qaeda Is Fiction: The Organization Doesn't Exist"

      "
      Mark Perkel | July 4 2005

      I came across three films produced by the BBC called "The Power of Nightmares" which explain how various groups use the fear of terrorism to advance their political power. I've spent all day converting them to a smaller format so that they can be ea silly downloaded. But they are an hour long each and are about 75 megs each. They are however extraordinary and it's quite an education into the history of Islamic Terrorism and American neo conservatives. Here are the links:

      Baby it's Cold Outside
      The Phantom Victory
      The Shadows in the Cave>

      Sorry for the windows (WMV) format but it allowed me to shrink the video to 1/10 it's original size. I don't think there's a copyright issue but if there is I'll wait till someone screams about it. I think the BBC would want people to see these films.

      In particular the third film makes a shocking revelation. The terrorist group al-Qaeda in fact does not exist. It was made up in January of 2001 in order to prosecute Osama bin Laden in his absence. In order to prosecute bin Laden there had to be an organization like the Mafia for which he was a part of. Under the law if such an organization exists then the head of the organization can be prosecuted under the law. So in order to bring the prosecution they made up the organization and called it al-Qaeda.

      But the organization is fiction. It doesn't exist. It's all a huge fraud.

      After 9-11 - a terrorist act that was organized by a bin Laden aide and funded by bin Laden - Bush dug up the name al-Qaeda from the prosecutors in the New York case against him. And since then we have been in a battle against a fictional enemy. The very people who made the story up now are believing their own lies.

      What I first heard about this movie I too was skeptical. I thought, "Yeah right! al-Qaeda doesn't exist - sure!" But now that I watched it, and with the other two movies providing further background, I am sitting here in shock and awe. Keep in mind that this was made by the BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation) which is hardly some tin foil hat organization!

      Here's the BBC Link that talks about the 3 films. I edited off the front part of the last two because it was identical to the first one and I wanted to save bandwidth.

      If what this movie says is true then we shouldn't be able to find any al-Qaeda references in the news before the begining of 2001. So lets start hunting this up and find out where the name al-Qaeda first surfaced. "

      Cheers,

      Robert

    17. Re:Fascist Americans by cpghost · · Score: 1

      Sorry for getting waaay off topic here guys...

      bhima, please give it a few years to settle. The emotions are still soaring high since 9/11. Unlike Europe, which has had its share of terrorist attacks in the past, this is still quite new and traumatizing in the minds of many Americans. Unfortunately, the administration is banking on a lot of irrational fears and phobia from a largely unpolitical and very ill informed population to push its own agenda. This is really sad actually. Compared to Europe, we react in a real hysterical way to a threat, which while being quite real and high, is still not so mindboggingly dangerous as the mass media are trying to suggest.

      But I'm fairly confident that this is just a phase in our history. A sad phase, like McCarthy, but a phase nonetheless. Calling the majority of a largely scared population 'fascist' is IMHO quite gross and way over board. It is the people you're calling 'fascist' right now who will eventually change the direction of its government if it gets too bad, no matter how resentful you think of them at the moment being.

      But it's still sad that you're thinking so harshly about Americans. I do hope that you'll reconsider and reevaluate your judgement in a few years from now.

      --
      cpghost at Cordula's Web.
  143. The reason not is because the UN is ill suited by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I heard a great quote along the lines of "The UN is the place where governments that suppress free speech demand to be heard." It's quite true, the UN isn't composed of a group of free and democratic countries, it's composed of some of those, and some that are rather less free, and some like Syria, which is a military dictatorship. These aren't the kind of nations I want having a say in what is the greatest source of free information, given that a free flow of information is very threatening to them.

    Another problem is that the UN isn't an elected body. It's diplomats that are appointed and are not answerable to the public they supposedly represent. Politicians do enough shady shit when they ARE directly answerable, it gets far, far worse when there's no accountability.

    I mean for a good example, see the receant Tsunami crisis. When the Tsunami hit, the important thing initally was getting basic aid there immediatly, food, water, and medical attention. A number of nations did just that. Both their military and civilian volunteers went over and worked their asses off to save lives. The UN, sent a group over to survey the damage and fact find, they gave some soundbites to the media, and whined that the troops over there should be wearing UN blue, rather than the uniforms of their countries. All the while people were in desperate need of immediate help.

    That's just a good example of the general problem. Look at the UN office in New York. The oppulance is simply unbelievable for an orginization that is supposed to be a representitive of so many poor nations. Then realise they have offices like this all over the place.

    Now for the US there's an additonal consideration in that the UN may decide they want regulations on the Internet that are unconstutional. The constution can't be overriden just by some treaty orginization, it overrides all other law in America (well, it's supposed to at any rate, politicans seem to forget that sometimes). So for example China might want to push a regulation that says no subversive political speech is allowed, and they'd have plenty of backers on that. Well, sorry, but that's unconstutional.

    While I think we can work out a more equitable solution than the US running the Internet, having the UN run it isn't the right answer.

  144. and while we are at it by houghi · · Score: 1

    We keep Linux and Usenet. You get Microsoft and AOL.

    Hey, suddenly I am all FOR it as a European.

    --
    Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    1. Re:and while we are at it by rhaig · · Score: 1

      how is it that usenet is a european invention?
      Wikipedia says it was "developed at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Duke University"

      --
      "We are not tolerant people. We prefer drastically effective solutions"
  145. everyone is free to use whatever dns root you want by slew · · Score: 1

    The dns root server has a IP address and runs a daemon to serve top-level domain mappings. If somebody (or group of people) want to use a different root, so be it. However, right now many choose to use the one managed cooperatively.

    The reason skript kitties in Romania get to your computer is because the machines have an IP address (not necessarily because they have a domain name that resolves to an IP address, but it sure makes it easier for them to find).

    Please read the wikipedia and get your facts in order.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alternative_DNS_root

    However, there are certainly unresolved issues with limited amount of IP addresses, but that's not what people are talking about here...

    There are also issues about conflict resoltion about the .COM part of the address space, but that's not what this is about either (although this issue is confused somewhat)...

    To me, this is like people complaining about what is on the internet (or tv, or movie theaters, or what they are serving at McDonalds, pick your poison) to their legislators hoping that they'll make some rule to change the world to their vision. If you don't like what's someone is doing, don't go there, someone will offer something different and patronize them instead. If enough people agree with you they'll change too and what you were complaining about will go out of business.

    It's not like anyone is forcing people to use the current defacto DNS root that the US doesn't want to cede to authority to ICANN. As far as I know there's no law in place that you have to point a root there.

    This is sounding strangely more and more like the Galileo vs GPS debate. If the UN wants to launch their own rootDNS, go ahead, but try not to interfere with Verisign, RIPE, ORSN, ORSC, etc (some of the existing rootDNS servers). Sounds to me, however, they don't actually want to set up an altRoot, but really just want the get the authority over the existing rootservers (i.e., a power play for someone corrupt person's agenda). Maybe they don't trust the US, but of course, the US doesn't have much of a reason to trust the UN either. I don't think ICANN's track record has really helped the situation either.

    This has the makings of a bad situation. Currently the UN doesn't have any "tax" authority since they technically don't have any soverignty over anything (it's just a treaty organization). Just imagine if the UN did own something (even if it's virtual)...

  146. ahh.. but he who owns... by josepha48 · · Score: 1
    .. the root servers will eventually own the world.. well maybe not, but root servers and dns are a big control thing..

    will the owner of the blue root server please come to america ..lol.. okay so its a bad joke :-O

    --

    Only 'flamers' flame!
    Does slashdot hate my posts?

  147. all your by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dont they know?
    All your internet are belong to U.S.

    sorry.

  148. Right. A better idea was never had by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, let's give the UN who hates the US the ability to starve us from obtaining IP addresses and bill us for the privilage. I know! Why don't we make Washington DC a state and give democrats two permanent senators to vote left on every issue too!

  149. TLDs suck. by PixelSlut · · Score: 1

    I actually agree. What's the point in having top-level domains when everyone who registers a domain ends up registering foo.{com,net,org,us,bar} at the same time? It's fucking stupid.

    I think you shouldn't be allowed to register every version of the same domain.

  150. Taxing.... by RancidMilk · · Score: 1

    Isn't one of the reasons that the United States broke away from the UK was to get rid of the taxation??? I think that we need to keep things the way they are. If they want to put in their opinions, go through our legal system just like everyone else has to.

    1. Re:Taxing.... by vidarh · · Score: 1
      No. Taxation without representation was one of the reasons, not taxation in and of itself.

      As it stands, the rest of the world are paying "taxes" to ICANN,a US controlld organisation, in the form of fees that the TLD operators are expected to pay for domain names. ICANN voted away most of the international representation by crippling the original board structure, so at the moment it is the rest of the world that's being taxed without representation for domain names.

  151. Re:Great. What next? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I may be wrong but Im pretty sure the internet was invented in CERN which, the last time I checked was still in Europe.
    Claiming that the USA invented it is typical, it reminds me of Saving private Ryan and U571 where history is re-written by Americans and the rest of the worlds contributions are ignored.

  152. The US controls most of the roots by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 2, Informative

    But not all. K and M (root servers are known by a letter) are run by RIPE (Europe) and WIDE (Japan) respectively.

    1. Re:The US controls most of the roots by Couldn'tCareLess · · Score: 1

      Not to mention that a good portion of the other *.root-server.net servers are at different physical locations around the world. http://www.root-servers.org/

  153. Last time I checked... by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It was the US who put him in power in the first place. They did that about the same time they were putting groups like the Taliban in charge of the Afgani's to resist Soviet occupation, and training people like Bin Laden to do the guerilla fighting.

    The UN is inefficient, but bad stuff tends not to come out of the UN because too many people have veto power. As opposed to here.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    1. Re:Last time I checked... by Toad+McFrog+Esq. · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The U.N. isn't just inefficient, it is a paper tiger. You said it yourself: Too many people have veto power. This makes it impossible to get anything done, much less something good or bad. Think of all of the good things that U.S. policy makers have been able to do over the years, simply because someone could make a decision and implement a plan. The U.N. just can't do that.

    2. Re:Last time I checked... by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

      Sure, which sucks for peacekeeping and human rights embargos, etc, but would be great for something like ICANN, because it would end up effectively independant, because some liberal countries have unilateral veto power where it matters.

      I just think it's a hugely bad idea to have one country with that sort of oversight.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    3. Re:Last time I checked... by Just+Another+Poster · · Score: 1
      It was the US who put him in power in the first place.

      Saddam Hussein was a nobody when the Ba'ath party rose to power in the 1960s. It is alleged that the CIA provided some form of aid to the Ba'ath party during the 1963 Iraq coup, but the leaders of the Ba'ath party at the time certainly weren't aware of it.

      The US had nothing to do with the 1968 coup that installed General Ahmed Hassan al-Bakr, who provided for the rise of Saddam Hussein.

      They did that about the same time they were putting groups like the Taliban in charge of the Afgani's to resist Soviet occupation,

      The Taliban didn't even exist during the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. Those who fought with the Afghan mujahideen were those who later fought against the Taliban. In fact, the Taliban murdered one of the most prominent mujahideen leaders two days before 9/11.

      and training people like Bin Laden to do the guerilla fighting.

      Bin Laden never received any direct support from the US. His role in fighting the Soviets was utterly negligible. He had a small part in providing support for the mujahideen, but it's very questionable as to whether he saw actual combat.

    4. Re:Last time I checked... by robocrop · · Score: 1
      It was the US who put him in power in the first place. They did that about the same time they were putting groups like the Taliban in charge of the Afgani's to resist Soviet occupation, and training people like Bin Laden to do the guerilla fighting.

      Each and every one of these statements is either false, or mixes truth with lie. So you'll excuse me if I don't immediately bow to your wisdom.

      One can find out about Hussein's rise to power - and the history of the Baath party - with very little effort via Google. The US government never trained bin Laden, or the Taliban, to fight anyone. They didn't even exist when the Soviets were invading Afghanistan. You seriously need to check your facts.

      The UN is inefficient, but bad stuff tends not to come out of the UN because too many people have veto power. As opposed to here.

      The UN is not inefficient. It is ineffective. Bad stuff definitely comes out of the UN - ask the Kurds, or the Sudanese, or all the people starving under 'humane' UN-approved sanctions.

      Like most people, you are completely willing to accept suffering due to inaction rather than suffering due to action. The desire to feel great about everything that your country does has become a boat anchor around your neck.

      Many people simply do not see that as an intrinsically better way of thinking than a strong nation leading the way towards a better world. The fact of the matter is that if the US were to continue to spread its influence around the world, everyone's standard of living would go up. People would have greater freedom.

      Laissez-faire is great for soothing your own conscience, but it is no more morally upright than direct action.

  154. It was created by *our* Vice President... by Tromeo · · Score: 1, Funny

    so we should control it.

    If you other countries would just have better politicians...

  155. Start the finger pointing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can't wait until I have to call the U.N. to fix my problem. I have enough problems with my local ISP and hardware vendor, who shopped the support to another country.

  156. I do not see the problem by houghi · · Score: 1

    others seem to be seeing. When they would take over the TLD's what they will say is:
    The US has TLD .us. Belgium has .be and so on. They will also devide the IP adresses acoording to needs.

    This has NOTHING to do with any form of control or wathever. Each country would still be able to do as they did before.

    I just don't see it happen to IPv4, perhaps for IPv6?

    --
    Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
  157. Re:Great. What next? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wouls like to point out that the parent thinks that they own the internet and that they have the IQ of shag carpet.

  158. Re:your mom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Mym mom says something like that:
    "I built you, I can destroy you, you little psicho!!!"

  159. just a thought by 834r9394557r011 · · Score: 1

    I thought we invented the internet, didn't we? So why whould we have to let someone else control that which is ours? I mean sure if the UN had helped fund and create the internet, then sure they can have some controll. I don't think that they should be able to just drop in after things are already running just fine and say, "We should get to decide how you run things."

    --
    w00t
    1. Re:just a thought by vidarh · · Score: 1
      Newsflash for you: There are servers that are part of the internet outside the US, and have been for more than 30 years. If the US government wants to control the US part of the internet that's there perogative, but don't expect the rest of the world to forever let the US keep control of services vital to the entire non-US part of the internet as well.

      To turn your question on it's head: Why should we (as in the rest of the world) have to let someone else control that which is ours? The non-US parts of the internet is no more the property of the US than non-US electricity networks or phone networks even though both originated with the US.

      Or do you advocate US control over electricity grids worldwide as well?

      So much for any concept of freedom and democracy...

  160. Suprised it's taken this long by herc_mk2 · · Score: 1

    I've read a lot of the comments, most of them seem to go something like this:

    • The USA invented the internet, US defense money paid for DARPANET, etc.
    • Response to above: Europeans invented the world-wide web, HTTP, etc.
    • The UN can't do anything right
    • The USA does whatever it wants
    • X% of internet servers are outside of the US, where X is a value between 0 and 100 ;-)
    I've been an internet user since the early 1990s, (before there was a "world-wide web," so I have some of my own opinions. I don't really know if I'm for or against this, so here are some random musings:

    First, it's been a long time coming. If the US hadn't wanted non-US sites on the internet, they had the capacity to close that door long ago. IIRC, the main reason that the US controlled the root servers (aside from the fact that it all started in the US), was that pretty much any non-US net was connected to the USA, although not necessarily to any other country's net. Putting them in the US ensured that they would be reasonably "central" in the net topology. But once the net became a commercial entity (not just a research and military network), ownership of the root servers should have been internationalized -- ICANN should have been international from the start.

    Assuming the UN took control of the root servers, I presume they would set up a committee very similar to ICANN; In fact, I wouldn't be surprised if the majority of this new committee's members came directly from ICANN. In other words, don't expect Kofi Annan or the career diplomats to be on this board.

    Finally, I'll admit that it must be galling for a non-USA citizen to go to the TLD "army.mil" and find a web page about the US Army... I wouldn't be surprised if the UN ever does take over the domain system, if the .mil wouldn't get moved into the .mil.us or similar. Don't know if .org or .edu would have the same effect, and .com is too big for anyone to tackle...

    1. Re:Suprised it's taken this long by inkswamp · · Score: 1
      Response to above: Europeans invented the world-wide web, HTTP, etc.

      Which is actually inaccurate. Tim Berners-Lee created a specific implementation, but the concepts driving it were mostly created by Americans. There are prior examples as well.

      BTW, yes, I'm an American, but I'm not saying this out of a sense of nationalism. I couldn't give a rip either way. I'm interested in accuracy. It annoys me slightly when Berners-Lee is given more credit than is due. He took ideas conceived by others and made a specific implementation of it. Yes, he was very smart and visionary in doing that, but it's a little like giving Steve Jobs credit for inventing the GUI. Jobs took ideas that others had created and put together a specific implementation of it. Praise is appropriate for both of these guys, but neither of them invented the concepts they used.

      --
      --Rick "If it isn't broken, take it apart and find out why."
  161. About the "Oil for food" thing... by orzetto · · Score: 1

    For the two or three Americans who may be interested on the coverage of this case in other countries, I can confirm it's been nonexistent in at least Italy, Norway and Sweden. It's either a world-wide plot og the liberal media with the exception of the US, or someone just wanted to make noise and discredit the UN in one take.

    --
    Victims of 9/11: <3000. Traffic in the US: >30,000/y
  162. Great Idea!!! by jjp5421 · · Score: 1

    Since they did such a good job with the Iraqi Oil for Food project...

  163. 30357F by Knightfall · · Score: 1

    OK, we tried to warn you. Now the entire world is against you but nobody has the balls to fix it. The U.S. finally has some vested intrest in this issue, not sure why, but they are coming to get you. No we can't stop them, nor will we really try, but don't worry! While they are bombing your servers to silicone dust we will publically condem the hell out of them!

    --


    Knightfall
  164. So does that mean... by greymond · · Score: 1

    I can ignore them since I am US Citizen? I mean who really listens to what the UN tells countries to do anyway. ;)

  165. IEEE, IETF, ISO, W3C...? by St.+Arbirix · · Score: 1

    How come I'm not seeing any of those mentioned? My god people, these are the groups that already handle everything that goes on on the internet within the bounds of the TLDs and IPs, who could be better qualified?

    --
    Direct away from face when opening.
    1. Re:IEEE, IETF, ISO, W3C...? by vidarh · · Score: 1
      Because the IEEE is US dominated and consists of engineers, the IETF is a volunteer organisation with no fixed membership structured and consists of engineers, ISO is a standards organisation and not set up for running anything, and the W3C consists of whoever forks over the considerable membership fees which means mostly corporate interests and main engineering types.

      Why should anyone except engineers who happen to have access to these organisations be satisfied with having a bunch of engineers set public policy?

      The only of the organisations you suggested that would be remotely acceptable for most governments would be ISO, and only because ISO is a government sponsored organisations which would have very much the same governing issues as the UN if it got handed something political.

    2. Re:IEEE, IETF, ISO, W3C...? by St.+Arbirix · · Score: 1

      How is DNS and IP assignment any more public policy than the TCP specification or port number assignments?

      --
      Direct away from face when opening.
  166. Slashdot to Govern UN? by Ferromancer · · Score: 1

    For a second I was confused when looking at the title of the web page :D

    --
    "Worker bees can leave
    Even drones can fly away
    The Queen is their slave."
  167. Re:Great. What next? by dvdsmith · · Score: 1

    Not to get into a nationalist argument, CERN came up with HTTP (Hypertext Markup Language). This depends on TCP/IP, which goes back to the US DARPA project, AFAIK. While I'm not an ubergeek who completely understands the whole mess, I think I'm generally right.

    --
    "Build something idiot proof, and someone will build a better idiot" - Samuel Clemens
  168. Re:Great. What next? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The INTERNET was NOT invented at CERN. The Internet was developed as a project of the US Dept of Defense. That's not re-writing history. That IS history. The HTTP protocol which enabled the World Wide Web was invented by Tim Berners-Lee who was at CERN at the time (may still be). HTTP is only a protocol that uses the INTERNET as its medium. There lots of other protocols that used the INTERNET before HTTP. Gopher, WAIS, FTP and others. Look 'em up. You're right that nobody owns the internet, but US tax payers paid for the development that made it possible AND the US happens to control the TLD infrastructure. I think it should remain that way. The UN is the WORST possible organization to turn it over to. It is an over blown, over glorified debating society. I don't vote for anyone in the UN and you don't either. Hey, guess what? NOBODY does! WTF would you turn over the most important communication medium the world has ever known to bunch of petty bureaucrats from 3rd world sh*tholes?

