The Fracturing of the Internet
farrellj writes "There is currently a major conflict between the US and the rest of the world about the control of the Internet. They are fighting over who will control the root DNS servers and assign IP addresses. The US is against an independent international body to do this. This could fracture the Internet into multiple country and regional mini-internets, with conflicts over IP and Domain Name assignments, with no interconnects between them." From the article: "... the Bush administration said in July that the United States would 'maintain its historic role in authorizing changes or modifications to the authoritative root zone file.' In so doing, the government 'intends to preserve the security and stability' of the technical underpinnings of the Internet. Without consensus, some experts say that countries might move ahead with setting up their own domain name system, or DNS, as a way of bypassing Icann." Update: 09/30 20:45 GMT by Z : I believe this to be another view of the discussion we had a while back.
/. needs a followup field, to link to previous related articles.
I dont mind hearing about them again, it would just be nice to be able to see the past article. Kinda like the "Related Links" on the right side of the articles we have now.
It nice how this article DOES link to the previous story at the end.
which was Posted 09:43 AM -- Friday September 30 2005
If funny how he calls it the other day tho
_JS
Currently a major conflict between the world and the US?
Arash
Arash Partow's Philosophy: Be a person who knows what they don't know, and not a person who doesn't know.
I don't think anyone can really blame any country for wishing to control their own aspect of the internet.
[%] Cingular Ringtones
My opinion is that an international institution should define global standards that each country can than agree or disagree to implement, and if the US wants to be separate at that point, so be it.
We had a discussion about this the other day
My flux capacitor is out of whack; the earth now rotates ~every six hours.
I read
At least under the US, the citizens of one country have some oversight. Give them their own little organization independent of everyone, and they'll have absolutely none.
-Erwos
Plausible conjecture should not be misrepresented as proof positive.
If by "the other day" you mean earlier today, in a story posted by yourself! Unbelievable. Simply stunning. I thought dupes couldn't get any more absurd, but this one takes the cake.
The Rise and Fall of Online Community
You go create your own internet...
...don't fix it.
I say the US has done a fine job in managing whatever it is managing.
The 'net has become a wonderful, open forum where anyone can express their ideas an opinions.
The UN tends to screw up everything it touches. I really don't want the internet to become another great cockup of the least organized, least effective polital body that has ever existed.
Shiny. Let's be bad guys.
In so doing, the government 'intends to preserve the security and stability' of the technical underpinnings of the Internet.
Security on the Internet? What are they talking about?
No sig for now.
Did I see the story include a line about sending a message about Iraq? What happened to it?
People who disagree with you are not automatically evil, greedy, or stupid.
Nothing wrong with fracturing.
All that would mean is that DNS goes from being a decentralized system with a central authority to a decentralized system. Once that happens well-tested capitalistic forces will come into play and things will sort out themselves. If the U.S. government chooses not to recognize the actions of foreign root servers, eventually U.S. ISPs will just start using the foreign root servers themselves. Participation in the Department of Commerce DNS roots is voluntary for all involved.
Duct tape!
Go easier on the tinfoil, OK?
You're new here, aren't you?
All authority that IANA or ICANN or any other organisation has over IP addresses and DNS is through the strictly VOLUNTARY participation by every ISP and even end user, out there. Their authority comes form the recognition that an authority is needed.. that addresses need to be allocated in an organized way.
IT is ultimately those who provide the infrastructure who will decide what needs to be organized and by whom. This isn't a government issue.. it's an ISP issue.
Can we import all the message from the other discussion we had today? Maybe Zonk can cut and paste them all to save us some time.
And so the pirates of the world abandon the old ways and sail upon a sea of their own creation, sharing their spoils to only the chosen.
I'd much rather let the UN manage the net than even begin to contemplate the above. I'm not saying the UN has properly managed everything they've touched, but there is no other international body capable of managing the internet. And it needs to not be exclusively under Amerikan control.
And I'm and Amerikan.
You are not the customer.
...of the United States' growing irrelevance on the world stage. Trust me. If the US disappeared off the face of the earth tomorrow, there would be a brief hiccup and then it would be business as usual. After all, what is it we do for the world exactly, other than bully people?
-"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
That's Zonk officially plonked. The only possible reason for duping your own story within the working day and adding a bleeding disclaimer at the end is to show off how pretty Politics is.
For those who haven't discovered it: It's in your home page prefs next to the topic ratings radio buttons.
Politics really is pretty though.
- Chris
See this link I posted today about this same topic.
-Zonk
The internet is about freedom. The US has in the last five to ten years become an enemy of such freedoms, take for example the PATRIOT act. The internet is simply too valuable a resource to be effectively put in the hands of people with such low regard for freedom and individual liberty (which include the right to privacy). I think its very clear that the US's motivation for not ceding to an accountable international organisation is primarily one of perceived "national security". The internet has to be in safe hands, and if a fracturing of the net is required then thats the price we shall have to pay to safeguard the whole.
Heh. Seriously, though, they're welcome to create their own.