  169. It's always a red letter day when... by VectorSC · · Score: 2, Insightful

    A budding draconian organization tries to take powers away from an established draconian organization.

    And who wins here? No.

  170. There is no Internet by DragonHawk · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I've said this before, on Slashdot, even: There is no Internet. Not the way we like to think of it. It doesn't exist as a cohesive whole. You can't connect to "the Internet". The most you can do is connect your network to somebody else's network. Maybe multiple somebodies. But still, you're just connecting to their networks. Then they do the same with some others. And so on. That's what we're talking about here. An inter-network. A bunch of individual networks. They are operated by businesses, organizations, governments, and individuals.

    Right now, almost everybody agrees that US-centric organization like ICANN get to govern top-level things like the root domain. But there is absolutely nothing keeping people following their own set of standards. Indeed, some already do.

    I don't even worry that much about "fragmentation". The Internet is already horribly fragmented. It's no longer safe or consistent or well-organized, which you used to be able to count on. If, say, we end up with multiple conflicting namespaces, someone will create some meta-directory protocols or search engines or something.

    Of course, it would be nicer if that didn't happen. No sense making things worse then they are.

    --

    dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
    I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
  171. Putting things together, here... by mister_llah · · Score: 1

    Indeed, couple the facts that the US created it... with the fact that they own almost all of it... and then add the fact that they were kind enough to share it with other nations, in the spirit of international community and freedom... ... and you will get why the prospect of the UN running it irritates me.

    ===

    The UN see a way to make a buck and a way to get control and influence. The member nations want whatever power they can get for themselves.

    Never mind that taking these controls, potentially taxing them, robs the Americans who created the infrastructure of their rights. It's not about the intellectual property of Americans or even just "possession being 9/10ths" and all of that... the United Nations DESERVES this!

    *sarcasm detector explodes* ... (ending rant now for the sake of my own sanity)

    --
    MoM++ - A Classic Expanded - [Master of Magic 1.5]
    http://mompp.sourceforge.net/
  172. What about Sloan? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How can you say this with Sloan at the command?! He's one evil dude and I hope Sidney gives him his cumuppins. You know he's still in with the covenant.

  173. Say goodbye to free Internet by dlevitan · · Score: 1
    In two senses of the word, the Internet will no longer be free if the UN takes over. Not free as in laws passed regarding spam:

    Syria: "There's more and more spam every day. Who are the victims? Developing and least-developed countries, too. There is no serious intention to stop this spam by those who are the transporters of the spam, because they benefit...The only solution is for us to buy equipment from the countries which send this spam in order to deal with spam. However, this, we believe, is not acceptable."
    China: "We feel that the public policy issue of Internet should be solved jointly by the sovereign states in the U.N. framework...For instance, spam, network security and cyberspace--we should look for an appropriate specialized agency of the United Nations as a competent body."

    So now Syria and China (I'm not even going to mention their human rights records or the like) want to make sure there is no spam and there is network security. Part of the reason the Internet has been so popular is that it was free to essentially govern itself. The spam laws currently on the books do very little, and while I hate spam as much as anyone else, I don't want any laws banning it because none of them will work and will only stop remove some of the freedom of the Internet.
    Now to the next definition of free - the developing countries want us to pay for their Internet access:

    Other suggested responsibilities for this new organization include Internet surveillance, "consumer protection," and perhaps even the power to tax domain names to pay for "universal access."

    So now they want us to pay for their Internet access because they can't afford it.
    This is not being done to make the Internet a freer place. This is being done so that other countries get a new tax base and yet another place to govern. To all of you who support this, wait until this happens, and then when your site is censored for being politically incorrect or something because you disagree with the Chinese government, you'll understand why this was a bad idea.
  174. Re:Great. What next? by joncue · · Score: 1

    I just read a history on the internet, and saw no mention of CERN. It was, according to this http://www.davesite.com/webstation/net-history.sht ml a product that came out of a US military project.

  175. what a shock?! america doesn't like the UN?! by capicu · · Score: 0

    So then, the superpower doesn't like the comparative "bazaar" system that the UN employs. You say it can't possibly be decisive enough? I suppose that when that many people (ie. the whole world) have access to a system, anyone can find a way to take advantage. In fact I agree, I'd much rather leave this product in the hands of Micros... I mean, er, America, safe in the hands of a notoriously fair and just corpor... I mean, country.

  176. Re:Great. What next? by CausticPuppy · · Score: 1

    I may be wrong but Im pretty sure the internet was invented in CERN which, the last time I checked was still in Europe.

    You are thinking of the World Wide Web, which began as essentially one protol for using the internet (along with others such as SMTP, IRC, gopher, etc). WWW is a much more recent development, relatively speaking, compared with the internet.

    The internet itself began as a U.S. Department of Defense project called ARPANET which was the world's first packet-switching network.

    --
    -CausticPuppy "Of all the people I know, you're certainly one of them." -Somebody I don't know
  177. Really ? by bmajik · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Do you have examples ?

    In any case, what is the UN qualified to have oversight on?

    --
    My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
    1. Re:Really ? by Pollardito · · Score: 1

      i think the Ohio river catching on fire would be one eye-opening example of what some people did with their freedom to dump materials

  178. TLDs should just be the country codes by *weasel · · Score: 1

    If we're going to change things, we should just limit the TLDs to country-codes and let each country do whatever the hell it feels like under its own TLD.

    Browsers can be set to default a country-code TLD based on the users system preferences without much trouble and the problem goes away.

    --
    // "Can't clowns and pirates just -try- to get along?"
  179. Re:Great. What next? by Androclese · · Score: 1

    What are YOU on?

    The Internet started out at the Apranet back in 1969 by the US Government. It later moved the US based Universities and from there into Corporate hands. (breif, condensed summary).

    The rest of the world jumped on our bandwagon, not the other way around.

    the U.N. is nothing more than a collection of petty thugs and murders. Do you really want China and North Korea sitting on an Internet content board?

  180. If this happens... by Facekhan · · Score: 1

    The UN will probably change Israel's country code to .zi (the "zionist entity") and .us to .if (infidel) and China will get .bf (beacon of freedom).

    I support the UN in theory and some UN programs (ex. Unicef) do great work but for the most part it is a place where the propoganda and demands of brutal dictators is taken just as seriously as the relatively informed opinions and peaceful desires of democratic states.

  181. actually, no. by imsabbel · · Score: 1

    Just shove your gps where it creates some nice feelings, be are building our own system where you guys cant fuck around.

    --
    HI O WISE PRINCE. WHT TOOK U SO DAM LONG?
    1. Re:actually, no. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Just shove your gps where it creates some nice feelings, be are building our own system where you guys cant fuck around.


      Are you sure about that? Last I heard we have some decent ASAT systems in the works.
  182. How about a privacy end-around by Mondak · · Score: 1

    Since we have laws against spying on our own citizens, lets just outsource it! Putting the almighty United Nations in charge of "Internet surveillance" allows foreigners to legally check the IP addresses of the sites I visit and then report back as an independent secret publication to interested parties in the US. "Mondak is indecent because he looks at pr0n" Or how about a circumstantial case like "Mondak was looked at websites on powertools and phone switches over the last month and therefore must have been guilty of the crime committed on X day". Great news

    1. Re:How about a privacy end-around by DarkDragonVKQ · · Score: 1

      The laws only protect you from the companies. (And even then they find ways to get around that). Do you really think the US's agencies or any intelligence agency in the world isn't at least scanning every bit of info for w/e reason? Whether it be possible terrorist acts, assasinations, etc..etc..

      --
      "I thought what I'd do was I'd pretend I was one of those deaf-mutes" ~ Laughing Man - GITS:SAC
  183. Re:Great. What next? by EiZei · · Score: 1

    Lot of mobile phone technology was pioneered in Europe. SMS and IRC were invented in Finland. Those are just examples I can think of right now but there are many more. Are you willing to give up the control of anything that has not been made in the USA to other countries? Didn't think so.

  184. It Makes Sense by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A bunch of pedophiles regulating a bunch of pedophiles.

    Perfect.

  185. I just keep thinking by mcc · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Every time the U.N. comes up, in any capacity, the rah-rah America faction-- especially, I find, the portion of that faction with "blogs"-- just explodes falling all over themselves to denounce the U.N. and talk about how horrible and evil it is and how everything it does is wrong.

    Looking at the U.N. myself though I don't really see an organization consistent enough to draw any conclusions about it. It is an evolving entity. Look at its state over time since oh, say, 1985, and you'll realize there are almost no points over this time period where the U.N. in practice clearly resembles the entity it was just five years before. The U.N. had a clearly defined role during the Cold War; now that the Cold War is over that role no longer applies, and it is trying to find its new role. I don't think there's any way to predict right now what that role is going to be. The U.S. has the option of taking an active hand in shaping the U.N.'s new role, if we want (there have been parts of the last 20 years where we've done this, though right now is not one of them); however, what we can't do is make the U.N. go away. It's going to stay around, and it's going to develop into something. That isn't our choice. Our only choice is, will it develop into something with us or without us.

    One thing that it occasionally worries me the U.N. might develop into is a bloc organization that basically represents "everyone but the U.S.". That is, I think it is possible that as the U.S. increasingly acts only in its own immediate interest to the exclusion of anyone else's interests, other countries will use the U.N. as a platform on which to band together and represent their interests in common, until the U.N. eventually becomes something which pens in the U.S. the way NATO penned in the USSR. As an American, I don't think this situation would be good for me or my country. However, I think it is possible. I also think that trying to push hard against or de-emphasize the U.N. does more to make the above "U.N. vs U.S." outcome likely than it does to make the U.N. weaker. The U.N.'s potential strength stems from the countries which wish to align with it; it's exactly as strong if the U.S. appears hostile toward it as it is if the U.S. appears apathetic toward it. However if the U.S. appears hostile toward the U.N. we do begin to set the stage for a situation where the U.N. begins to behave antagonistically back.

    I see this DNS thing as a small but noteworthy step toward this situation.

    Four or five years ago if the U.N. expressed an interest in controlling the DNS servers (and they did) there would be no point in taking this suggestion seriously (and no one did) because there was already an independent and international body (ICANN) on track toward running the DNS system. Now the U.S. has decided to make ICANN no longer a meaningfully independent body, and the governance of the DNS servers a U.S. national issue rather than an international one. And now, as a result, we are starting to see movements where service providers and governments outside the U.S. are starting to look into ways to break away from the U.S.-commerce-department-controlled ICANN system and into nameserver independence. In this light, the U.N. proposing they control nameservers takes on a very different tone. It underscores that if the U.S. does not wish to administer the nameservers under its control in an international fashion, there are other entities perfectly willing to assume that job.

    If other nations choose to break away from the U.S. controlled nameservers, well, it's likely they'll do so together, meaning that we will have the U.S. commerce department running DNS for the U.S. and an international body running DNS for "everybody else". And who will run this international body? Well, the U.N. is a likely choice. The steady smear campaign against the U.N. doesn't exist in the same way outside the

    1. Re:I just keep thinking by NickFortune · · Score: 1
      Nicely insightful; wish I had mod points.

      If we as Americans don't want the U.N. running the DNS system-- and I don't think we do, though I do have serious issues with the antidemocratic nature of the ICANN organization as it exists right now-- the thing to do would be remove the need for the U.N. to control it

      Well, I Am Not An American, but I think one way or another we're looking at the impending fragmentation of the DNS system. If the political will to address these issues existed, ICANN would still be headed for independance, possibly after a spot of reform.

      As it is, it seems inevitable that some non-us groups will be dissatified with the arrangement, and will investigate alternatives. It's unlikely however that the UN will find much greater favour than the US. Bizarre a it seems in the context the current discussion, there are still a lot of nations where the UN and its subordinate organizations are distrusted as having an unfair bias in favour of the US.

      I doubt we'll see the UN govern ICANN. We may see the UN set up an alternative body; more likely I think is a number of alternatives. Since the fragmentation of the net serves no one's interestes, we can then expect some interesting bridging technologies to evolve.

      Eventually, with a bit of luck, we may see a better DNS system arise from the debris; something decentralised and resistant to mischief. I don't think the current one can endure overt politicisation.

      --
      Don't let THEM immanentize the Eschaton!
    2. Re:I just keep thinking by amerinese · · Score: 1

      I can think of already one problem with the UN controlling the DNS system--not everyone is a part of the UN or wants to be. What does a country like Taiwan do if China starts imposing itself on this hypothetical organization? Taiwan is blocked from ever entering the UN as long as China, a permanent security council member wielding veto power, does not want it to. China even blocks Taiwan from things like the World Health Organization, which is ridiculous given the whole SARS/avian bird flu/every flu comes from Asia situation. I'm not sure that the US accurately represents the world, but I'm not sure a one country-one vote organization that excludes a few countries here and there and tilts all the power towards the 5 original members is all that representative either.

    3. Re:I just keep thinking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The U.S. has the option of taking an active hand in shaping the U.N.'s new role, if we want (there have been parts of the last 20 years where we've done this, though right now is not one of them); however, what we can't do is make the U.N. go away. It's going to stay around, and it's going to develop into something.

      Given that the US provides ~40% of the funding for the UN, it will go away (or just be an annoying gnat) if the US pulls out.

    4. Re:I just keep thinking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      25%, when you pay your dues.

  186. Internet, meet Hobbes by TTK+Ciar · · Score: 1

    The rest of the world would just point at a different set of root servers.

    Yes, they certainly could. They wouldn't. Most of Europe has been taken in completely by the Hobbesian Philosophy which posits that all things good come from a strong central authority, and splitting authority is inherently bad since it leads to chaos. It is through an implicit "social contract" that individuals form societies and collectively surrender authority over their possessions and themselves to the central authority, so that that authority may dispose of both in the best interests of the society. Breaking this "social contract" is tantamount to attacking society. Thus the Europeans will not build their own root servers unless they could destroy the authority of the existing root servers, because this would be a division of authority.

    Obviously, Hobbesianism and Socialism complement each other beautifully. Less obviously (to some, at least), both are horribly broken and wrong.

    I believe that concentration of authority invites its abuse, through incompetence or maliciousness or both. I believe that contracts should be signed by all parties involved before they should be considered binding. I believe that people own what they buy, build, discover, or contract, and that people are the authorities over what they own; this is what ownership means. I believe that charity is good, but that government enforcement of mandatory acts of charity are bad.

    I also believe that it would be immoral to try to force these beliefs on anyone else. This is IMO the most important distinction between libertarians and fascists, that a true libertarian lets others walk their own paths.

    -- TTK

    1. Re:Internet, meet Hobbes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      great post. Almost enough to make me open an account here.

    2. Re:Internet, meet Hobbes by isotope23 · · Score: 1

      Hobbesian Philosophy which posits that all things good come from a strong central authority

      I am always amused by the following line of thinking: Individualism is bad because it creates "chaos" (this infers a worldview that people are either incapable of governing themselves or will take advantage of the situation).

      Yet the proposed solution is to centralize power into the hands of fewer people??? The net result is either a few people taking advantage of tremendous power, or trusting a few people to govern everyone, when by the afforementioned worldview they are incapable of governing themselves.....

      --
      Service guarantees Citizenship! Questions Guarantee GITMO.... Amerika Uber Alles!
    3. Re:Internet, meet Hobbes by tourvil · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Yet the proposed solution is to centralize power into the hands of fewer people??? The net result is either a few people taking advantage of tremendous power, or trusting a few people to govern everyone, when by the afforementioned worldview they are incapable of governing themselves.....

      When someone says "People are incapable of governing themselves", they are silently adding to the end "except for me".

    4. Re:Internet, meet Hobbes by NemesisNL · · Score: 1

      Nice. Yet I believe that true libertarians are only a few small steps away from being egotists. You see being libertarian is fine as long as you belong to the class of people that have. If you belong to the class of people that have not.......living in a libertarian world can get pretty tough. There are people in our society that need help. The sick, the old the needy. There has to be an authority that takes care of these groups to make sure true libertarians do not just take care of themselves and forget those that cannot do the same. In this world we need to take care of the poor because if we do not they will come and visit us strapped with explosives and blow up stuff. You can ofcourse also lend a helping hand because yoou are a nice guy....either way you can not afford to let people die because you are to buisy taking care of yourself

    5. Re:Internet, meet Hobbes by spun · · Score: 1

      Contract of all involved parties is a hard concept, since in an inherently interconnected world, anything person A and B do together also effects the rest of us. How do you propose solving the problem of externalities through contract alone? How will you keep your neighbor from polluting your air and water? Who will own the public infrastructure such as roads or power lines that are natural monopolies and thus subject to abuse? (or do you think we should let the free marklet sort it out and all be free to choose from any of 20 roads and seventy powerlines all coming to our house?)

      Ownership is a social concept, nothing to do with the individual. If you were the only person on earth, ownership would mean as much to you as water does to a fish.

      All ownership at the social level originates from theft. What was once a public good, owned by no one, is through the power of some authority declared private, and all others are kept by force from using that previously public good.

      Helping others is a public good. Poor, sick and hungry humans are desperate humans, who will kill cheat and steal. Killing or jailing them all is not as economical as making sure all humans have a basic level of food and housing that will keep them from turning into dangerous animals. If I pay to get rid of a pack of wolves stalking the town, you benefit from it as much as I. Why shouldn't you be forced to help pay for it?

      The way most libertarians yammer on about contracts makes me think you are all the type who would go to dinner and dash out tithout paying because you didn't sign a contract. Most libertarians want all the benefits of society without paying for them. They think that magically the free market will provide for all the things that taxes do now without costing a dime more, and that all the sick, poor and hungry will just conveniently die or suddenly become rich, fat and happy instead of rising up and kicking their sorry libertarian asses when all the services are cut off. Libertarians are the kind of idealists who sound noble to many on first hearing, but the noble smoke screen of personal responsibility hides a selfish streak a mile wide in most of them.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    6. Re:Internet, meet Hobbes by rich_r · · Score: 1
      Yes, they certainly could. They wouldn't.
      That's a very bold prediction!

      Most of Europe has been taken in completely by the Hobbesian Philosophy which posits that all things good come from a strong central authority, and splitting authority is inherently bad since it leads to chaos. It is through an implicit "social contract" that individuals form societies and collectively surrender authority over their possessions and themselves to the central authority, so that that authority may dispose of both in the best interests of the society. Breaking this "social contract" is tantamount to attacking society. Thus the Europeans will not build their own root servers unless they could destroy the authority of the existing root servers, because this would be a division of authority.

      Everyone loves a generalisation. Who mentioned Europe? The thrust for innovation will be coming from asia, driven by the undeniable fact that there's a few more of them then there are of us.
      The point is that, as it stands, things are working fine. Should the US start tinkering (verisign, anyone?) then (as I've commented before) the US will find itself sidelined. This needn't become a government thing. Individuals can point to whichever nameserver they choose. Hell, they could even mirror the roots and provide service to anyone they like. ISP's can configure their nameservers anyway they like. Companies will go wherever their customers are, and if they're on the internet that doesn't include the North American Intranet, then so be it.

      Just as tcp/ip was designed to route around a nuclear strike, the same principle can be applied when the poltics break the technology.

    7. Re:Internet, meet Hobbes by skubeedooo · · Score: 1

      Thus the Europeans will not build their own root servers unless they could destroy the authority of the existing root servers, because this would be a division of authority.

      So by your logic Europe won't create a trading block that would divide the existing American authority on trading agreements? And they wouldn't create their own common currency to rival the size (and in effect authority) of America's? And they wouldn't go against the current (american) military authority when it comes to war?

      It's an interesting idea you have but i would say that:

      1. The assumptions are wrong.
      2. The conclusions are wrong.
      other than that, it's great.

      Moving on to why libertarian is so great...

      I believe that people own what they buy, build, discover, or contract, and that people are the authorities over what they own...I also believe that it would be immoral to try to force these [socialist] beliefs on anyone else. This is IMO the most important distinction between libertarians and fascists, that a true libertarian lets others walk their own paths.

      I see, so it is ok for a 'libertarian' to force their belief that they own 'what they discover' on all others, whereas it is not ok for a socialist to force their belief on others that society owns what they discover. This is blatant hypocrisy.