There exists no way of exchanging information without making judgments. --Bene Gesserit Axiom
...more contract work for me!
Whatever the U.S. can manage poorly, a conglomoration of bureaucracies can do poorerestly.
My ZooLoo
There is currently a major conflict between the US and the rest of the world about the control of the Internet...
is such an over statement that it's almost misleading. We're not going to war with the world over this. It's a dispute. The only war so far are the flame wars that broke out on Slashdot when this was posted the first time. The Iraq War was a major conflict; this is a dispute that might have serious consequences on the Internet. Let's be a little more precise.
No, I'm not new to Slashdot. Yes, I'll probably be modded down for this but this is just so silly.
EvilCON - Made Famous by
Starting with Slashdot's fractured editorial communications, posting duplicate stories on the same day?
I'm anti-American and even I want the USA to keep control of the root zone file. It just makes sense.
Yeah because my subscription to the Economist is always getting held up by the USPO, and when I do get it, it's all censored, blacked-out text everywhere.
It's only obvious that the US gov't wants to stop this too!!!!
This will never happen, ironically due to corporate interests. Most large companies now do business overseas. Would they want those customers cut off from their website? Would they no longer want their employees to be able to send email to business partners in other countries?
Although there will certainly be conflicts regarding the internet in the coming years, there is too much invested for people to just give up on a solution and resort to fractionalized intranets.
When Rome did fall, the roads were taken over by various parties and sometimes looted for their stones and not very well maintained. But, those evil arrogant Romans got their uppcomance, and that's what really mattered.
See my previous post, on the article of the same subject earlier today: http://politics.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=16387 7&cid=13686969
On second forget the blackjack. And the Internet.
It's not broke...(Score:5, Insightful) by FIT_Entry1 (468985) on Friday September 30, @09:46AM (#13683886) don't fix it. [ Reply to This ] Re:It's not broke... by KjuibFriday September 30, @10:18AM Re:It's not broke... by mwilli (Score:1)Friday September 30, @10:54AM Re:It's not broke... by rabeldable (Score:1)Friday September 30, @11:01AM Re:It's not broke... by pembo13 (Score:1)Friday September 30, @11:40AM Re:It's not broke... by Dwonis (Score:2)Friday September 30, @04:11PM Re:It's not broke...(Score:5, Insightful) by fitten (521191) on Friday September 30, @11:02AM (#13684732) Personally I think the internet is broke. back in the day the internet was free. Napster was legal. A dial-up connection got you anywhere. Email was important. I think the US did break it. Though, I believe the UN can do nothing to fix it. The Internet was never "free" in either sense of the word. You may have had an Internet connection but someone paid for it. In my case, the university I attended paid for the connection and we got use of it in exchange for going to school there. Napster was never declared "legal". It simply wasn't noticed and when it was, some people had problems with it. Just like if you steal a candybar from a store and never get caught, does that mean you didn't break the law? A dialup connection can still get you anywhere if you have the right service provider. Email is important, still. Just like anything else, there's always someone out there who will piss in the pool - spammers looking to make a quick buck or virus writers who do it for the hell of it. Do you have any specific examples of where the US broke the Internet? I'm entirely convinced that the UN can't even fix itself, which it needs to do badly before worring about taking on more responsibility (for anything). [ Reply to This | Parent ] Re:It's not broke... by Anonymous CowardFriday September 30, @12:10PM Re:It's not broke... by John Courtland (Score:2)Friday September 30, @12:49PM Re:It's not broke... by Dahan (Score:2)Friday September 30, @12:50PM Re:It's not broke... by ThJ (Score:1)Friday September 30, @12:58PM Re:It's not broke... by fitten (Score:1)Friday September 30, @01:29PM Re:It's not broke... by Cat_Byte (Score:2)Friday September 30, @02:58PM Why the U.N.? by QuaintRealist (Score:1)Friday September 30, @03:19PM Re:Why the U.N.? by Maclir (Score:2)Friday September 30, @04:09PM Re:It's not broke... by Holi (Score:2)Friday September 30, @03:24PM Re:It's not broke... by Mac Degger (Score:2)Friday September 30, @11:05AM Re:It's not broke... by lscotte (Score:1)Friday September 30, @11:13AM I don't know...(Score:5, Funny) by bullitB (447519) on Friday September 30, @11:15AM (#13684858) I think this US control of the Internet is what's been holding it back. Maybe with international bureaucracy and UN regulation, this "Internet" thing will finally take off... [ Reply to This | Parent ] Re:I don't know... by chris macura (Score:1)Friday September 30, @11:52AM Re:I don't know... by dustinbarbour (Score:2)Friday September 30, @12:03PM Re:It's not broke... by Anonymous Coward (Score:3)Friday September 30, @11:26AM Re:It's not broke... by notsoanonymouscoward (Score:3)Friday September 30, @12:40PM Re:It's not broke... by pdgill (Score:1)Friday September 30, @11:35AM Re:It's not broke... by Anonymous CowardFriday September 30, @03:56PM Such Short Memories(Score:5, Funny) by Zane Hopkins (894230) on Friday September 30, @12:18PM (#13685717) (http://www.top-find.com/) Its not about being broken, its about trust. Do none of you remember back in 95 what happened to NeverNeverLand. The US wanted to invade to close all of the Pirate Training Camps, but the NeverNeverLand government was vocal across the internet in claiming there were no training camps, just theme parks. So what happened, the US kicked NeverNeverLands domain (.nn) out of the root servers. Suddenly no one in NeverNeverLand could email one another, the government collapsed and the country went into chaos. But worse, nobody could access any
"Hell, I know what that is. We Bushes 'r an ol' Texan family. I'm purdy sure they got our rootz on file."