      Suppose I go and 'discover' some lake that is upstream of your house. Since I've discovered it, I own it along with all the water in it, and if i want to block off the outlet, I will. Too bad for you, who has used this water to live on all your life...it's mine now and you're going to have to pay me for it. Does this sound fair? Clearly not.

      Personally I consider myself as a soft libertarian. I think that people should be as free as possible, but I realise that 'freedom' is a complicated issue that no magic bullet of government non-intervention can cure. I also think that the value of freedom has to be balanced against the other things people have every reason to value, such as the ability to feed themselves during unemployment, the possibility of educating themselves etc etc.

    8. Re:Internet, meet Hobbes by isotope23 · · Score: 1

      All ownership at the social level originates from theft. What was once a public good, owned by no one, is through the power of some authority declared private, and all others are kept by force from using that previously public good.

      Bull. If I make anything, i.e. invest my time and my skills to produce something it is mine. Example: I go out to an area of unused land and through my own effort I put in irrigation, plant crops, and tend the crops, I would end up with a food source.

      According to your line of thought I would then OWE others that food? WHY? I was the one who spent a portion of my life growing them.....
      Society only comes into play when I wish to VOLUNTARILY TRADE the items I have produced to others for items they have produced. As for social obligations, I feel we are morally obligated to help and support only our family.

      poor and hungry will just conveniently die or suddenly become rich

      No, I do not wish the poor nor the hungry any ill will. However neither you nor they have the moral right to DEMAND the fruits of my labor.
      That said, I do donate to food banks, and some other programs I deem as worthwhile.

      If I pay to get rid of a pack of wolves stalking the town, you benefit from it as much as I. Why shouldn't you be forced to help pay for it?

      Because killing the wolves may help you to a much greater extent than it helps me. Indeed your threat to FORCE me to pay may make you a bigger threat than the wolves themselves.

      Poor, sick and hungry humans are desperate humans, who will kill cheat and steal. Killing or jailing them all is not as economical as making sure all humans have a basic level of food and housing that will keep them from turning into dangerous animals.

      Your ideal is TURNING them into dangerous animals. By insulating them from the consequences of their choices. The message they learn is there are no consequences. Soon they will come to expect something for nothing. The next step is they will compare their "basic" standard of living to everyone else, and demand more.

      but the noble smoke screen of personal responsibility hides a selfish streak a mile wide in most of them.

      Talk about hypocrisy! You claim a man is selfish for advocating personal responsibility. Yet you then have the temerity to TAKE my labor to advance YOUR moral code? Not only are you selfishly claiming that your set of morals is better than mine, but you are advocating the use of violence if I dare to disagree.

      --
      Service guarantees Citizenship! Questions Guarantee GITMO.... Amerika Uber Alles!
    9. Re:Internet, meet Hobbes by spun · · Score: 1

      I don't want to take your or anyone else's labor. That at least is one thing we can agree on. Coercion is wrong, stealing is wrong, the use of force is wrong. However, you can't labor without taking from the public domain. What could you possibly labor on or with that wasn't public to begin with? That land you irrigated? By moving in and working it, you have stolen choice from me. Before, I could go there to hunt, to gather, or just to meditate on the natural beauty. Now I cannot. Who gave you the right to take what had been freely shared by all and make it your own? With any resource it is the same, though it may have the labor of individuals in it now, and those individuals are entitled to the fruits of their labor, originally, it belonged to all.

      I do not wish to sheild anyone from ALL the consequences of their actions, yet it occurs to me that having a shield from consequences is precisely the reason we humans form groups. If I am sick, or made a mistake in hunting and have no food I do not need to die for my mistakes. That should be the bottom line. No one should have to die or suffer unbearably for their mistakes. Those who do not want to be a party to the bargain that no human being lets any other human being starve to death or die of exposure should be outcast, to live or die on their own, not a part of human society, as they so obviously wish. Beyond making ure that everyone is provided with the basics, sure, every one should be free to do as they wish. People who have a lot tend to think they can do without that kind of insurance, but being part of society, gaining the benefits of society, they should help pay, or be outcast. Think of it as a membership fee.

      You have engaged in a kind of slippery slope argument that is untennable in the light of research and common sense. People have intrinsic motivations besides greed. In fact, modern economic research shows that fairness end reciprocity are two concepts with more motivational power than pure self interest in a large majority of the population. Your sort of cynical view of humanity is in fact the thing that is really creating the problem. Google for "fairness reciprocity economic research" and you will see what I mean.

      You have also given short shrift to the problem of externalities, public goods and the free rider problem. Look, anyone can claim that something doesn't benefit them, that they shouldn't have to help pay for it, but if that were allowed in the case of public goods (like clean air) that all can benefit from, then no one would pay to help maintiain those goods.

      Free market evangelists use this as an argument that EVERYTHING should be privately owned, but since everything was orginally public, who gets paid when things go private? All of us? Besides, a group of people acting democratically can manage a resource at least as well as a single private owner can. And it still does not answer the question of externalities, those things beneficial or detrimental to parties other than those involved in a transaction. The free market doesn't deal with those things well at all. What is your solution?

      I honestly want to know, as this is something I have been thinking about for some time. Let's try dropping the antagonisytic tone and try to learn from one another. I suspect we have more in common than you might think. Maybe you could stop calling my philosophy evil and I could stop implying that all libertarians are selfish bastards?

      I never said my set of morals was better than yours, I never claimed I wanted to TAKE your labor, and I never said I advocated violence, so quite with the hysterics.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    10. Re:Internet, meet Hobbes by TTK+Ciar · · Score: 1

      I see, so it is ok for a 'libertarian' to force their belief that they own 'what they discover' on all others, whereas it is not ok for a socialist to force their belief on others that society owns what they discover. This is blatant hypocrisy.

      You have misquoted me, sir. I said it would be immoral for me to try to force my beliefs on anyone else. You have dishonestly inserted "[socialist]" into your quotation, where it is inappropriate.

      -- TTK

    11. Re:Internet, meet Hobbes by skubeedooo · · Score: 1
      ok, sorry about misquoting you, i did honestly think you were trying to imply that property rights (and in particular owning what you discover) are a consequence of libertarian thought.

      I also didn't dishonestly insert socialist at all. Since you were using a pronoun, you could have been referring to either belief. Sorry for the misunderstanding.

    12. Re:Internet, meet Hobbes by isotope23 · · Score: 1

      Let's try dropping the antagonisytic tone and try to learn from one another.

      Agreed...

      What could you possibly labor on or with that wasn't public to begin with?

      The ultimate conclusion to this line of reasoning is that I myself am public property.
      Which leads to a whole set of justifications for power over what I do with my finite time here on earth.

      Who gave you the right to take what had been freely shared by all and make it your own?

      This IMO is a fallacy. Look to the animal kingdom. Territory, and its defense is a natural and ingrained instinct. Accordingly by my natural rights I have the right to "take" property owned by no one and improve it so I may survive.

      Society and reciprocity come into play when there is a conflict between myself and you over who owns said property. Society is there to allow us to come to an acceptable outcome to the dispute without resorting to violence.

      I do not wish to sheild anyone from ALL the consequences of their actions, yet it occurs to me that having a shield from consequences is precisely the reason we humans form groups. If I am sick, or made a mistake in hunting and have no food I do not need to die for my mistakes

      I fully agree here. That is why I say my moral obligation is the support of my family, (and my friends). This is based in part on mutual self-interest. However this is a VOLUNTARY arrangement.

      People who have a lot tend to think they can do without that kind of insurance, but being part of society, gaining the benefits of society, they should help pay, or be outcast. Think of it as a membership fee.

      To some extent I can agree. Yet there is a contradiction to your arguments. If I do not agree to the terms of your society, how then do you reconcile my rights to public land? Surely there can be no moral basis for claiming that the majority has a greater right to sightseeing than the outcast has in attempting to farm for survival.

      People have intrinsic motivations besides greed. In fact, modern economic research shows that fairness end reciprocity are two concepts with more motivational power than pure self interest

      I would disagree. Fairness and reciprocity are there because of self interest. It is an aquired survival skill, thus very strongly tied to self interest.

      but since everything was orginally public, who gets paid when things go private? I think is the primary point of contention. Even if we take the claim of public ownership at face value, you are still in essence making a claim for ownership. Instead of individual ownership you are merely muddying the waters by claiming ownership, but by a nebulous group...

      Besides, a group of people acting democratically can manage a resource at least as well as a single private owner can. Many times however the democratic group has no clear vested interest in ownership and thus do not do the job as well as if they were the solitary owner.

      And it still does not answer the question of externalities, those things beneficial or detrimental to parties other than those involved in a transaction

      My answer is that in such a case I would be either exchanging property that was not mine, or
      possibly have an invalid claim on said property. However there are instances where the above does not hold.

      Example, you are hungry yet have nothing I wish to trade for. You neighbor is not starving, and has something I need. The question is would you be harmed if I traded with your neighbor and not you? I would have to answer no. I have not DONE harm to you. Admittedly I have not helped you, but neither have I directly made your situation worse. I also have conflicting interests though.
      By living in close proximity to you, I have a very vested self-interest in making sure you can survive. If I do not, you may become desperate enough to steal my property, or you may leave and when I need help there will be noone there to help me

      --
      Service guarantees Citizenship! Questions Guarantee GITMO.... Amerika Uber Alles!
    13. Re:Internet, meet Hobbes by spun · · Score: 1

      ]]What could you possibly labor on or with that wasn't public to begin with?

      The ultimate conclusion to this line of reasoning is that I myself am public property.
      Which leads to a whole set of justifications for power over what I do with my finite time here on earth.


      No, you can do what you will with your time. No one owns you. You just can't take from the publicly held resource, or even unheld resources without some recompense. Even taking an unused resource is limiting my choice to use it in the future, why should I agree to that? Will you use force to uphold your decision to take it? Without society, you have only the 'right' to take what you can hold by force. With society, we can come up with rules that govern such things. You may get the rights to do certain things that limit the choices of others, but those rights may come with strings attached. Those strings may include the agreement to uphold said rights for others, even those you don't care about. They may also include the responsibility to contribute something back to the society that granted them. Don't like it? You still have the right to try to take what you can hold by force. But society might not approve of that, and would be justified in responding with force. Or you can move on to someplace where no one will contest what you have taken. No one is saying they own you, but no one is saying that you should be given any resource without some responsibility to the ones who agreed to uphold your right to take it. That would be you stealing from others.

      This IMO is a fallacy. Look to the animal kingdom. Territory, and its defense is a natural and ingrained instinct. Accordingly by my natural rights I have the right to "take" property owned by no one and improve it so I may survive.

      There are two fallacies here. First, this is a common form of the naturalistic fallacy. You are attempting to argue what should be from what is. Second, there are no such things as natural rights. Rights only exist in relation to society. Without society, there would be no need for the concept of rights. The only rights anyone has are those that everyone agrees to uphold. And why should I or anyone else agree to uphold your right to take for yourself what was previously shared by all? There may very well be some good reasons, but you haven't given them here.

      If I do not agree to the terms of your society, how then do you reconcile my rights to public land? Surely there can be no moral basis for claiming that the majority has a greater right to sightseeing than the outcast has in attempting to farm for survival.

      Society has a greater moral claim to the land than you do only insomuch as the land might benefit a greater number if used by all than exclusively by you. However, you only have two options in getting everbody else to agree to your concept of property. The use of force, which we both agree is wrong, or accepting that property is not a natural right, but a contract between you and society that comes with some some reciprocal responsibilities.


      ]]People have intrinsic motivations besides greed. In fact, modern economic research shows that fairness end reciprocity are two concepts with more motivational power than pure self interest

      I would disagree. Fairness and reciprocity are there because of self interest. It is an aquired survival skill, thus very strongly tied to self interest.


      I am not saying that it doesn't boil down to self interest. In fact, everything does. However, it is a genetic form of enlightened self interest. Cooperation is a survival strategy that is more effective than competition.

      ]]And it still does not answer the question of externalities, those things beneficial or detrimental to parties other than those involved in a transaction

      (your response snipped here, as it simply doesn't address my question)


      By your response, I don't think

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    14. Re:Internet, meet Hobbes by isotope23 · · Score: 1

      No, you can do what you will with your time. No one owns you.

      Yet, according to your interpretation all other property is public. It follows that the constituent elements from which I am made were once public property. Thus either I am public property, or through possession of the elements of which I am made they become mine and thus
      not all property is theft.

      You just can't take from the publicly held resource, or even unheld resources without some recompense.

      To whom do I owe recompense for claiming unheld property? Why?

      How did the "public" gain claim to public property? By what right did they do so?

      A patently absurd example. Does my right to sightseeing for lions on "public" land in africa trump the right of someone there for subsistance farming? If not then how are his rights more important than mine? I would have to say by reason of being located upon the land in question.

      there are no such things as natural rights. Rights only exist in relation to society.

      I disagree. Natural rights are everything it is within my power to do to assure my survival. Society is an attempt to voluntarily abridge some natural rights to better secure others. I.E. I give up the right to try and kill you, under the understanding that you will not kill me.

      We use the term rights when perhaps ability would be a better description. Natural rights would then be the unabriged natural abilities which do not conflict between individuals.

      For instance, I could contract with you to dump my toxic waste in your river. What of the people downstream? This was exactly the point I was making, by signing such a contract I am clearly taking property from the downstream owner, which was not mine to sign away.

      There should have been some regulation, carried out and enforced by some body somewhere that kept you from doing that.

      If you do not believe that the individual is capable of making intelligent choices on his own, how then can another individual with authority be any better? Inevitably this authority will act in the same greedy and selfish manner. He/She would take payoffs to ignore the pollution etc. How then does this improve the situation?

      It would seem to me that you must come to one of two conclusions. Either:

      A) Individuals are capable of governing themselves. (which precludes the need for authority except to mitigate violence)

      B) Some individuals are better able to govern themselves and thus others as well. (Thus why have a democratic process at all?)

      This is in no way different from the social contract that says you will pay your taxes for the benefits derived from them.

      I would agree with you if the contract was voluntary. If I could opt out then I would be fine. On the local level I can. I have less ability to do so upon the state and federal level. This is why I believe that there is a moral justification and necessity for the greatest concentration of power to be located closest to the individual.

      --
      Service guarantees Citizenship! Questions Guarantee GITMO.... Amerika Uber Alles!
    15. Re:Internet, meet Hobbes by spun · · Score: 1

      Yet, according to your interpretation all other property is public. It follows that the constituent elements from which I am made were once public property. Thus either I am public property, or through possession of the elements of which I am made they become mine and thus not all property is theft.

      False dichotomy. You don't own you. No one owns you. You aren't the materials you are made up of. On average, in seven years time you won't have a single same atom in your body that you have today.

      To whom do I owe recompense for claiming unheld property? Why?

      To everyone in the world. For reducing the choices we have.

      How did the "public" gain claim to public property? By what right did they do so?

      Because before someone owned the resource, everyone shared it. Anyone could use it. After someone took it, the rest of us couldn't use it. Why should we let someone exclude us from doing what we could before?

      I disagree. Natural rights are everything it is within my power to do to assure my survival. Society is an attempt to voluntarily abridge some natural rights to better secure others. I.E. I give up the right to try and kill you, under the understanding that you will not kill me.

      We use the term rights when perhaps ability would be a better description. Natural rights would then be the unabriged natural abilities which do not conflict between individuals.
      between individuals." Note the plural. Between individuals, i.e. society.

      Besides that, the right of property does conflict between individuals. You take it, I can't use it, why should I agree to that?

      This was exactly the point I was making, by signing such a contract I am clearly taking property from the downstream owner, which was not mine to sign away.

      But everything you do in this interconnected world impacts someone negatively. If you don't have the right to pollute your stream because of someone downstream, what right do you have to eat your food, breath your air? All right, a bit over the top, but you see my point? Taking property is like polluting the stream.

      Look, I'm not saying the concept of property is bad, I just want to hear some good reasons for it. As it is, I think of property as a contract. The rest of us agree that you can exclude us from it in exchange for you upholding the same right in us, and contributing to the common good.

      If you do not believe that the individual is capable of making intelligent choices on his own, how then can another individual with authority be any better? Inevitably this authority will act in the same greedy and selfish manner. He/She would take payoffs to ignore the pollution etc. How then does this improve the situation?

      Ah, the old conundrum. Let me be clear on my position. I used to be a hard core anarchist. Not the bomb throwing kind (a media myth to discredit the movement) but the Trotsky kind. Very much like a Libertarian, if you care to look into it. I still believe fundamentally in the idea of self government. I have looked into communism and rejected it. Do you know that communism was originally supposed to be a stepping stone to anarchy? The communists just didn't think the people could get there on their own, and there is some merit to the idea (think of the chaos if we just did away with all government tomorrow.) But ultimately I believe in the individual.

      However, I think for self governance to work, things need to be far more equitable and fair than they are now. There are huge imbalances in the distribution of wealth that do not arise from merit. Some inequality is perfectly fair. The excellent and hard working should receive more than the lazy and stupid. But no one is worth hundreds or thousands of times more than another. Why should I agree to a valuation system that creates such imbalance?

      Property rights are important for a healthy society. but it is important to realize where they really come from. They don't come from our ability to

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    16. Re:Internet, meet Hobbes by isotope23 · · Score: 1

      And finally, if we want to continue this, may I suggest that one or the other of us make a journal entry? I am having a lot of fun with this debate, and I hope you are too.

      agreed.

      --
      Service guarantees Citizenship! Questions Guarantee GITMO.... Amerika Uber Alles!
  187. turn over GPS? - no they're building their own by bobalu · · Score: 1

    It's called Galileo and it will co-exist with the US system - if they ever get the funds together, that is.

    http://europa.eu.int/comm/dgs/energy_transport/gal ileo/index_en.htm

    --
    The revolution will NOT be televised.
  188. Re:Great. What next? by TechnicGeek · · Score: 0

    http is hypertext transfer protocal. html is hypertext markup language.

  189. Are talking about the same org who chose Libya... by haute_sauce · · Score: 1

    ...to chair the human rights comission ? Yesiree, I want them taxing my domain and deciding where the money should go...

  190. At-large Board Members Would Have Fixed It by Teancum · · Score: 1

    Where ICANN really screwed up, and where the U.S. Dept. of Commerce really messed up as well, was to kill the whole at-large board member plan.

    I participated in the election of Karl Auerbach to the ICANN board, and I thought the whole process was incredible. **_IF_** ICANN had kept that policy for the at-large members and phased out the rest of the board, this would never have even been an issue, and the U.N. would not have even been tempted to get involved. Even though it was just for governance of the Internet, it was the first major election to a legislative body that I know about that litterally involved people from arround the world.

    If these elections ever came back, I would vote for Karl in a heartbeat. As it was, Karl had to sue ICANN just to get financial records, and his position (in part because of Karl's meddling and getting into the face of Vinton Cerf) was eliminated by the rest of the board members. One of the nasty things that happened, and one of the mistakes of the at-large membership, was that the at-large board members were outnumbered by corporate members, who viewed the at-large board members as a threat (they were, as a matter of fact).

    As it is, ICANN has lost all credibility in my opinion, and it appears as though the U.N. may be the only real option to get things cleaned up. They had their chance, and it is sad to think that America fostered this dictatorship (or more correctly, facist organization in the most litteral sense... governance by corporation) instead of having a real democratic movement and organization, even more so when it looked like it was really going to happen.

  191. le ouch by bobalu · · Score: 1

    Totally off-topic, but I feel your pain. Well, I didn't feel it in my pocket but what a fiasco, I certainly felt pain watching what was left.

    They're refunding the ticket price at least, right?

    --
    The revolution will NOT be televised.
  192. Independant Internet? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    If they do this, can we just f-ing split off from the rest of the world, accessing external countries via some sort of UN portal?

    I dont want them messing with things here, they have a really bad track record of doing accomplishing anything, and they have no business telling US what to do.

    Besdies they dont acknowledge several of our guaranteed rights here in America.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Independant Internet? by Big_Al_B · · Score: 1

      If they do this, can we just f-ing split off from the rest of the world,

      What goal would this accomplish and at what cost?

      I dont want them messing with things here,

      The internet is not only "here" now. What do you think would change?

      they have a really bad track record of doing accomplishing anything,

      Except...

      1. Raising consciousness of the concept of human rights through its covenants and of its attention to specific abuses through its resolutions or rulings. (eg. abolishing Apartheid in South Africa)

      2. Health successes such as the World Health Organization's elimination of small pox.

      3. The UN's World Food Programme helps feed more than 100 million people a year in 80 countries.

      4. The UN has helped run elections in countries with little democratic history including recently in Afghanistan and East Timor.

      5. The UN Population Fund is a major provider of reproducitive services especially in poor countries. It has helped reduce infant and maternal mortality in 100 countries.

      6. Organizations like the WHO, UNAIDS and Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria are leading institutions in the battle against AIDS around the world especially in poor countries.

      7. The UN has set up war-crimes tribunals to try war criminals in the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda.

      8. A 1988 Nobel Peace Prize for the UN Peacekeeping forces.

      (Note: There's a healthy dose of criticism in the same source material. Some deserved, some likely not...)

      and they have no business telling US what to do.

      What would they get to "tell us" if they "governed" the internet? And what do you think it means to "govern the internet" anyway?

      Besdies they dont acknowledge several of our guaranteed rights here in America.

      Sure, but ironically our current administration has the same problem. What does this have to do with overseeing IP address allocations and domain namespaces?

  193. Why not allow unlimited TLDs? by EMIce · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Why not allow unlimited TLDs? Official structure and organization through TLDs is overrated.

    For example, it seems silly to rely on something like .mobi for mobile sites rather than embedding that in the application protocol. We should be relying on meta-data to define such distinctions, including the categorization companies, non-profit organizations and ISPs. Meta-data would be more flexible, as distinctions do overlap in ways that domains can't singularly cover.

    If you need something authoritative, private authorities could use public/private keys as proof to do that. Indiviuals could then decide which private authorities have standards worth trusting. The U.N. could set up such an authority to authenticate government sites. When a user visits a government site, it could refer the application to the whichever authorities it chooses.

    Limiting TLDs just creates conflict as different powerful interests vie for their own distinctions. Sure people can more quickly categorize this way, but the limitations seem to outweight the benefits.

  194. USA! USA! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nuke the fuckers!

  195. do it like phone system numbering, only way to go by mlksys · · Score: 1

    The addition of top level domains has been a dismal failure, it just does not work. When .org and .net rules were changed to open them up, people registered their name in .com, .net, and .org. When we add additional top level domains the same thing happens.

    They are useless. The international complexity only makes it worse.

    The only reasonable solution to the problem is to create a policy where non country based TLDs will be abolished in the future and force all to migrate under a country domain. For example, ibm.com would have to become ibm.com.us or similar.

    This way each country manages their own domain space much like each country manages their part of the telephone numbering space.

    Since generic TLDs are abolished and international interrelationships are removed, their should be no need to ICANN or UN or anyone else to worry about root servers management. I suppose one could argue that ITU might manage root servers but only idiots would allow ICANN or UN to do so. One might reasonably argue that the root serves should be run by proven reliable entities that are not entirely in a single country, but dont let bogus organizations like UN or ICANN become involved.

  196. Decentralized? by The_Wilschon · · Score: 1

    It seems like decentralized control works pretty well for most everything else on the internet, so why not the internet itself?

    And yes, I know, I'm posting late, and top-level posting at that, so noone will ever read this comment (if you do, could you reply, just to give me a warm fuzzy feeling?), but I had to throw in my 2 cents worth anyway.

    --
    SIGSEGV caught, terminating

    wait... not that kind of sig.
  197. Re:Great. What next? by doshell · · Score: 1

    Paraphrasing someone's comment to a recent Slashdot article (I can't remember who or where, sorry):

    The internal combustion engine, which, among other things, made way for the invention of the automobile, was invented in Germany.

    By the same logic you used in your post, Germany should be allowed to have that same kind of "feel free to run them, but we're the big guys and deserve to be in control" attitude in respect to cars, and inclusively tax American (as well as other countries') vehicles. Does that look fair to you as well?

    I'd bite on your GPS rant too, but others have taken care of it already, so I'll just leave it here.

    --
    Score: i, Imaginary
  198. UN Root server by CaptainFork · · Score: 1
    I thought UN already controlled the sales of all vegitables including root vegitables.

    But I wouldn't want to have to go to The Hague or wherever to be served.

  199. Re:Great. What next? by illc0mm · · Score: 1
    The Internet (or internet as you put it) was not invented in CERN. What was invented at CERN by Tim Berners-Lee around 1989 was URL/HTML/HTTP which is what most people associate with the Internet. The Internet started out as a ARPA (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advanced_Research_Pr ojects_Agency) project funded and run solely by the Department of Defense. Oddly enough, it was first called ARPANET (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ARPANET). ARPANET was designed between 1968 and 1969, the first message over the network was at 10:30PM October 29, 1969 between UCLA's SDS Sigma 7 Host computer and SRI's SDS 940 Host computer. from: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Intern et Skip ahead to 1983:
    ...TCP/IP protocols replaced the earlier NCP protocol as the principal protocol of the ARPANET; in 1984, the U.S. military portion of the ARPANet was broken off as a separate network, the MILNET. At the same time, Paul Mockapetris and Jon Postel were working on what would become the Domain Name System.
    Now it's starting to look like the Internet we know today, at least underneath. Remember this is still IPv1
    At the end of the 1980s, the U.S. Department of Defense decided the network was developed enough for its initial purposes, and decided to stop further funding of the core Internet backbone. The ARPANET was gradually shut down (its last node was turned off in 1989), and NSF, a civilian agency, took over responsibility for providing long-haul connectivity in the U.S.
    I should mention something here about Vint Cerf as the real father of the Internet and not Al Gore, if anyone can be considered one it's Vint Cerf (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vint_Cerf).

    So as you can see, several decades an millions (if not billions) of dollars went into the creation of what we now call the Internet, mostly all by US interests. Of course, the most popular and most life altering one was by Tim Berners-Lee of CERN. But, remember this... HTTP/HTML/URL are all APPLICATIONS that run on the Internet. They are not the Internet. As far as DNS this too was designed by an American, Dr. Paul Mockapetris(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Mock apetris). Which is what gives us names like slashdot.org, and wilwheaton.net to name a few... Anyway, check out the links to really learn what it's all about if you care... -illc0mm
  200. Re:Great. What next? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cut the strawman arguments please, the UN is a treaty organisation. As such something like the internet in the end will be controlled by them eventually, or something like it. The idea that any single goverment can permanently maintain control of something so international is ludicrous.

  201. Re:Great. What next? by doshell · · Score: 1

    If you were to apply that logic to everything else, I'm sure there's a whole lot of inventions that took place in other countries you use in your everyday life, and you don't usually think of as someone else's property.

    I don't even need to go that far: American-based research did indeed lead to the creation of the Internet, but to say that the effort involved was 100% American is at the very least unfair. The Internet is a worldwide network.

    You can take your part of the Internet (the one in American soil) and do whatever you want with it. But please leave the rights of the rest of Humanity to it alone.

    --
    Score: i, Imaginary
  202. pretty heated by lawrenqj · · Score: 1

    Wow, this has gotten pretty heated.

    The important point is that the internet isn't (or at least shouldn't be) monitored or governed by anyone, including the US gov't. Sure, private companies hold a lot of power on the internet, and they all fall under the jurisdiction of their home country, which is predominantly the US. But why should swiss companies be subject to US laws, or UN laws for that matter when they publish online?

  203. Re:Great. What next? by gallen1234 · · Score: 1

    Your analogy (and that of others) is flawed. It would only be correct if we were talking about the U.S. using German engines. Germans may have invented the concept but the engines used in American cars are built for those cars. If the rest of the world wants to build their own Internet they have my best wishes. I won't have any objection to not being able to access sites in Syria, China or Ghanna.

  204. Re:Great. What next? by illc0mm · · Score: 1
    Apples to oranges... The UN does not regulate phone service, mobile or otherwise. Why should it regulate the use of the Internet. It's a bad idea plain and simple.
    Are you willing to give up the control of anything that has not been made in the USA to other countries? Didn't think so.
    Well, that sentence doesn't even make sense... Are you saying that the UN should make and/or regulate cell phones? Or maybe IRC, I'm sure everyone would love that.

    Does the UN say what telephone number I can have, or what name I can have in the phone book? Does it need too?

    - illc0mm
  205. Let them have it by iminplaya · · Score: 1

    Really! They're doing so well with the Middle East and Africa, I'm sure the net will be just as well off if these people manage it.

    --
    What?
  206. Hmm.. How do you say "Fuck 'Em" in French? by popo · · Score: 1


    Guess what. You conceive it. You develop it. You own it.

    --
    ------ The best brain training is now totally free : )
  207. No No No No by argoff · · Score: 1


    Look, the UN is accountable to the "rights" of countries, not the rights of individuals. That's what makes them shch a poor body to resolve disputes involving freedom, individual rights, and fairness to society. The internet relates to all of these.

    The UN stood by and picked their nose when the former USSR went on a "purge" of 10's of millions of people and did the same thing again when China's land reform policy put farmers out of business and led to the starvation of 30 million chineese. Not to mention the countless other disasters they failed to prevent or halt and I doubt they prevented anything that western countries wouldn't have halted anyhow.

    These are not the people we want in charge even if we do need to get the US governments nose out of it.

  208. Re:Great. What next? by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1
    Also, the UN is the United Nations. You're probably thinking of the EU, the European Union. The difference is the US actually owns the GPS system, whereas nobody owns the internet, as it's an international cooperation project. Besides, the rest of the world is developing Galileo, a GPS-like system.

    No, he was right. The US does own the Internet, always have. George H.W. Bush (41) signed a bill in 1992 that allowed the internet to go public. Up until that point it was for Government purposes only. Even in Europe (they had to have a contract of some sort with the US to hook up to it). That is why the U.S. Department of Commerce still holds the reigns to it today. They also didn't want to screw it up so they got international cooperation - the much criticized ICANN. What they really did was assure that everyone is a bit upset at things. Even here in the US.

    I never did understand why Europe wants Galileo. So they can pretend they invented GPS maybe? I doubt they could improve it much, if any (especially for the cost, more accuracy, more money). Why not use what is already there and already a standard for over 10 years? Spend the money on something that we don't already have. Again, we don't mind if the rest of the world uses our GPS just as with our Internet. Think of it as your own, something you don't have to pay for and it just works.

  209. Re:Great. What next? by tremor_tj · · Score: 1

    You're argument falls flat in the face of the fact that everyone doesn't use one internal combustion engine.

  210. United it stands. Divided it stands too? by ciphertext · · Score: 1

    The real question isn't whether the U.N. should control "the internet" (meaning root domains). The fragmentation of the internet is an inevitability. The real question to be asked is how that fragmentation will ultimately occur. What would the topology be? Would it be that each country maintain its own national network (essentially a national node) or a collection of countries sharing a node? I think any forward thinking, international agency would be wise to consider the event that they need to register multiple domains. One for each potential root node of the global network in which they wish to resolve.

    --
    To know is to have knowledge....to understand is to be enlightened.
  211. The US should control the internet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First of, let me say that I am NOT American.

    However, It always gets on my last nerve how other countries now want to "collectively" assume control over the internet.

    The Americans built the internet from the ground up. Read up on ARPANET. Yeah yeah, I know some protocols that we use today, were developed at CERN, but the fact still remains that the US Department of Defence gave it to the US Dept. of Commerce, so that the internet could explode.

    Where were these countries when US researchers/engineers/scientists were slaving to develop the first packet switching networks that birthed the internet? They were busy, doing absolutely nothing !!

    So now that the Internet has turned into a global tool, and they realize the power of the internet, they want some control over it.

    GO bark up another tree. The UN is totally inept at doing anything except blabbering on about world peace, while doing nothing to actually achieve it.

    So as for Brazil, China and all the others, they shouldn't get anything, the USA deserves to control the Internet, they built it for crying out loud !!

    1. Re:The US should control the internet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, what happens if nations in Asia, Latin America, and Europe get fed up with the US' nationalistic attitude towards things like root servers and TLD's and decide to define, in their own collective organization, their own policies towards root servers?

      I think you totally misunderstand how the Internet works. It is based on cooperation of distributed networks. It may very well boil down to the REST of the world deciding to do things in a fair and more equitable way and leaving the USA out of the boat when it comes to having root servers and TLD's the rest of the world will recognize and
      use.

      The US doesn't "deserve" control of other people's networks any more than Thomas Edison did people's light bulbs.

    2. Re:The US should control the internet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes the Americans do deserve control over the internet, as we see the internet today. Regardless, it is better that one country "run" the internet, rather than the UN.

      I know exactly how the internet works. If the rest of the world wants to go their own way and decide to define their own little protocols etc, to set up a new backbone for the internet, then let them do it.

      Let me tell you right now, an internet that is built from scratch by ALL the countries of the world (except the USA) will take years and years. Why? Because not one country will fully agree with the other as to how the whole thing will be set up. If they set up another world organization, where will the HQ be? Beijing? Rio ? London ? The same thing will happen all over again, except this time the USA will not be involved.

      Understand this, right now, all the countries in the world are pushing for decentralization of the internet. The only reason there is harmony between them is because they are working towards a commoon goal.....dethrone ICAAN. When and If they are successful in doing that, then they will be back to the "each man for himself" philosophy, and they will all bicker and argue over all the technicalities in the internet. If Europe wants to do something, Africa will be too poor to manage/install it etc etc etc.

      I have seen Foreign policy and International relations in action. You are kidding yourself, if you think the rest of the world could absolutely agree on something as complex as the internet. Even IF they were to agree, it would take years before it became operational, given all the planning and designing and budgeting.

      Edison gave the incandescent electric lamp to the masses, but he also founded GE, which is the biggest company in the world today (in terms of market capitalization). Similar to what the USA is doing today......

    3. Re:The US should control the internet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just why do you think a single nation should have control over a cooperative and distribtued network?

      I don't think that is the case. There is growing resentment towards the US' policies towards the Internet.

      No one is going to scrap their IP blocks, their fiber, underground cable, or anything of the sort. It would be easy and painless for countries to change the root servers that are used.

      Understand this - not all countries have the same arrogance towards world politics that the USA does. This is why many others are wanting the UN to have some policy here. If not the UN, then there can be multilateral agreements among countries.

      There does not need to be a world organization. The internet is founded upon agreements, not centralization (so I continue to question your understanding of how the Internet works). If big powers like EU can agree on something, it wouldn't be much of a hurdle to get others on board. No one is doing this because they think they deserve exclusive control, they would do it because they feel the US is heavy handed in their governance and just want some simple equity.

      I challenge you to tell me why you think this is complex. The issue at hand here is mainly DNS, which the US is retaining its monopoly over. The US doesn't really control anything else. The rest of the world is one step away from ridding themselves of overbearing control that the US is making them endure.

      Regarding the last point, its a non-sequitur. GE doesn't tell other countries how they can use their light bulbs or where they can get their electricity from.

    4. Re:The US should control the internet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hey, I'm all for the internet being run by some uber world organization, as much as the next guy.

      The reality of the situation is that the US is never going to willingly relinquish DNS control.

      I really dont want to argue as to wheter the internet is centralized or not. I see your POV and still stand by mine. The ability of the US Government to shut down suspected Al Qaeda sites, days after 9/11 should show you that the internet is not ALL about AGREEMENTS. (The insurgents never agreed to have their sites taken down). There is some form of centralization on the net. If there wasn't, what is the world fighting the US for? By centralization I mean some form of control.

      The A-Root server in Virginia, is the main server that the other 12 feed off (as I understand it). If the rest of the world wants to make their own A-root, then were is that A-root going to be placed? Again I ask you, London? Tokyo? Sydney?

      And yes the entire can get complex very fast very quickly. If they want to make their own DNS rules and regulations, and set up their own A-root, then they are going to have to find a way to make both A-roots cooperate, or else American computers wont be able to access global websites.

      If you think "it is easy and painless to change the root servers that are used", you are simplifying the whole set up. Which A-root will have more authority in the event of a disagreement. What if one A-root stores the coordinates of www.abc.com as something, and the other A-root stores it as something else. Who wins? Where does the client get redirected to?

      You can just replace the A-root, plug it in, and expect there to be no problems. You are grossly oversimplifying the whole thing. (I ask you where is your understanding of the internet?)

      As of today, there are more mirrors of root servers outside the USA, than there are within the USA. So what is the fuss all about?

      Ya, the EU agrees on many things, but everything is harmonious. Ask France and Holland. What about the countries that dont want Turkey in on it. Where is all that solidarity now?

  212. Re:Great. What next? by m50d · · Score: 1

    HTTP doesn't depend on TCP/IP. You could, for example, run it over IPv9, a Chinese protocol, or ATM or something similar. We don't, but that's more for historical reasons than anything else. The fact is the Internet is bigger than any country, and no one country contributed enough of the protocols to claim they wrote the internet as it is today.

    --
    I am trolling
  213. Re:Great. What next? by doshell · · Score: 1

    It would only be correct if we were talking about the U.S. using German engines.

    Are you implying that every motherboard, processor, network card, router, antenna, wire, etc, connected to the Internet is American-made?

    If the rest of the world wants to build their own Internet they have my best wishes.

    Is is that difficult to grasp that the Internet is not a 100% American project? ARPANET was. The US certainly wasn't involved in building and setting up all the Internet infrastructure outside US soil. And by calling it "yours" you're claiming rights to an entity that belongs only partially to you.

    --
    Score: i, Imaginary
  214. It can help bring about massive change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IF the UN takes root, the countries that aren't as powerful as the US will try to make their footprint, mostly just because they can. This could easily fuck the system up.

    Once it's b0rked and not working as well as it does now, a new kind of internet will emerge that is COMPLETELY decentralized - every net-accessing machine will act as a root server (see 'mesh network'). There could be little internets all over the place, and to connect to other networks further away we can use sats, airships, base stations, IF the current US backbone gets hamered by the UN regulatory shit.

    It's all about balance, action and reaction, in order to achieve stability. Usually, the last system that didn't work will be replaced by one that's much better so that stabilty isn't compromised again.

  215. Scandal will abound by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd hate to see an IP address for Pr0n scandal.

  216. Re:Great. What next? by ahillen · · Score: 1

    Apples to oranges... The UN does not regulate phone service, mobile or otherwise. Why should it regulate the use of the Internet. It's a bad idea plain and simple.

    Well, international phone service is in fact regulated by the International Telecommunication Union, which is "an international organization within the United Nations System" (quoted from their web site). To quote further:

    "The Union was established last century as an impartial, international organization within which governments and the private sector could work together to coordinate the operation of telecommunication networks and services and advance the development of communications technology."

    It sounds a lot like the telephone equivalent of what is suggested for the internet.

  217. All your root servers are belong to us! by spookyfluke · · Score: 1

    All your root servers are belong to us!

    --
    you.bases.each{|base|base.are_belong_to=us}
    1. Re:All your root servers are belong to us! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All your root servers are belong to UN!

  218. What would be the point? by tnk1 · · Score: 1

    I'd have to agree with the people who ask why we need to change anything.... What advantage does having the UN or some other international body give the Internet?

    Credibility? The Internet already works just fine for everyone who uses it. That's all the credibility you need. Its not like we have to convince the French and Germans to send troops to the Internet to make it work.

    National security? Well I see no reason that you couldn't set up your own root infrastructure if you wanted to spend the money. I think it's a reasonable concern that the US may try using it as a political tool, but at the same time, putting it under an international body almost ensures it becomes political. I mean, just listen to the people adding in the "Universal Access" taxation idea in the very same article where they talk about internationalization. So fine. Install some servers and pipes and have the local capability to start serving out DNS or whatever. Put in a failover contingency plan if for some reason the US does something you don't like. It seems like a reasonable defensive measure to me. That still doesn't require the UN to run anything, though.

    The fact is that the only reason I can see that anyone wants to have an international organization run things is purely political. They don't like that the US nominally runs things. It hurts their constituencies that they don't get a "vote". Well, that's silly. The only concern with a technical infrastructure, in terms of input, is whether foreign voices are being ignored in terms of making the Internet work or improve. Well guess what? If good solutions are ignored based on nationality, then the US-controlled Internet will stop being useful and something else will replace it. Again, no UN required.

  219. yea why not... by imthatguy · · Score: 0

    I mean look how well they do with keeping the world in order and harmony... Keep in mind these are the same people who made a commission and have spent thousands, perhaps millions, of dollars to define what 'terrorism' really is. If they can spend that kind of time and money on terrorism I bet they'll do wonders with teh interwebs!

    --
    Did you know you can be apathetic to apathy? Not that I give a shit...
  220. Re:Great. What next? by doshell · · Score: 1

    I don't see how that affects the analogy; think of the concept of a combustion engine, not of the many physical implementations of it.

    American researchers came up with the idea of interconnected computer networks and, in good scientific practice, made it open (both the idea and the network) to the rest of the world. From that point on, it ceased to be an exclusively American project. All I'm implying is that the US are entitled to manage their portion of the Internet, but (should) have no business controlling the rest of it.

    (And if you're worried about the concrete, physical aspect, remember that not every computer, router, switch or cable connected to the Internet was made by an American company, neither are all of the Internet nodes manned by Americans).

    --
    Score: i, Imaginary
  221. just an idea by dacoto · · Score: 1

    Migrate slowly the current US involvement into a larger UN organization to oversee the Internet as a whole. Allow so many tech types from each country to be a working part of the organization.

    With regard to say China's statement regarding the ability to filter content, the UN org implements a base system to allow that functionality on a per country basis if needed for filtering. The filtering country would be resposable for it past that point. I do not see this as a good solution myself because I do not believe in filtering the net but if a country wishes to do that it would be their option. I dont think this would hurt the backbone of the internet but I could be very wrong.

    It would be a long and I am sure not smooth operation but something will need to be done because even though "it aint broke dont fix it" works now, it will not hold up for the long haul.

    --
    Open Source, Open Formats, Open Doors, Open Your Mind "Break On Through to the Other Side" The Doors
  222. VS: The US by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know, I know, we raided, took all your systems, put you in prison for five years while we searched through all your stuff and still didn't find anything. But hey, we thought maybe you were doing something illegal so it was OK. I mean, guilty until proven innocent... right?? Oh, you didn't want that hardware back did you? I guess one of our agents maybe took it home for some more "thorough inspection" and just happened to maybe hook it up to his lan so he could personally "inspect" all those dvd-r's on his home theatre system. But on the bright side, it'll probalby be on ebay within the next 6 months so you can always just get it back that way? Er...

  223. Oh yeah... by Mad+Ogre · · Score: 1

    Because we all know how good the UN is at managing everything else.

    --
    MadOgre.com
  224. Tha move toward national networks rolls along... by analog_line · · Score: 1

    This is pretty much inevitable. As it stands now, national boundaries mean very little on the Internet. If your server is illegal in France, but it is based in the United States where it is legal, as long as you don't care about never being able to go to France, you won't be prosecuted.

    This kind of thing makes governments of any stripe, whether right or left wing, communist or capitalist, cringe in fear. Eventually information network interconnectivity is going to be by treaty. It's the only solution that any government is going to be able to live with in the end, now that they are getting up to speed on what the Internet really does.

  225. Re:Are talking about the same org who chose Libya. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As opposed to the USA who unilaterally took Libya off the internet on a whim?

    Background: Gadaffi got annoyed at the USA when they bombed his house in 1986 killing his (adopted) daughter (in revenge for Syria previously killing two US soldiers in berlin). Some people think he then ordered pan am bombing, but others think it was revenge by Iran for the USA shooting down their airliner previously killing 290 pilgrims (the USA said "oops!").

    Much more recently .ly disappeared from DNS.
    Taking libya out of the DNS is probably the sort of thing that makes him not trust the US to run it.

  226. Re:Great. What next? by ahillen · · Score: 1

    Your analogy (and that of others) is flawed. It would only be correct if we were talking about the U.S. using German engines. Germans may have invented the concept but the engines used in American cars are built for those cars.

    Just as well you can say that the US has developed the concept of the internet by developing most of the protocolls (although one of the main protocolls used by many people - http - was developed at CERN, if I'm not mistaken).
    People worldwide are not using the "American internet" (physically build by the US), but networks build by their own companies (or paid for by their own governments) which use the concept developed in the US. And because so far everybody agrees in accepting some US servers as authority when it comes to assigning addresses, it appears to be a world wide uniform network. But I surely hope you do not believe that the network connecting European universities, or the network bringing internet connections into European homes was build by the US, do you? To paraphrase you: The internet used in Europe was build by the Europeans.

    If the rest of the world wants to build their own Internet they have my best wishes.

    Since the hardware is already international, "building their own internet" essentially means to not accept the US root servers any more. If all countries other than the US decide to use an independent address system, they have their "own internet". Of course, that would be a major inconvinience for almost everybody, including many US companies.

  227. The inventor of the Internet should be in charge by Actionable+Mango · · Score: 1
    The creator of the Internet should be in charge. Therefore, it should not be the UN...

    ...it should be Al Gore.

  228. Wonderfull by KarrottoP · · Score: 1

    I can't wait for the domain name registration scandle where domain name disputes are bribed away to the highest bidder and Radicals get there message boards politically protected so they can plot more bombings....That is what the UN can bring to the table.

  229. Re:Great. What next? by An+Onerous+Coward · · Score: 1

    By the same logic, I guess Slashdot is a wholly owned subsidiary of Tim Berners-Lee.

    All those websites he owns, you'd think he'd have more money.

    --

    You want the truthiness? You can't handle the truthiness!

  230. 2 cents by ciphertext · · Score: 1

    How would that decentralization occur? Along national boundaries, along associations of nations or both?

    --
    To know is to have knowledge....to understand is to be enlightened.
    1. Re:2 cents by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here it is. Right now. It happened. You don't notice, because it works.

      When's the last time you forgot the government existed?

  231. Re:Great. What next? by Blapto · · Score: 1

    Europe wants galileo because at any moment the US is free to pull the plug on GPS. Europe therefore cannot run its affairs on a satellite system that may go down, and should therefore build their own system that they have more control over.
    You cannot own the internet, it's not an entity. You can own the root servers, and that is what the US have, and therefore assume they own the concept of the internet.

  232. Microsoft controls nearly all PCs out there! by cpghost · · Score: 1

    the rest of the world does take their toys and goes home, i.e. "invents" a new internet and leaves us out of it

    There's no need to get hysterical about this. The only contentious point is who controls the DNS root servers, right? If the rest of the world doesn't like DoC keeping control over it; set up an alternate root and point your resolvers to it. That's all!

    Anyway, the world has no problems giving Microsoft a de facto monopoly over their computers: controlling the DNS is their lesser problem!

    --
    cpghost at Cordula's Web.
  233. We started it... by Vegeta99 · · Score: 1

    so it's ours. Dont like it? Get the fuck out.

    1. Re:We started it... by praxis · · Score: 1

      So you propose we cut the international routing? We should then because they're not the only ones who benefit from being able to access our networks. In fact, Vonage should start charging less since they can no longer offer international long distance. Companies should start charging more, since now they can't tunnel over cheap international connections and each and everyone will need to build their own private network, or rent one for a hefty price. Forget projects like Wikipedia that benefit from contributions from around the world. Let's have Americans writing the articles about Germany politics rather than a well educated German who's familiar with the system and lived in it. In fact, forget the rest of the world. Screw 'em. We're the world!

    2. Re:We started it... by Vegeta99 · · Score: 1

      You'd rather have the UN try and run it? I sure don't put much faith in them.

    3. Re:We started it... by praxis · · Score: 1

      It doesn't have to be the UN. The UN is just there already. I imagine something more like ITU. Hell, I'd be happy with ICANN so long as the board membership reflects the true demographics of the world rather than the US corporate elite.

      Also, that post above was meant as sarcasm.

    4. Re:We started it... by Vegeta99 · · Score: 1

      Ok. =) Sorry. Just being a pissy American.

  234. taking from the corrupt.giving it to the corrupt by Danathar · · Score: 1

    I'll take the monster I know (current organization) vs the one I DON'T know (the UN).

    I see only negatives to giving it to the UN. Sure, it would be great if the UN was a relatively honest organization that you could be relatively sure would'nt be bribed. Unfortunately I don't think that's the case.

    Now you could make the argument that the CURRENT owners are just as bad, but I seriously doubt the UN is better. All risk...and relatively NO reward.

  235. The "Oil for IPs" Scandel by Logger · · Score: 1

    Ahh, I can see it now.

  236. Should the U.N. control Microsoft? by cpghost · · Score: 1

    A lot of people are angry at the US and would prefer to put the control of the Internet (actually just the DNS) in the hands of the U.N. Fine. But the world is not unhappy at all that a US company named MSFT controls over 95% or more of their PCs. So what should happen now? Have the U.N. control Microsoft? And Intel? And AMD? Where do you want to draw the line?

    The Internet is fine as it is now, thank you very much. The IETF, RFC, etc... are much more friendly than those unreadable ISO protocols! Please, dear U.N. burocrats: leave the Internet alone. There's no need to break a running system!

    --
    cpghost at Cordula's Web.
    1. Re:Should the U.N. control Microsoft? by praxis · · Score: 1

      You draw the line at infrastructures to which multiple world players have invested and from which multiple world players have benefitted. Like air traffic, telephones, satellites, seafaring, and the Internet. Those are the types of things that need a global body to regulate (with the say of the member states). Private business can be resolved the way it is now, subsidiaries which exist around the globe and are resposible for the local laws and act as abassadors to the foreign lands.

  237. Selfishness, meet Libertarianism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How come there has never been a succesful libertarian country, state, county, or city, anywhere in the world, ever? Other philosophies have at least put their money where their mouth is, come what may. I posit that libertarians are too inherantly selfish, and the system they propose too inherantly flawed to ever work, and this is why we have never seen, nore will we ever see a working libertarian society anywhere, ever.

    1. Re:Selfishness, meet Libertarianism by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, the problem is that libertarianism in government is the LACK of something. In particular, it is the lack of excessive control in any area of government. The United States started with ideals much closer to libertarianism; our founding fathers believed strongly in freedom from government. Please note that the government took but a tiny fraction of our money in taxes 200 years ago. But you see, over time, the lack of control was slowly filled in by worriers, corrupt politicians, mothers against drunk driving, Socialists, decendants of slave owners, con artists, the uneducated, the lazy, the irresponsible, etc. Each layer of control, like a coat of paint, adds little, but over the years we have accumulated a thick layer of sludge over our government's simple beginnings.

      At this point, far too much of the country is unwilling to give up the perceived benefits of every government program that was designed to benefit their demographic. I believe that if they were willing to do so, they would see that everyone willing to work would be better off in the long run. (I see no shame in letting those unwilling to work suffer.) But most people are short sighted, unhappy, dependant creatures with little self-respect or self-control. They have been fed the idea that if only they are selfless enough, they will finally be happy. But we libertarians know better.

  238. Yeah right... by jav1231 · · Score: 1

    Let's see, "America, like your money we the rest of the world expects you to turn over your technology to us as well. Thanks!" True, many technologies on the Internet were developed globally, but it was developed here as an infrastructure. Turning it over to the U.N. is just stupid. Anyone that thinks this is a good thing is frighteningly stupid.

    1. Re:Yeah right... by praxis · · Score: 1

      I think this is a good thing, so I suppose I'm frightfully stupid. Perhaps it's that stupidity that tells me that when the global community has say over an infrastructure, then it will flourish, whereas when a single country controls it it will be used to oppress the Have-nots while empowering the Haves. The ITU has done a wonderful job of making the telephone a viable communication medium for the world. Without such an organization, you have individual country laws that conflict with other laws in other countries. There needs to be a body to resolve such disputes diplomatically. The less chances that state governments get to take foreign companies to court to enforce their laws, the better the economy for those companies. It sucks having to keep track of dozens of different laws around the world to run a web service.

      I don't mind being stupid.

  239. Something like ITU - Not UN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The group handling the RF spectrum has done a good job. I could let a group similar to this handle the internet. But having the UN make decisions and levying taxes (redistribution scheme) is just not going to sit well with the more developed countries. China would just love to have a hand in ramming censorship and putting controls onto all of the users in the world.

    Think about that before turning controls over to the UN.

  240. just what I want... by maxpublic · · Score: 1

    ...an international body which has NO membership requirements setting the rules for the rest of us - including the citizens of my own country, which no organization should have authority over except for the one which I elected.

    How am I supposed to respect a body which not only allows more than 80 brutal dictatorships world-wide to join it's ranks, but to VOTE on what that body should and should not do? Perhaps if the U.N. had a stringent set of rules defining who could and could not join I'd take it more seriously, but as is I won't even give it the time of day.

    Max

    --
    My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    1. Re:just what I want... by praxis · · Score: 1

      I guess that's the same way citizens of countries other than the US feel. Why should they have an organization they did not elect setting the rules for them?

      Are you going to say next that because you disagree with your political oposition that the US government should impose strict membership rules so that people you disagree with don't get a vote? I mean, the US allows some really deranged people to vote, usually for choices that bother me to no end, but I respect the fact that in a democracy, they have a right to speak just as I. The UN is modelled on that prinicple too.

    2. Re:just what I want... by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Why should they have an organization they did not elect setting the rules for them?

      You're right - why should they? I see no benefit in allowing an outside authority to dictate terms to the citizens of your nation. Especially when you're currently the most powerful nation in all of human history.

      but I respect the fact that in a democracy, they have a right to speak just as I.

      The problem with your analogy is that people do, indeed, have a right to vote in the United States. They DO NOT have a right to vote in these dictatorships. So how exactly do these governments represent the interests of their citizens? And even if they did, really - do I want a bunch of fucking religious fanatics dictating what can and cannot be allowed on the internet? Do I want some bunch of uptight pricks in Europe to have the authority to ban certain kinds of free speech, or tell people that they can't sell or trade Nazi memorabilia? Do I want the CHINESE to be able to decide what's allowable and what's not? My answer would be a clear "fuck that, and fuck the horse it rode in on".

      Democracy in and of itself is nothing more than mob rule. Democracy has to be bounded by inalienable rights to be of any real value.

      In any event, it isn't the business of the U.N. to dictate how other nations should conduct their affairs regardless of how the organization is currently being used. Any step towards one-world government is the most hideously bad idea since the Germans thought it'd be a good idea to hand over power to the National Socialists.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    3. Re:just what I want... by praxis · · Score: 1

      I think you misunderstand the purpose of an international body to see after the infrastructure. They would:

      1) Provide a mechanism for addressing and accessing computer across borders. This means structuring DNS, etc. Ensuring standards (like TCP/IP) are upheld.
      2) Perhaps provide a mechanism for filtering content across your borders if you so wish, so China may do its thing if they want, and the US can do its thing if they want.

      That's all. In no way would a government in say Germany have say over the content posted on a US site. In fact, instead of going after the Googles or Yahoos of the world to make sure their laws are enforced, they can go to the international organization to get help setting up filters for things they want filtered.

      I don't see this as anything more than a way for different nations to get along with information availability.

      Regardless of what you or I think about a country's laws on say Nazi memorabilia (for they have their own very personal reasons for it I'm sure), they have the right to have those laws, and an international organization might help them enforce it on their citizens without stomping on the rights of other countries citizens.

      Now, if you disagree with how some governments treat their citizens (those dictatorships you are so afraid of taking over the internet on *our* soil), that's fine. I disagree with many of them too and find their actions horrific. Getting an international organization set up to permit cross border and fair communication is not the way to fight them. It's not like we're asking each country in the world to vote on standards of censorship for the entire world, we're asking the body that assigns IP addresses to be of shared governorship with all internet users, rather than a subset.

    4. Re:just what I want... by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Regardless of what you or I think about a country's laws on say Nazi memorabilia (for they have their own very personal reasons for it I'm sure), they have the right to have those laws, and an international organization might help them enforce it on their citizens without stomping on the rights of other countries citizens.

      And it's incumbent on them to filter the internet on their own, and at their own cost. The Chinese have proven that it can be done, so the nations of the world (and this includes the pansies who throw a hissy fit over something like Nazi memorabilia, or 'hate speech') have no reason to complain that THEIR laws aren't being implemented by OTHER countries, whether individually or through the U.N. If it really bothers them that much they can always ban internet access within their borders.

      The only ways they could 'stomp' on the rights of the citizens of other countries is if these countries cede enough power to them to do the job. So long as things remain as they are the French, for example, will never be able to tell anyone outside of the borders of France what they can or cannot sell.

      It's not like we're asking each country in the world to vote on standards of censorship for the entire world, we're asking the body that assigns IP addresses to be of shared governorship with all internet users, rather than a subset.

      As it stands the system works fine and no one other than the U.S. government is CAPABLE of abusing it. And in this instance (perhaps surprisingly) the U.S. government has given no indication whatsoever that it plans to abuse the system, nor has it done so in the past. A change such as the one you're describing will invite someone, somewhere, to find a way to abuse it simply because they can.

      We're talking about government, after all. And not just one government, but all the governments of the world - the vast majority of which don't value free speech as much as the United States does. You can naively assume that the U.N. will do a bangup job if you like, but I'll stick with the tried-and-true because I see absolutely no reason to change something that works when the alternative isn't going to be any better, and has the potential to be far worse.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
  241. Re:Great. What next? by illc0mm · · Score: 1

    The ITU does not regulate phone service, they simply facilitate standards within the systems/countries much like the IETF does for the Internet already. The UN does not collect taxes on phone service, that I'm aware of, and I've looked a little bit during this discussion.

    Part of the problem with the Internet DNS is that the .com, .net, .org, etc... domain names were created with out thought of the country tlds.

    It would make more sense for the .com, .net, and .org names to go away and all revert back to the country tlds, .uk, .us, etc... This way each country to rule their TLDs as they currently do. I don't think that's going to happen though.

    -illc0mm

  242. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  243. Re:Huh?: Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Too bad that USA is even more lame and corrupt than the UN. Americans cant handle the truth so that is why USA needs to be in control so everything that is said and done can be checked by the Americans so that nothing that is even remotly true will get out. If it would then people might start to realize that USA really doesnt want anyone well and just wants to reinstate slavery once again, except now its Europeans and Arabs that will be under the whip.
    Huh? Paranoid? Not more than americans are about UN. Difference is that USA is a real threat to peace and freedom while UN is not. With UN not much happens but with USA its those who pays most gets all control. Its lots of talk about freedom and such but in reality its nothing more than fancy words.

  244. Thanks, Professor by Danuvius · · Score: 1

    Now you can go back to your high and mighty American ivory tower to work out the next scandel (sic) that threatens mighty America.

    --
    Akarsz Magyar Gentoo fórumot? Akkor
  245. Re:Great. What next? by thestudio_bob · · Score: 1

    It's my understanding (and god forbid I'm wrong) but I thought the GPS system is off by 10 yards, or something to that affect. I'm guessing the rest of the world is a bit paranoid that we've tied a lot of our missle guidance into the information that the GPS system provides That's why the U.S. is threatening to blow up any competing system, they don't want any other country/group to have pin-point accuracy of structures/locations within their borders. I don't think the U.S.'s fear is that a large country is going to attack them, I think it's more about a small group, such as Al-Quida, having a cheap effective means of pin-pointing targets.

    --
    The real Sig captains the Northwestern. This one captains /.
  246. Jesus is coming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sounds strange to me but yet familiar! I hope it does happen if only because the day is coming closer and closer.

  247. The UN or the Swiss? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Which is the best argument for not giving the Intenet to the UN:

    1. Corruption

    2. Incompetence

    3. Toadying up to dictatorships

    The U.S. is far from perfect, but it's light years ahead of the UN. Something that 'ain't broke' certainly should not be sent to an organization that's been proven incompetent. The only people who'd do a better job of managing it than the U.S. are the Swiss, but they're too small to tell the UN bureaucrats to take a hike. And their secretative banking laws make me wonder about undue influence from covert money.

    --Mike Perry, Seattle

  248. Misoanthropy rising! Must .. resist... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
    This is the kind of thing that makes me think, "Damn. People really suck."

    The situation with numbers is a little trickier, but when it comes to names, US control is entirely defacto. Anyone who doesn't like the US having the final word, can simply decide the US doesn't, and that's that. Point your resolver at a different set of servers.

    Everyone is free to do this. But they don't want to. They don't really want to be free or determine things for themselves; they want to control others. It's not enough that you can use OpenNIC or whatever -- you want to force other people to do the same. Everyone essentially votes on who is in control, and ICANN is still getting 99% of the votes, and that is pissing some people off. But instead of educating the voters, they want to essentially take over ICANN's defacto authority.

    This is wrong. Your laziness in this regard, is the very reason your politicians (completely outside the scope of internet issues) suck. You're just like us Americans who are too cowardly to vote for someone other than republicans and democrats, so we try to influence the republicans and democrats and then wonder why our elected leads still do the wrong things.

    Voters have to take responsibility and vote intelligently. Quit fucking with the candidates, that's not the answer.

  249. How will this make YOUR life better? by Shuh · · Score: 1



    It won't.

    Everyone is always so concerned about other people getting ripped off, it never occurs to them that the "cure" is worse than the disease.

    The "U.N. first" crowd would rather have a million of us send $1 to some U.N. Goon Squad in Nigeria than have all of us free while some dumbass wires $1,000,000 to an anonymous Nigerian con-man. It's 6 of one, a half dozen of the other.

    Either an anonymous dumbass gets burned every once in a while or the whole of responsible computer users (you and me) get burned with new taxes and regulations every year. Gee, that's a hard call.

  250. ICANN's Intellectual Property Unilateralism by billstewart · · Score: 1
    There's only one kind of IP that ICANN cares about, and it's Intellectual Property, not the Internet Protocol. It's been extremely strident in insisting that everybody who participates in the registry and registrar processes must Respect their Authoritay, particularly about trademark disputes, and as part of that they insist on every registry and registrar violating every domain name user's privacy by requiring complete whois contact information and publishing all of it, so that trademark-lawsuit summonses and subpoenas can be delivered to the domain name owner, no matter what spammers may do with it or what political-correctness-enforcing governments may want to do with it or what violations of European data privacy laws it may cause. That's a significant expansion of the uses of whois's real functions, and it's a core part of their agenda.

    There are other governments, such as China, that *like* doing this sort of thing to their citizens, and much of this WSISness is because they'd like to get ICANN-like powers to do it more effectively.

    From a technical perspective, ICANN hasn't done a good job with Internationalized Domain Names, which is a serious problem because there are lots of counties where people need to use other character sets, and while Verisign came up with a couple of horribly botched approaches to the problem that worked for the web, didn't work adequately for email, and were totally useless for other protocols, the problem still needs to be solved. China's been threatening to split the root about it, though they could perfectly well hang anything they want under .cn and get the same effects. There are less serious issues (we really could use some more TLDs, and they've interfered with experimentation that could support alternate policies; .museum is the only TLD that's done anything interesting.) They decided to set a price on IPv6 space, which somewhat hindered IPv6 deployment in the US, though that's mainly a Cisco/Microsoft issue at this stage.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
  251. Let's not and say we did. by Britz · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Before I go on, please aknowledge that I am from Germany and I think the UN is a great idea.

    It is really bad as it is now. Every independent board member that has overseen ICAAN actions has said this. But putting it into the hands of the UN per se would just make matters much worse.

    Also I have the strong feeling that many people don't have the slightest clue what the UN really is and what it does. The funny thing is everyone seems to have an opinion about it. Either they hate it or love it or like it or dislike it. Germans like it and left leaning Americans like it. French like it and conservative Americans dislike it. I don't know about Americans, but I know that Germans don't have a clue what it is they like.

    Some basics:
    The UN is made up of different bodies to which countries are elected. Each world region (like Africa or Asia) has a certain quota for how many countries they can vote into a certain comitee. Then there are also organizations for specific purposes. Like UNAIDS or the UN high comissionare for refugees.

    The UN is very good for diplmacy for example. All nations can go there and resolve conflicts instead of starting wars. Granted, it hasn't work very good and could be made better, but I don't see any alternative. Kofi Annan for example pushed through some very important reforms in his first two years of office.

    Anyways, I could go on for hours, but maybe You can just check their webpage. It is quite informative.

    Just reading the UN Charta would most likely be very invormative to many people here I suppose.

    The UN is many, many things at the same time. Maybe if a sensible set of rules would be put together for some kind of organization under the UN umbrella it would appear international and at the same time remain efficient. But is not going to happen anyways. So keep cool and keep cursing Verisign and their control over ICANN.

    1. Re:Let's not and say we did. by Teancum · · Score: 1

      Did you ever read the proposal for ICANN at-large members? If not that is too bad in many ways.

      The proposal called for 5 regions world-wide, and each board member had to be elected by direct ballot cast from each region by ordinary internet users. The process of qualifying wasn't that hard, but you had to prove that you were unique, with a hard snail-mail address. Ballot stuffing could happen, but it was quite difficult.

      The result? It actually happened. ICANN, in their infinite wisdom killed the idea.... after the board members were actually elected and serving on the governing board (in closed meetings that the at-large members weren't invited to attend).

      I wish that non-US government regulatory bodies had been complaining back then with the same kind of gusto as they seem to be doing right now, and it might have been that the at-large board members would be running the show right now, and not a bunch of stupid self-interested board members who don't care.

    2. Re:Let's not and say we did. by sita · · Score: 1

      The UN is very good for diplmacy for example. All nations can go there and resolve conflicts instead of starting wars. Granted, it hasn't work very good and could be made better, but I don't see any alternative.

      How do you mean that? It doesn't work, but it is an excuse for not trying something else, so it is actually causing harm. It is a bit like dowsing for finding avalanche victims. It doesn't work, and if you do that, and not send out the dogs, people die.

      (This is about the political branch of the UN, the agencies do a whole lot of useful work. Not all of them all of the time, but in general one could claim it is working.)

  252. Re:Hmm.. How do you say "Fuck 'Em" in French? by praxis · · Score: 1

    Well, we can own TCP/IP sure, but to be fare, lets give up HTTP. I mean Switzerland is not the US. It was developed to *not* share information, so why should we use it to do so?

    ARGHH. Sorry, I'm just for the fact that the world contributing to a project has led to the Internet to be what it is today. I think if we were to go your route, the Internet should have stayed in the US military because once you remove the ability of research institutions around the world from sharing knowledge leading to the greater good of humankind, all that's left is spam, web advertising, IM, and rubbish. We have plenty of equivalent things outside the net so why add to it?

  253. GDP per capita 135% higher by GPS+Pilot · · Score: 1

    The upper end of your range is correct. U.S. GDP per capita is $40,100 -- 135% of the U.K. GDP per capita ($29,600).

    --
    That that is is that that that that is not is not.
  254. US to retain what? by AnotherBlackHat · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The idea that the US is currently in control of the internet is already silly.

    The other root servers could stop mirroring A, ISPs could stop pointing to the current root servers, or the end users could stop using their ISPs domain servers.

    If the UN wants to set up and control their own root server, they should just do it, there's nothing stopping them.

    -- Should you trust authority without question?

    1. Re:US to retain what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have yet to see a post wherein anyone here acknowledges why the US has as much control over the Internet as they do and why they should maintain it. (I acknowledge I haven't read all the posts here- too much leftist 'UN is great' bullshit to sort through.)

      That reason is the fact that the US fucking built the motherfucker with our tax dollars. Fuck these nothing little asswipes throughout the world. This is our technology that for obvious reasons we thought should be distributed throughout the world. Ultimately, though, it is ours- YANKEE INGENUITY, MOTHERFUCKERS!!!!

  255. Re:Great. What next? by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1
    Europe wants galileo because at any moment the US is free to pull the plug on GPS. Europe therefore cannot run its affairs on a satellite system that may go down, and should therefore build their own system that they have more control over.

    Maybe it is me but that sounds like "the sky is falling" by chicken little. If the US pulled the plug on GPS, there would be a lot of very upset people over here. I know pilots that rely on it more than the traditional nav aids (which is a very bad thing when the battery dies). Whoever did it would have to have an extreamly good reason for doing so, even then would risk being tarred and feathered. Maybe your right, perhaps Europe doesn't know how to trust other people. Even a country that has demonstrated a willingness to help Europe so many times in the past, even at great cost in lives and money. Indeed if I had a choice I think I would rely on GPS rather than Galileo. I think GPS would be more likely to stay up, Europeans like to fight back and forth (shoot in foot disease).

    Interesting you think the internet is not an entity. Entity refers to a separate existance, if the Internet doesn't exist then what are we all using? It does exist, as a bunch of interconnected wires, routers, computers and so on. Back before the internet was allowed to go public, clearly the US Government owned it. You would go to a US jail for misusing it and a few did. They regulated every aspect of it. Today I understand they have the legal right to regulate most of it, however they choose not to. Again, it would really not be in their interest to do that. They know if it is screwed up, then the internet will splinter, maybe into a million pieces. It may never recover. Nobody wants that.

  256. Re:Great. What next? by ahillen · · Score: 1

    The UN does not collect taxes on phone service, that I'm aware of, and I've looked a little bit during this discussion.

    The fundamental discussion is about whether such essential things like the allocation of address space or the creation of TLDs in an international network should be the responsibility of an international organisation or if it should be controlled by one country alone. I personally would prefer the former. I see that the linked article also mentions the possibility of impossing an 'internet tax', which in my book is something completely unnecessary. But it's not like you can't have the former without the later. One should not take the most stupid suggestion made in relation with an international internet organisation as an argument to reject the whole thing in general.
    Of course the international organisation should have as few responsibilities as possible, but enough to make the decissions necessary to prevent the fragmentation of the network. That includes the assignment of address space and decissions about TLDs, but surely not any taxation powers or any decision about how the individual countries handle their TLDs.

  257. Ok, umm, hell no by halr9000 · · Score: 1

    "perhaps even the power to tax domain names to pay for 'universal access.'"

    I am *not* paying a tax for which I have at least some measure of direct or indirect control, sorry.

    Hello...American Revolution, Boston Tea Party...

    I don't trust the UN to take good care of my money.

  258. Oh hell no... by AxemRed · · Score: 1

    I don't care if some sort of international organization takes the reigns, but I don't like the U.N. Really, a trade or technology group would be better suited than a political one.

  259. Re:Great. What next? by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

    Used to be off by about that much because the signal was intentionally encrypted. That was turned off years ago so now they are within 3 feet depending on terrain. Sometimes my handheld seems to work down to 6 inches.

  260. Have you seen the catfish by halr9000 · · Score: 1
    for example, declaring the Vietnamese catfish as not being a catfish, to subsidize the US catfish industry
    Have you seen the catfish that grow in Asia? I mean DAMN. That really wouldn't be fair. Let's get some weight classes going here. :)
  261. Re:Great. What next? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As others have said... it wasn't international... ever really. It was founded and funded by the USA and eventually, other nations plugged into it to use it. With your logic, every country in the world should control everyone else's economies, since they all take a part in it.

  262. booo on the UN by compufixaz · · Score: 1

    Alright Algore. Where are ya? You invented this thing and Kofi wants you to give it up. On a serious note, the UN will kill the internet. Just kill it. Do we really need another power hungry politician running something they don't understand?

  263. UN 'progress' by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    And which one of those effect me? None. Most were a waste of time and energy.

    What does domain control have to do with 'internet control'? Its the foot in the door.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:UN 'progress' by Big_Al_B · · Score: 1

      And which one of those effect me? None.

      Uh, okay. But see, your comment was that the UN doesn't do things skillfully, not that "the UN doesn't do things that affect me."

      Besides, may I ask how you keep from coming into contact with diseases cured and/or managed by UN efforts? Do you oversee the hygiene and travel itineraries of your friends, family, coworkers, as well as all the random folks you run into at the supermarket? Or do you rely on health organizations that you're apparently not even aware of to constantly analyze and neutralize contageous disease vectors whenever and wherever possible? My guess is te latter.

      Most were a waste of time and energy.

      Are you fucking kidding me? Personally, I'm confident that right-minded folks overwhelmingly believe that fighting disease and preventing human deaths--regardless of politics--is worth someone's time and energy.

      What does domain control have to do with 'internet control'? Its the foot in the door.

      The foot in the door of what? You clearly have no technical understanding of the technical issues involved and are just jerking your knee to a nationalist anti-UN tune.

      So you don't like the UN. Fine. The internet is international, and eventually, the US will lose its monoply control over IP-space and TLDs. If it's not the UN, it will be the ITU or a new treatied organizaton. It's inevitable.

  264. Just a thought... by Bent+Mind · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Just a thought... Why not have the UN setup a root name server that handles county names. For example: .us for the US, .uk for the UK, etc. Then each country could run their own name severs and have any extension they want. For example .com.us or .xxx.fr

    As for taxation, enforcement, or any other government action, forget it. I might consider it if I were allowed to vote (directly or through representation) on any regulations involved.

    --
    Request a Linux Shockwave player here: http://www.macromedia.com/support/email/wishform/
  265. Such attacks are not about the UN by einhverfr · · Score: 3, Interesting


    From a year ago for example, a large number of leading indicators showed progress in Iraq's infrastructure. Compare that to the Congo or Haiti in which the UN is running peacekeeping operations.


    Pardon me for being Mr. Obvious here but there is a big difference from running a peacekeeping operation and trying to rebuild a country after largely destroying it (first with sanctions, then with bombs).

    "Men from roughly 50 different countries make up the U.N. forces in Congo, and the United Nations does not conduct background checks. Furthermore, U.N. troops are exempt from prosecution in Congo."

    Can you say "International Criminal Court?"

    While the US has made mistakes on the ground dealing with Iraqi and Afghani Prisoners and civilians, at least widespread allegations of sexual exploitation and abuse of women, boys and girls havn't been happening like they are happening in the Congo.

    As others have pointed out, this never happend in Vietnam or anything, right?

    Also a lot of this type of activity in the Congo has been happening between the warring factions. Sorry, but blaming the UN for their actions is like blaming the US when insurgents attack an Iraqi police station.

    "Didier Bourguet, a U.N. official from France, is pictured here in an image found on his hard drive, which was obtained by ABC News. Also on the hard drive were thousands of photos of him having sex with hundreds of young Congolese girls."

    If that is the case, then someone has an obligation to prosecute him. IANAL, but last time I checked, I think the country of nationality had the first right to prosecute in these matters, followed by the country where the crimes were committed, and following that, there is no reason why the ICC couldn't prosecute. Oh, wait, the ICC is a dirty word here in the US, sorry I forgot...

    I would further point out that there is a large contingent of French, British, and German troops in the Congo under the EU (*not* NATO) flag, the first EU peacekeeping deployment outside Europe.

    People forget that a large extent of the issue is that conservatives (the media insofar as most large media outlets are owned by other corporations such as Disney, GE, etc have inherent in their organizations a conservative bias) are largely upset that the US is no longer the dominant power in the world (except militarily). Every major trade war with the EU has ended in a US defeat. The EU has a larger population and a higher per GDP than the US. And the have two permanent seats on the UNSC, and many seats in both the GA and the WTO. Compare that to *1* for the US in each organization.

    We in the US can hold our own against China and any other nationalist state. However, because we don't see internationalism as a worthy goal, we cannot hold our own against states who work together to set up common economic policy, as the EU has done.

    Note that the parent poster, like many, seems to equate the UN with "France" and/or "Germany." This is further evidence of the building propaganda war against the EU. But what will happen if the EU ends up with three seats on the UNSC at some point (if, say, Russia were to join)?

    I fear we are heading into a new type of cold war against an opponent we cannot hope to defeat. Thanks "New American Century..."

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
    1. Re:Such attacks are not about the UN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The EU economy is stagnating, and the common monetary policy is dragging down the few EU states that are doing well. There have been rumblings about abandoning the Euro, because the booming economies and the recessing economies have different monetary needs (regarding inflation, interest rates, etc.)

      Plus, European politics have been in shambles since the French rejection of the EU Constitution. Which is too bad, really.

      And yes, while the EU (which is not really a single state) has a slightly higher total GDP, it has a much lower GDP per capita. ($30k vs. $40k)

      Sources:
      EU
      US

      And I'll post anonymously so I'm not tempted to waste anymore time on this.

    2. Re:Such attacks are not about the UN by einhverfr · · Score: 1

      I don't deny that the EU has some fairly major challenges at the moment. These include a number of countries (France in particular) who have felt that they can ignore budgetary requirements and run excessive deficits, Poland's feeling that they are not well represented in the EU, and the fact that Chirac has made a number of serious blunders in how he presented the EU Constitution to the French people.

      However....

      US companies are increasingly under pressure to operate under EU standards. For example, with regard to environmental standards (leadless circuit boards, for example), and many other areas. This is because the EU for all its current faults is still stronger economically than the US.

      The EU's current problems seem to stem to a large part from the recent expansion into Eastern Europe. This meant the melding of the Eastern European economies with the more established Western European economies. This has caused a large number of problems and we will see how easy it is to put things back together.

      I think that in the end (in another 5-10 years), this is likely to be a bump in the road, but it may significantly slow EU expansion, esp into areas such as Turkey or other former Soviet republics.

      There is the chance, of course, that this could sink the ship so to speak, but currently I don't think that is likely.

      Finally I find it interesting that people are *still* trying to pit the US vs. France/Germany as a way of framing this argument even after it became apparent that Italy was likely to send the arrest warrants for the 13 CIA agents they were able to trace to the kidnapping of a terror suspect in Milan to Interpol and possibly even as the US for extradition. This is *far* bigger than France and/or Germany. It is a fight about gunboat diplomacy (US) vs. internationalism (EU). In 10 years, we may not have any allies over there.

      --

      LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  266. Re:Standardization (Where is OSI?) by calidoscope · · Score: 1
    Assigning Internet authority to the UN would not only benefit in the short term, but would have gigantic benefits in long term global communication. The benefits from a continual standardized network is beneficial beyond our recognition.

    Question for you: Why is "the internet" running TCP/IP (+ UDP/IP, etc.) and not OSI?

    Simple reason, TCP/IP was created by technologists who wanted a working system, rather than a bureaucracy. The general rule with IETF was that a working implementation was needed before a standard would be accepted.

    Reminds me of a joke about OSI: OSI is to networking as Bary Manilow is to music - something that is supposed to please everyone, but manages to repulsive to everyone.

    --
    A Shadeless room is a brighter room.
  267. ahahaha by toiletmonster · · Score: 1

    that was a good laugh.

  268. they ate their milk producing animals by guet · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Africa's real problem is that they ate the milk producing cows and goats. That's after they slaughtered the rest of the herd that was going to breed the next generation. This is because they got desperate and ate next year's seed instead of planting it. Everytime the rest of the world trys to kickstart their food production with breeding stock or seeds, they just eat it.

    I thought I'd seen it all on slashdot, but your summation of hundreds of years of colonial exploitation and invasions, arbitrarily defined states (often encompassing many ethnic groups) which war with each other over resources, corrupt government, civil war and finally skewed trade laws which make it impossible to climb out of poverty as

    'they ate their milk producing animals'

    really does take my breath away.

    If the UN know what they're doing, they'll surely be rushing lots of well informed teenage geniuses like yourself over to sort it out right now.

    1. Re:they ate their milk producing animals by TheGavster · · Score: 1

      While the GP is wrong to lump all of Africa's problems under a single heading, I think he does have a point with the trade argument: If you can't sell your agricultural products, how are you starving? Sounds like you've got more food than you need!

      --
      "Because Science" is one step from "Because old book". Try "Because of my experiment testing my falsifiable assertion".
    2. Re:they ate their milk producing animals by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. American education system has really
      produced some fine specimens that should be sent to Africa, immediately, for education.

      'they ate their milk producing animals'

      Indeed. And since you don't know, US businesses are these days mostly exporting and selling GM manipulated seed that is TERMINATED. Meaning that the plants can't produce seeds that will grow or produce any offspring.

      And I better not even get into the AIDS drugs business.

    3. Re:they ate their milk producing animals by Maian · · Score: 1
      Although I don't know what the Africans are farming, but there's a type of agriculture known as "cash crops". Most famous example: tobacco. Try eating tobacco, why don't you.

      Also, there are other basic necessities than food. You know, water and shelter. And guess what they'll need for at least one of those: cash. Hence, the cash crops.

    4. Re:they ate their milk producing animals by GnarlyNome · · Score: 1

      Some people learn from books some from experience
      and some just have to piss on the electric fence
      (will Rodgers 1879-1935 )

      --
      Diplomacy is the art of saying "Nice doggie" until you can find a rock. Will Rogers
    5. Re:they ate their milk producing animals by stuartkahler · · Score: 0

      I seem to have pissed off a lot of people by being politically incorrect with the truth. I wasn't trying to assess blame, but the problem.

      There was a nightline (I believe) program recently about a girl who was simply given a goat to help her earn money for her family. No other assistance. She was able to go to grade school in Africa with the milk money instead of working all day long. She eventually was able to come to the US to attend college. All because someone gave her a goat. A goat. A goat and a lot of hard work was what it took for her to become an educated, world traveled woman.

      Now maybe I wasn't clear about who is ruining things. It's not necessarily the owner of the cow or hen who is eating it. In fact, it's usually someone stealing it for food. It's typically the local armies who steal next year's seed to eat now. Or a neighbor eats your goat because his only other alternative is to die, and your goat will keep his family alive for another month. These are desperate people who have to stay alive today before they can worry about next year.

      Yes, my analysis of one of Africa's problems only looks at a single part of Africa's situation, but if I could analyze the totality of Africa's situation in a single /. post, I'd be working for Newsweek or Time, not posting about Africa on a 'tech news for nerds' site. The fact is though, we need to stop sending them fish, and start sending them hooks and nets, if I may get biblical on you. We keep air-dropping enough food to last to the end of the month and then we walk away. Six months later we wonder why they're starving again. We spend billions rebuilding the cities we bombed in Iraq, but can't build schools in southern Africa. We rebuild the oil pipelines Saddam sabotaged but can't build irrigation pipes to fields in southern Africa. We're training a fresh new Millitary in Iraq, but can't help set up an accountable police force in southern Africa. And what little we actually do send always seems to end up in the hands of the local warlords that we want to get rid of.

      If you want to talk about trade laws keeping them down, then please inform the rest of us about what they actually have to trade. It's obviously not food. Is it the endangered lion skins, or the elepant tusks? Maybe it's the diamonds that have made DeBeers and everyone else involved rich, except for the people actually digging them up. Perhaps I'm uninformed about the fine automobiles they make that I can't buy because of unfair trade practices. My personal analysis of Africa's situation is that they're mostly at the hunter-gatherer step zero, not step one. Before they build cell phone towers, airports, tourist traps, factories and hotels, they need to produce food. Agriculture is the first step of every civilization, not f$#@!%g universal internet access.

      If the UN know what they're doing,
      They obviously don't, because all they're sending now is actors and musicians. Maybe Madonna can do a rain dance for next year's harvest. They only talk about 'debt relief' for countries that have long since defaulted on the loans anyway. Nobody in the UN cared about millions getting killed until someone attached the word 'genocide' to it. They still don't care about half a continent of people starving to death. The UN is still busy patting itself on the back for ending apartheid(sp?).

      And it's been more than 10 years since I was a teenager.

    6. Re:they ate their milk producing animals by stuartkahler · · Score: 1

      US businesses are these days mostly exporting and selling GM manipulated seed that is TERMINATED
      There are still many non-GM sources of seed. The USA doesn't have the patent on non-GM corn, wheat, rice or soybeans. The fact is that most sold seed is GM because most non-GM farmers don't need to purchase seed for next year because they have plenty from the previous crop. The only reason you ever have to buy seed is if your previous crop got wiped out, you're changing crops or you need a new variety to fight against a new disease. Go ask an Amish farmer how much seed he has to buy each year, and then tell me about his GM terminated seed woes.

      Finding non-GM seed for africa isn't the problem. Getting that seed into african soil is the problem.

      What does the aids drug business have to do with the african food shortage, aside from also being one of africa's major problems?

    7. Re:they ate their milk producing animals by stuartkahler · · Score: 1

      there are other basic necessities than food. You know, water and shelter
      If you can grow crops, you obviously have water. Add dirt and grass or straw to make bricks. If you can grow tobacco, you have the resources for food, water and shelter.

      The minority of africans (no pun intended) that may be farming cash crops aren't the starving ones, though.

  269. a trade? by Easy2RememberNick · · Score: 1

    The US can keep the Internet, but Canada wants back insulin.

    (btw Africa is not a country, it's a continent.)

  270. Israel by einhverfr · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The League of Nations planted the seeds for WWII and the UN created Israel to plant the seeds for WWIII. This single act contributed more to make terrorism the worldwide phenomena that it is today than anything. The lobbying efforts of the arms dealers paid off very handsomly.

    You don't get off so lightly. What about the Carter (and later Reagan) Administration's "Join the Jihad" campaign aimed at recruiting militant Islamists and getting them together in Afghanistan (with training from the US) to fight the Soviets?

    See, it is all the fault of two presidents from different political parties... At least as far as Al Qaeda and any collegiate international terrorism organization goes.

    And Regarding Israel--- The history of the founding of Israel between WWI and 1949 is quite interesting and full of material that will make almost anybody uncomfortable regardless of political disposition. However, it was all started by the British who claim to have wanted to reward those Jews who fought for Britain in WWI by trying to promote British Palestine as a place where they could go to as a homeland provided that the existing Palestinians were not displaced (read the Balfour Declaration). The time between the end of WWI and 1949 was full of terrorism on the part of the Zionists and Arabs (continuing today often on both sides despite efforts of moderates on either side). And, most interestingly, the attempted collaboration between the ELHI brotherhod (in part lead by Yitzak Shameer) and Hitler (one might add that the ELHI brotherhood had no shortage of good things to say about the Nazis). As punishment for his efforts and sympathies, Shameer was later elected Prime Minister which should tell you a lot about Israeli politics.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  271. Re:Great. What next? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I expect those whiny Euro poofter-weenies will next want us to turn the GPS system over to the U.N., too.

    Well, there is an important difference between GPS and the internet. GPS was developed, built and operated by the US, so it belongs to the American tax payer who paid for it. This is not true for the internet, contrary to what many people here seem to believe. Sure, the original development was done in the US, the result was released as open standards (we all love open standards, right?). But the internet as it exists today was built by a lot of cooperations, and by a lot of national entities. Do you truely believe that the part of the internet connection British (or French, or Italian, or German...) universities is built and operated by the US? Or wasn't it rather paid for by the respective tax payers?

    That the internet seems is working as one single network is based on
    a) the US opening the core protocolls as open standards
    b) the US being willing to allocate address space to operators in other countries
    c) the other countries being willing to accept US control over the address space for the sake of interoperability.

    If tomorrow all countries outside the US would agree to forget about the root servers and use their own address space, they would not take anything away from the US that is US property.

  272. Iraq and Congo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >>From a year ago for example, a large number of leading indicators showed progress in Iraq's infrastructure. Compare that to the Congo or Haiti in which the UN is running peacekeeping operations.

    Well, somebody first destroyed Iraq a year ago, if you remember correctly.

    And somebody else did not destroy Congo and Haiti.

  273. Who's Your Daddy? by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

    Look, fucko (not that there's anything wrong with that) - she's already gone. And she's KNOCKED UP! You're a grandpappy - the one she learned all her tricks from. And now she's got a new sugardaddy. You can't hold her - the most you can expect is pictures of the grandkids.

    "Ha! But if in our fears, we don't learn to trust each other
    And if in our tears, we don't learn to share with your brother
    You know that hate is gonna keep on multiplying
    And you know that man is gonna keep right on dying"
    - Funkadelic, "You and Your Folks, Me and My Folks"

    --

    --
    make install -not war

  274. A bad idea for sure. by stock · · Score: 1

    You really want the U.N. to take care of your currently fine working Internet? You know, the internet, where any person without much trouble can setup his own Web and Blog site? Is the current state of affairs in the Internet world not the best example of freedom of speech and expression in full action?

    And now you want the U.N. to take care of that?

    The same U.N. which comes in action at places, after which a couple years later the complete area is still in turmoil, people dying of AIDS, young girls forced in prostitution, the African continent at the brink of dying after 50 years of U.N. Aid, Afghanistan getting promoted to the premier export country of Opium , Heroin etc. ?

    No Thanks,

    Robert

  275. I, AC, do ehereby nominate John Bolton az prez! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    by the power invested in me by the power of AC. One Net under some farking God, or not, or just code or whatever but most certainly Natalie Portman.

    John Bolton for rezident President of the Intern-nets!

  276. cBS is right wing, too by spun · · Score: 1

    They are owned by a big media conglomerate that serves the interest of its wealthy shareholders, and that is to brainwash ignorant chimps like you into spouting their lies for them. Which you have done admirably. Your corporate masters will be proud of you.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  277. I would agree, except that by einhverfr · · Score: 1

    the big problem is that the US has not only decided to continue with its control past the experation date (Vietnam reunification anyone?) but has actually decided to increase its involvement. This is something that everyone on all sides of the spectrum should oppose.

    If you think the status quo is best, then oppose the efforts of the Department of Commerce to make themselves the approval point for any changes. If you think that this is a symptom of the fact that one country controls what should essentially be a global public good, then let the UN take control.

    But don't give the US government total power over DNS. That is opposed to the ideology of pretty much everyone except, perhaps, those currently in office...

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  278. It Just Doesn't Matter,,, by Slugster · · Score: 2, Informative

    Okay, that was really a sly off-the-cuff remark, but it did get me thinking again today; it really doesn't matter if parts are moved to poor countries, because users would find ways around mismanaged portions anyway a la' Freenet.
    .....
    -And a bit later I thought a third time (in one day, possibly a record for me) that this is exactly the reason why it shouldn't be moved into any country that doesn't already have the IT network in place to handle it. Anything moved to a cesspool country and mismanaged to the point of impracticality would just get adapted "out-of-the-loop" anyway, by whatever means necessary. If you collect a list of countries that really have the network capacity in place already for a major piece of this pie, the plan doesn't sound so unreasonable.

    But then again, somehow I just know the UN would end up moving most of it into Iran, Sudan and Haiti.... ,BR> To call the UN incompetent isn't accurate.
    The UN is more like a giant prehistoric incompetency, from thirty million years ago when huge lumbering pea-brained incompetencies roamed the earth.

  279. The language is not as forcefull as ammendment I by zippthorne · · Score: 2, Insightful

    See that's the thing, in the US, we have a document that plainly states, "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."

    Then follows up with ammendment 10,
    "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."

    and 9,
    "The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people."

    To specifically deny certain powers to the government. It does not explicitely state what the rights of the people are, only that there are certain rights endowed by the creator, which the document is designed to protect.

    The article you mentioned implies that the source of the rights is the document itself, which grants the signors a certain elasticity wrt changing those rights for you.

    That is the difference between the US constitution and so many other founding documents worldwide; It is there delineate the bounds beyond which government may not go. Other documents seek to declare certain rights to the people.

    --
    Can you be Even More Awesome?!
  280. MODERATION ABUSE!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's interesting to see this perfectly reasonable post get modded down as "troll", while all the arguments that argue against it get modded up.

    Hey mods, they either all are troll or not. I like how you mod people who have different opinions than yours. this is blatant abuse, and should be rectified by the editors.

  281. The US Inventing the UN, History Lesson by tjstork · · Score: 1

    The United States did invent the United Nations.

    The United Nations had in its genesis the League of Nations, advocated by the American President Woodrow Wilson. Impressed with the ideas of the League but also mindful of its failures was the young politician Franklin Delano Roosevelt.

    When World War II was fought, it was through Roosevelt's insistence that the United Nations was founded. Roosevelt though, like Wilson, felt that the United Nations should ideally only apply to Democratic Nations. Unfortunately, he had to get Stalin on board the United Nations and in doing so ruined it.

    For historical reference, please read the original Atlantic Charter, and also the text of Wilson's request for war against Germany in 1917.

    --
    This is my sig.
    1. Re:The US Inventing the UN, History Lesson by iCEBaLM · · Score: 1

      So arrogant you americans, the Atlantic Charter was conceived and negotiated by FDR and Winston Churchill, it was not a sole US "invention". FDR came up with the name "United Nations" but do not kid yourself that the US was the only country involved.

      As for the League of Nations the US wasn't even a member because it was so ineffective! I wouldn't even want to claim responsibility for that mess.

    2. Re:The US Inventing the UN, History Lesson by tjstork · · Score: 1

      The British Empire and the Soviet Union had no real used for the United Nations. Churchill signed on board because Roosevelt goaded him into it and Churchill needed to get the United States into the war.

      The facts of the matter is:

      We arrogant Americans created the League of Nations, then refused to join it.

      We arrogant Americans created the United Nations, and now some of us think it has outlawed its usefulness.

      Of course other nations got their two cents worth in, but, the United Nations and present structure of the world was driven by the United States primarily.

      --
      This is my sig.
  282. Re:Great. What next? by dvdsmith · · Score: 1

    Yeah, your right. If I'd thought about it for a sec, I would have said that it runs on top of it, not that it "depends" on it. I agree that the internet is bigger than any one country and arguments over who started it all are largely pointless. However, I also believe that at least its working for now and would very hesitant to hand it over to a body where nations such as China would better position to implement changes making it easier to restrict the free exchange of information. This wouldn't just be a problem for freedom speech in oppressive nation. This would in time provide tools to those in the "free world" less concerned with free speech than restricting speech whereever they might find offense. Its kind of like what the "smart" bomb has done to modern warfare. It is more effective and less likely to cause collateral damage, so there is a better chance it will actually be used. The end result can be a matter of debate.

    --
    "Build something idiot proof, and someone will build a better idiot" - Samuel Clemens
  283. Re:American's also have cheap farm labor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Shut up, you self-rightious prick.

    All Africa needs is an educated and elightened individual, like yourself, to jolly well tell them what to do, and everything will be alright. Where have we heard this before?

    Moron.

  284. Trying to take over the world by brakken · · Score: 1

    Just like they leech off of our tax money and give it to countries who would like to kill us (live8) now they want complete control over the Internet too. The UN are the real terrorists!

    --
    [ brakken ]
  285. screw the UN by p51d007 · · Score: 1

    If they want to screw up the web, put the UN in charge of it. Within a matter of years, the web will be so screwed up, it won't work anymore. And their fix will be like anything else. Have the countries that have money, pour more money into it. If I were the USA, I'd tell the UN to go take a flyin' leap off a short pier. The United States Government STARTED the net with DARPA, so it should stay in the USA. All these other countries, if they think they can do a better job, go out and invent one yourself!

  286. Lactose Intolerance by Luthair · · Score: 1

    Apparently you haven't heard that the most of the world is Lactose Intolerant and cannot eat milk products. I think missing something that major disqualifies you as an expert.

    1. Re: Lactose Intolerance by stuartkahler · · Score: 1

      Are they also intolerant of goat's milk (contains lactose?). The example also applies 100% with people eating productive hens.

      If prevalent lactose intolerance were the only issue, all the lactose intolerant people would die and the people who can break down lactose properly would thrive. That's not the case.

  287. N.U...Not U.N. by DrSoCold · · Score: 1

    "Apparently the rest of the world isn't happy about the US franchise on internet governance"

    Correction, the media are not happy about the US governing the internet and want to create some silly U.S bashing stories. Nobody asked me what I thought.

    This U.N you speak of, is it not N.U?. Meaning "Not Us"?.
    Because that's the answer they seem to give to every damn problem that does require them to put their hands in their pockets for cash and their bullets in their rifles for action.

    Is this the same N.U that let 8000 muslims get slaughtered in the balkans during the mid 90's?
    Is this also the same N.U that let 1million Rwandans get slaughtered in the 90's?
    Finally, is this the same N.U that let 4000 americans get slaughtered in new york 9/11 by not noticing a terror network maturing in their back yard?.

    U.N my foot. Feed them to the donkeys. Let them stick to what they do best....nothing.

    1. Re:N.U...Not U.N. by yaweh · · Score: 1
      youre fucking crazy. youre rambling on about the UN "let" those things happen, the US also "let" those things happen. i would agree that the UN is not exactly perfect, but for you to just sit there and bash the UN is kinda ugly. besides, how are bullets in rifles going to fix problems with the internet, like theft, scam, child porn, etc?

      and your typical paranoia about "the liberal media", its old already, nobody's buying it anymore. if things like facts, events, science, reason, logic are "liberal", then "liberal" is synonomous with "intelligent".

      --
      "There was no sex." - hoggoth
    2. Re:N.U...Not U.N. by DrSoCold · · Score: 1

      Try to stay on topic.

      "the liberal media", its old already, nobody's buying it anymore"

      The media is rubbish, journalists suck. Nobody's buying it? Are you already past saving then?

      The media OWNS you my dear boy/girl.

  288. It makes Europeans feel less irrelevant... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    than they are. Well, you asked...

  289. ok guys... by trucker3406e · · Score: 1

    Its obvious MOST of us dont like this idea. Its just like th UN to try to weasel in on someone elses hard work and dedication. So, I say we take every opportunity to help make sure the UN stays out of our inventions. I havn't the slightest idea how I can help this but I'll definetly be on the look out. GO TEAM!

  290. Here's the problem with their theory. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As an American, I lose very little from internet fragmentation. Sure, I won't see as many page three girls (but the really incredible ones will still make it over). I probably won't see anymore websites about crazy japanese people building working Nausicaa flyers and looking for much crazier people to fly them. (props for teddy and newsmap too) But, largely, everything will be as it always was, the world at my fingertips. There's a chance I won't even notice as the oddities I go abroad for will be replaced by equally interesting and more local oddities.

    The rest of the world however, they loose a lot. Or gain a lot if one is one of the tyrants as opposed to the oppressed. Which is really what issue is. The tyrants want control out of US hands because they know, that with the UN, they'll get their way at least some of the time. Now, they have to spend a lot of money on technology and enforcement to achive a similar effect.

    The internet will fracture long before US turns over control over OUR infrastructue to third parties who don't have our best interests at heart. And why should it be any other way?

  291. Re:American's also have cheap farm labor by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Where have we heard this before?

    Well, I heard it first from Amartya Sen, an economist from India. You probably have not heard of him, but he's very smart. Some people in Europe even game him a medal for being so smart. You can use a search engine to learn more. The medal was called a "Nobel Prize".

    Prof. Sen showed us that famine is caused by (... wait for it...) illiteracy. Drought, disease, pests, and poverty are all proximate causes, but they don't cause famine.

    You're probably wondering who drought is not the cause of famine. Sen (who had considerable experience with famine in India, years ago), showed us that illiteracy is the real cause. (Let's leave out civil war for a moment--this is obviously another cause of famine, but is also a much more efficient killer than famine.)

    The brash young man you took offense to demonstrated a real fact about Africa. The improper management of agro economies is what lets minor variations in production yields turn into famine.

    Need another example? Look at what's going on with the displaced Zimbabwean white farmers. There's now a very real threat of famine, because of the land reforms. But this famine was not really caused by the land reforms, communism, corruption or anything else. The real cause is that the white farmers were simply better at growing crops than the new black farmers.

    Now, control your blood pressure. I'm not saying the whites are better, superior or whatnot. In fact, the white farmers were better merely because they had education (at the expense of the blacks), and better agro management (again, at the expense of others, historically speaking). They knew how/when to apply fertilizer. They knew what crops to rotate in/out of what fields. They knew how to till, etc. They're not geniuses. They just knew how to do this, because of their education and training. If you took kids from New York City, and had them farm for a living, they could probably feed themselves with great effort. But if they had to feed everyone else, New York City would starve. You simply cannot appreciate how important education and training is for agriculture until you've tried it. Growing a crop to feed hundreds of people is very hard . Get a few steps wrong, and your yield is low. So you eat a little seed corn. And plant less next year. Lather, rinse, repeat, and in 10 years you have a crisis.

    So, when the brash young man criticized the farmers for eating their seed corn, he was right on the money. This is exactly the type of problem I encounter in my missionary work. It's not that the villages are greedy, love to eat too much, or anything else. They just did not have the education/training to get enough crop yield to replace their seed stock. After a few years of that, your seed stock is gone, and you're into the spiral of eating livestock, subsistence farming, etc. You can feed your family if you're the farmer, but everyone else is gonna starve.

    The truth is that you cannot provide agro aid without also providing an educational basis for its maintenance.

  292. Re:More valuable than Lagrange points=US will keep by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

    It will get let go quite easily if Hillary Clinton gets elected. She's so into the whole Euro-socialism thing that I wouldn't put it past her.

    Remember folks, the democratic and republican parties are dead. We now have Neo-Cons and Euro-Socialists. Pick your poison.

    --
    Life is not for the lazy.
  293. Can't save what isn't there by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Whether a problem exists is in the eye of the beholder. We see openness as a virtue, but many regimes see lack of censorship as a vice. We see affordable universal access as a virtue, they see inadequate control. We believe all that is not evil must be allowed, but the power-hungry believe everything is verboten unless they deign to grant permission, and then only until they have a whim revoke it. Power-brokers of any stripe will eventually unleash their inner tyrant. Lust for power proves that they must never be allowed to have it!

  294. Hmmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (1) Create Internet (2) Internet grows, World uses (3) World unhappy, UN Takes over (5) ?? (6) Profit

  295. Re:The language is not as forcefull as ammendment by bar-agent · · Score: 1
    "The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."

    "The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people."

    Such a pity that the US government ignores those amendments. At least the UN is up-front about putting its own interests ahead of the law.
    --
    i'd hit it so hard, if you pulled me out you'd be the king of britain [bash.org]
  296. so by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    What you're saying is, he's worse than Kerry Contrary? He supported the invasion of Iraq, before he didn't support the invasion of Iraq, based on the same information....

    Sounds like he had a firm talking-to by the Left.

  297. Bah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Apparently the rest of the world isn't happy about the US franchise on internet governance.
    Fuck 'em.

    The system works. If the "rest of the world" is boo-hooing about not enjoying the prestige of being involved, they can make their own internet.

    STFU, crybabies.
  298. OH DANG by paranode · · Score: 1
    You're right, he works for the Democrats AND al Jazeera:

    "On February 18th, 2005 Scott Ritter announced to an audience in Washington State that George Bush had ordered plans drawn up to bomb Iran in June of 2005, and that the Iraq elections had been rigged by the United States. [4] He reiterated and clarified his statements about Iran in a March 30 article published by Al Jazeera. [5] Ritter also alleged that the United States had rigged the 2005 parliamentary election to prevent the United Iraqi Alliance from winning an outright majority."

    Oh what's this, a sex criminal too? I rest my case.

  299. sounds like a good idea by yaweh · · Score: 1

    our govt neither has the balls or even the capability of exercising any real control of this beast. it has grown and been allowed to "flourish", lol, to the point now that there is all kinds of scam and theft running rampant on the internet. but if a universally accepted commision can at least set the bar, and the rules, then it would be much, much easier to for individual contries to make the arrangements to correspond to the law, i think.

    --
    "There was no sex." - hoggoth
  300. Gank grab again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Trillions of dollars have been given to Africa since the end of WW2 and Africa is in the same shape it was at the end of WW2.

    How come 60 years of handouts to Africa have done nothing?

    It's time to

    - stop the handouts
    - stop the loans
    - stop the food drops
    --> only give money to Western construction companies to build infrastructure in those countries using Western enginners, western managment, and subject to Western laws (i.e., leave no money in the country getting the FREE road/bridge/dam/etc to be taken by corruption).

    In no way should any part of the infrastructure project be up to the local government. The conditions on the local government to accept the infrastructure project are 'complete and total control of money, materials, personnel' by the western construction company and that the western construction company will have to pass yearly audits by non-governmental western financial auditors that have to publically post their audits on the internet.

    The citizens of country Y, that have spent trillions of tax dollars, francs, pounds building
    - a working legal system
    - society where individuals generally respect the law and each other
    - non-totalitarian government systems

    Those citizens should not be forced via taxes to the UN or some NGO world body to fund development/access/etc for countries that
    - cannot produce a working legal system
    - have citizens that do not respect the law and do not respect each other
    --- including perpetual civil war/ethnic violence
    --- rampant preventable disease spreading (i.e., not malaria)
    - have governments based on corruption

    1. Re:Gank grab again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You, my friend, don't have a clue (sucker! haa-haa) and probably due to say the following or similar sentence at least once in your future life: "I didn't believe this could be happening here". Westerners are as much greedy as any other human and laws of their home land does not bound them abroad, so they WILL and DO indulge in corruption whenever they are sent to help the poor in some faraway country. Besides, there are other non-western countries with high overall moral that are quite capable to perform such tasks. Oh, you mean, modern == western culture? Let me reveal you the truth. You see, those african nations you are talking about are as "westerner" as they come, there is no substantial difference between their and your societies, except that they have very very poor access to media and seem to don't have a clue about politics. Let me explain:

      The corruption is nothing more than charging (additional) toll on a procedural bridge. But, to be able to prevent "our valuable customers" from crossing that bridge without paying you (or fend off the threat to be beaten up if you don't enable the free pass), you have to be strong enaugh, in other words, those who come to you have to be scared of you. Usually, that means that corrupted official pays protection from own bribe to someone who has authority over that official. Inevitably this means that chain of corruption goes up to the highest circles of government, to the elected ones or their most trusted subordinates. Therefore, corruption is always reciprocal of democracy. If elected "representatives of people" are confident that they will never or hardly ever be punished for that in the elections, or elections rarely ever take place, the corruption goes "thru the roof". In Africa, war often comes before elections, ends in dictatorship and the point is that corruption on an international level (coming from Western companies' interests in monopol on exploiting certain natural resources) is in fact reason for, rather then consequence of, the wars. The corruption is "great enabler", "great costs cutter", "valuable asset" in big business.

      Now, what is needed to "cure" Africa (or any society that has high corruption problem)?

      First, more news to more people (it is not a coincidence that so many journalists per year are being killed in Africa).
      Second, more often elections.
      Third, give it a little time fo people to get used to the idea and for politicians to develop morale as practical and useful trait (play nice, get reelected).

      Everything else, pouring money in, building infrastructure, etc. can help only after these three make a foundation.

      Oh, yes, I almost forgot: what's in it for international corporations? Sure they won't let democracy gain on *their loss* (sounds familiar?). Well, that is something for good politicians of weak countries to consider, they need to respect interests of big money in the interest of peace and prosperity of their country and their citizens. Because, if you can't win, try to negotiate the best price. War and bribery costs corporations significant money. Give them what they want, for a price bellow these costs (peace in fact, has a price). Consider how much would your successor charge them (how cheap he/she is) if you were killed in assasination, and keep concession price lower then that (human life, of a given human, has price too).

      It occured to me that Adam Smith made a mistake when he refused in disgust to analyze crime as part of economy in his "Wealth of Nations". If we keep the taboo in place and refuse to understand the connection and relations between economy, politics, media and organised crime (corruption, if you will), as well as life cycles of political/social order (anarchy/tirany/oligarchy/democracy/cesarism/feuda lism, seen even in "Star Wars" fiction world) that are moved by it, we will never "take off the ground" to control the greatest problems of the world society that badly affect most of us in different ways. Instead, Marxism (like "capitalism == organised crime") and its extreme solutions, or other forms of social vengence discharges are going to get "reinvented" over and over again, even they were proven wrong and fruitless before.

  301. Re:Here's my reality... by DarkDragonVKQ · · Score: 1

    Though some countries in the world are looking for alternatives. Some already use Linux and prefer it over Microsoft's Windows.

    --
    "I thought what I'd do was I'd pretend I was one of those deaf-mutes" ~ Laughing Man - GITS:SAC
  302. Taxes by DarkDragonVKQ · · Score: 1

    Well, I'm assuming everyone else here feels the same way I do about taxes. We hate them and most people said that it's a stupid idea to tax the internet. Even more so what would the money be going to? Helping people? That's great it'll wind up just like Social Security. Working in the beginning but screwed up and needs a huge revamp later on. I hate paying taxes to help other people. Ok, paying for education (fine since my kids can use that). Paying for roads (why not I use them as well). But paying to support other people? Why in the hell would I be forced to do that. I already donate some money to charity. Even worse I bet some of my money is going to some slacker who didn't bother at least trying in life. Yes, it has its benefits but a system that helps people will always be abused. Just let people take care of themselves and the foolish will die out soon.

    --
    "I thought what I'd do was I'd pretend I was one of those deaf-mutes" ~ Laughing Man - GITS:SAC
  303. But who watches the watchers? : ) by Coyoteold1 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Gee, I hope the UN proves better at managing domains than they are at peacekeeping in Haiti.

    http://www.ipsnews.net/new_nota.asp?idnews=29506

    Seriously though... I'm honestly not sure which entity(ies) I would trust to manage things like domains.

    I hate to say it, but I'm not sure I trust my own government to do a good job of this for the rest of the world, but at the same time, am not sure that the UN would do a good job of managing these vital services for the internet either.

    I'm thinking the internet needs it's own "UN" in a way... an impartial group that represents the best interests of everyone, and whose goal is to make the internet work... not decide who uses it, how much it should cost, who gets to sneak peeks into other people's stuff, etc.

  304. STOP singing "god bless america" and THINK by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Try to be impartial, stop singing "god bless america" when typing, it is a good idea and every person in the world knows it, even you, calm down, stop offending the rest of the world calling 'em terrorists, comunists. US is not a good example in the world of a wise-decision-maker-nation, *no ofense*, but internet is a global network today, it is unrelevant if DARPA invented it, a concentrated power always is a bad idea (hmmm, except when it is concentrated in your contry).

    PS. Yes, it is broken, and need to be fixed

  305. Re:Great. What next? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Doesn't DARPA still have some control over the internet? It was designed to provide network connectivity in the event of a nuclear war, and last time I checked we still had a whole shitload of nukes laying around(which means most likely other nations do as well)

  306. The ITU Should host the root servers. by chris_sawtell · · Score: 1

    The International Telecommuncations Union is an international organization within the United Nations System where governments and the private sector coordinate global telecom networks and services. This is the supra-national organisation which should control and operate the DNS in the same way as it ultimately controls all international electronic communication. The first thing that urgently needs to be cleaned up is what is essentially the identity theft of TLD names from small countries with naive governments. I'm thinking particularly of .tv, .cx, and .to. These stolen domain names have been totally corrupted by a bunch of disengenious American 'entrepreneurs'. While the United Nations may not be exactly lily-white in absolutely all its dealings, the magnetude of the UN's sins pales into insignificance compared when compared with the identity theft of not just one, but three nations' names. The next item on the clean-up agenda is to ensure that the three-letter TLD names disappear as soon as possible. Thus all the .com names become .com.us, or whatever country they are actually situated in. Finally the effective introduction of IPv6 is long overdue. It's my belief that the creation of a totally erroneous perception of scarcity value in the current 32 bit addresses is yet another reason to take the administration of the DNS out of the control of a demonstrably corrupt nation.

  307. UN to control DNS root servers? by chris_sawtell · · Score: 1

    Nonsense! Virtually every day dozens of emails tell me that it's Pfizer who control the root servers!

  308. Re:Hmm.. How do you say "Fuck 'Em" in French? by Big_Al_B · · Score: 1

    Guess what? Many, many, many IETF RFP authors are--here it comes--NOT US Citizens, ergo we don't "own" the internet that exists today.

    For example, HTTP was conceived by a Brit, Sir Tim Berners-Lee.

  309. The long version. by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    1 - I'm against the UN both functionaly and conceptionally. My original post was about function, but doesnt mean i cant dislike them fundamentally.

    2 - If the *few* things it *might* have done ok doesnt directly benefit me and my country, then its irrelevant to me and a waste of resources.

    3 - "foot in the door", i do understand how the network functions. The 'foot' would be more of a political control issue, where they control by demands and threats to its member nations, not by actual hard 'network control'. Much as they are doing inconjuction with the WTO. ( another body that should be ignored ).

    Once the control of the TLD's is gained, they will start branching out into mandating items such as content control and privacy/rights invasion, with no regards for the local laws of the individual members. It wont stay with 'just' control of the TLD. Controlling bodies never stop with a little control.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:The long version. by Big_Al_B · · Score: 1

      1 - I'm against the UN both functionaly and conceptionally. My original post was about function, but doesnt mean i cant dislike them fundamentally.

      Fine. Whatever. Just stop arguing in non sequitors then, because it makes you sound dumb.

      2 - If the *few* things it *might* have done ok doesnt directly benefit me and my country, then its irrelevant to me and a waste of resources.

      So you're view basically is, "They weren't lucky enough to be born here, so F'm--let'm suffer and die." That's pretty vile and immoral. I guess we're different people. Thankfully.

      BTW, I don't think the world's contageous virii are aware that they should apply for visas prior to entering the US. I'm confident that, left unchecked, they probably would travel to the US and thrive without your permission. Public health efforts have a pretty direct benefit, if you value, well, living.

      Regarding your fear of foreign organizations, who don't necessarily represent/respect/acknowledge your valid interests, controlling the internet...I guess you could probably empathize with the folks who don't want a US monopoly then--if you had some capacity for empathy that is.

  310. Re: several DNS root servers are outside of the US by Tamugin · · Score: 1

    Things have changed a bit. Quoted from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dns_root_servers

    ****************
    There are currently 13 root name servers, with names in the form letter.root-servers.net where letter ranges from A to M:

    A - ns.internic.net - VeriSign - Dulles, Virginia, USA

    B - ns1.isi.edu - ISI - Marina Del Rey, California, USA

    C - c.psi.net - Cogent - Herndon, Virginia, USA

    D - terp.umd.edu - University of Maryland - College Park, Maryland, USA

    E - ns.nasa.gov - NASA - Mountain View, California, USA

    F - ns.isc.org - ISC - Palo Alto, California, USA

    G - ns.nic.ddn.mil - U.S. DoD NIC - Vienna, Virginia, USA

    H - aos.arl.army.mil - U.S. Army Research Lab - Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland, USA

    I - nic.nordu.net - Autonomica - Stockholm, Sweden

    J - VeriSign - Dulles, Virginia, USA

    K - RIPE - London, UK

    L - ICANN - Los Angeles, California, USA

    M - WIDE Project - Tokyo, Japan

    --
    Chris
  311. Re:Great. What next? by gallen1234 · · Score: 1

    Is is that difficult to grasp that the Internet is not a 100% American project? ARPANET was. The US certainly wasn't involved in building and setting up all the Internet infrastructure outside US soil.

    You're right. We didn't set up all of the infrastructure outside the U.S. but this brings us back to my point. If the countries that do own that infrastructure want to do something else with it, they're welcome to but I don't see any reason to cede control over the parts that do belong to us to the United Nations. If this leaves some third world countries isolated from the "Internet proper" they should take that up with the officials that made the decision to secede.

  312. Here's the Why by Flambergius · · Score: 1

    I realize that I'm way too late for most people to ever see my comments, but I believe I have perspective that at least underrepresented, if not totally missing from this discussion.

    Internet is very important for me. It is my main communication medium, both privately and professionally. My competence and experience is directly tied into it. Internet, or rather my access to it, is a capital resource, the only one that I have. Even beyond that, Internet has a central role in my vision of the future that I want to work for.

    I recognize following governments and inter-governmental organizations as having justified power over me:
    The Republic of Finland
    The European Union
    The United Nations
    Please notice that the United States of America in fact is not on that list. Consequently, I do not expect the government of United States to hold my best interest in particularly high regard. I don't deny that many US policies have substantially benefited me, the creation of Internet being a prime example, but I do content that for most part such benefit has been incidental. In fact, with the EU and US increasingly competing in the global market, I expect to be royally screwed over by the US and that nobody in the US will care.

    The US is the unquestioned military superpower of the world, and plans to remain so. However, maintenance of military supremacy is dependant on economic supremacy and here US only is a reigning but vulnerable champ. Economically, the EU is in the same league already, and has some structural advantages that may allow EU to pass the US. Because of their enormous populations, China and India both pose a serious threat to US supremacy in the long term. To me it seems pretty clear that in the long term US will not be able to sustain its military might compared to the rest of the world without using its strategic resources to hinder its economic rivals. I am not suggesting that US will use military force, simply because to make my case I do not need to do so. The US has other strategic resources. Main is of course the Middle Eastern oil, which US does not itself use (preferring more stabile sources), but does control to sufficient decree to affect its availability and price. There are others, control of Internet being one of them. I won't even suggest that the US will do anything really underhanded with these resources, again because to make my case I don't need to do so. So the US will not block the EU from the Internet, or nor will the US force Middle Eastern countries to stop selling oil to China. The US will use the strategic resources to shape the global economic playing field to favor itself. That is not even very controversial claim; in fact it is pretty much what you would expect a powerful government to do. Somewhat more controversially, I will predict that in realizing this goal the US will be ruthless and vindictive to those that oppose it, it will not care about the human suffering, injustice or ecological harm it will cause, and certainly it will not give any thought how its policies will affect my life. Nor will these policies actually serve the average US citizens' interests of economic prosperity or the ideals of democracy, freedom, justice or truth. When I said "playing field to favor itself" I meant that the goal of US government is to remain the sole military superpower; the production of munitions, not consumer goods. Worldwide freedom and justice, even political but especially economic (i.e. global free-market) would eventually lead to diminishing of the US share of world economy, which would mean that the US could not anymore outspend the rest of the world in military budget and the US would lose its status of a sole military superpower.

    One thing I would like to make perfectly clear, when above I say "the US" I really do mean that, not just the current administration. I do not see great deal of difference between Democrats and Republicans, in terms of policies that affect on me. Since the WWII both have been really bad, and I really could not choose betw

    --
    Computers are useless. They can only give you answers - Pablo Picasso
  313. Re:American's also have cheap farm labor by stuartkahler · · Score: 1

    Thank you for standing up for this. It's too bad you had to post anonymously because of the risk of being branded a troll.

    The one thing I think you skipped over is that here in America, farmers either have college degrees or grew up on a farm and start their career with 15 years of experience. Usually both. American agriculture is a major science and certainly not something relegated to illiterates.

  314. Re:American's also have cheap farm labor by stuartkahler · · Score: 1

    I think the people in my family who actually own or have lived on farms would be far more qualified for the job than myself. My agriculture skills would leave me starving here in america, nevermind africa.

  315. Let them eat goats by guet · · Score: 1

    If you want to talk about trade laws keeping them down, then please inform the rest of us about what they actually have to trade...My personal analysis of Africa's situation is that they're mostly at the hunter-gatherer step zero, not step one.

    There's very little point in arguing given your blithe ignorance. Africa is a vast continent, and your knowledge seems to start and end with anecdotal snippets seen on American television. I'm sorry but to try to say African Nations are at 'hunter-gatherer' stage is laughable.

    As to what various nations in Africa have to sell, perhaps you'd like to read this article, or this one.

    Nobody in the UN cared about millions getting killed

    I'm curious as to why the UN should be like a red rag to a bull for most Americans on this website. All large political organisations are corrupt (including the US Senate etc), the politicians in the US (and Europe) have turned a blind eye to regimes like Musharef in Pakistan for the sake of expediency, and to torture and yet when it comes to the UN it seems to be beneath contempt for most Americans, even though many of its goals are laudable and sometimes its programmes are very effective (eg WHO).

    1. Re:Let them eat goats by stuartkahler · · Score: 1

      The articles you link to rag about the US selling agricultural goods too cheaply. You're saying we should charge more to developing countries for the food they might want to buy from us? People are starving because we're underpricing our food exports? If they have food, they should use it to feed their citizens. If they have extra sugar, beets, cotton and rice, let them sell it at market prices, or grow something else. If your country has the capability to grow food, it's not someone else's fault if your people are starving. It's just bad leadership.

      Americans import a lot of food too. Produce something seasonal that we need and find a way to get it to us. Just don't make foods that can sit in a warehouse for years because we have stockpiles of those items. Part of our national economic strategy is to overproduce and stockpile enough food to last us through several severe droughts or floods. That means we don't need to import anything that can sit in a warehouse for a year. Maybe you should try selling to China. They make lots of cheap goods, need lots more food than they can grow, and are much closer. Or open up your own factories and develop a self sustaining nation.

      The problem with the UN is the same as the old welfare system in the US. It gives hand-outs, but never gives a hand-up. A government(s) run agency is at a severe disadvantage in creating or stimulating entire economies.

      I think you just like complaining about the USA, don't you? I be you think we created AIDS too.

  316. Empathy by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Nope, dont have any.

    Immoral? Well, morals are relative.

    Viruses wouldnt travel here if we closed our borders and let the infected die off elsewhere.

    Its called evolution, the weak perish. So the UN thinks they can do it better then nature? They cant even manage to find their way to the bathroom.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Empathy by Big_Al_B · · Score: 1

      Viruses wouldnt travel here if we closed our borders and let the infected die off elsewhere

      Great. You'll also have to ban US citizens from foreign travel, and ban imports and exports. So much for freedom and capitalism. Oh well, at least I get to stay here with dumbasses like you.

      You know, I don't get it. You have this vitriolic pseudo-patriotism thing going, but you don't seem to believe in any of this country's founding principles. So what gives?

      Its called evolution, the weak perish. So the UN thinks they can do it better then nature?

      Well, that is the basis of modern medicine you dumbass.

  317. Von Braun? by Chmcginn · · Score: 1

    I was thinking that Germany's rocket research in WWII probably led to most of it, since both the US and the Soviet Union took a whole bunch of scientists & documentation home with them after the fall of Berlin. (And even before that.)

    --
    Have you been touched by his noodly appendage?
  318. big brother by sinergee · · Score: 1

    just another affirmation of 1984, people agreeing to enslave themselves.