I sent the current editor an email about this being a dupe, and yet it was still published. On the other hand, they have also taken dupes down. So, I guess it is a mixed bag :/
I think we should give the terrorists a local loopback IP (127.0.0.1) so when they try to attack us, they accidently hit themselves. That'll show em! Shoulda paid more attention to subnetting in college!
I am an infrequent reader so I usually scoff at people who complain about dupes, but they're both on the main page! that has to be the worst ever... http://politics.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/09/ 30/1254230&tid=95&tid=1&tid=219
Ok seriously, there are arguments to both sides of this clearly. Sure America made it, but does that mean we get to KEEP it. The internet has moved into the ranks of "utility" like phone, power, sewage, water, etc. Would we argue that some country from the middle east gets to keep control of waterflow systems simply because aqueducts were likely invented in babylon?
"As far as I'm concerned, I prefer silent vice to ostentatious virtue." ~A. Einstein
"Theoretically, giving the UN control of the root DNS would give every member nation a share in the responsibility."
Yeah, theoretically. But fuck theory at this time. This is a practical matter we're dealing with. The UN is not the ideal body to deal with such matters. I mean, look at the WIPO. It's been nothing but trouble. Now we have shitty WIPO-standardized legality infecting numerous other nations. Let's not let that sort of nonsense happen to the Internet as well.
Centralized anything is proven time and time again to be bad, be it computer systems, economic systems, intellectual property frameworks or whatnot.
Cyric Zndovzny at your service.
The one thing that I don't really get, is that if you understand how it all works, this doesn't really make sense. I mean this isn't something that really matters, for the most part.
A little brush up on teh Intarweb
ARPNET was the origins of the "Intarwebs", it was replaced by the U.S. built and controlled NSFNET [wikipedia.org] (full transion in 1989, Military went to MILNET). All ISPs had to sign an agreement with NSFNET (1987-1995) to connect to the backbone. NSFNET was not federally controlled, it was controlled by "Merit Network, Inc" which was run by public universities. True, a good bit of funding came from taxes, but it was up to academics as to how it was used. In 1995, NSFNET was transitioned to NAP architecture, which provided much faster routing and the capabilites for more growth. Today the "backbone" [wikipedia.org] is a collection of commercial ISPs, a few private, and a few University controlled networks. There is little to no direct federal intervention.
DNS [wikipedia.org] servers are, of course, chained in the sense that one DNS references another DNS, and DNS entries spread like viruses (lookups are forwarded). The root [wikipedia.org] level DNS servers (serving requests from the root). Some of them are DoD owned, and some are privately owned.
But not all traffic is routed through the root level DNS servers. In fact you local DNS might not need to hit the next guy in the chain if he still has a valid lookup entry for your request (check the TTL, not all BIND [wikipedia.org] implementations do this correctly). So the traffic on the internet does not go through one space, and you probably dont hit the root level DNS servers that often. Not only that but the way DNS works, unless you hit the root server yourself, it never knows that you were making the request, all it knows is that DNS server at 217.88.99.42 (or what have you) hit it.
Basically this whole argument is kind of silly. No one really controls net traffic, perse. The root DNS servers (i.e. ICANN) do for the most part reside in the US, but because of the recursive nature of a DNS lookup, it does not really tell you what is going on (put a packet sniffer on your own BIND server and see what comes up).
The Internet is still largely, "grass roots". It is largely peer-to-peer. The only centralized items are the root DNS servers.
Since the U.S. gov does not really control "the Internet", why should we change that? It sounds good in a meeting to say "you control the Internet and that isn't right", but that is gross over-simplification. Nobody really "controls" the internet. If their argument is just about moving or adding new root DNS servers, that wouldn't really matter, but instead it sounds like "politics as usual", that is to say FUD./p
Politics.slashdot.org is not pretty to those of us who see the US flag as a symbol of opression, not benevolence.
the Internet.
The US is just being the Microsoft of the world.
I wonder where a lot of our values come from and now I know... our government is a shadow of how corrupt our society is so welp... there you have it.
The price is always right if someone else is paying.
You buy the ticket, You take the ride... as they say.
What stops people (router makers, network software designers, etc.) from adding an zone-based over-layer to the DNS system. For most traffic, the local packets would use their local DNS. But, if you want to go international, you wrap your request in something that routes that request to the appropriate international gateway to that zone where it is unwrapped and sent to the remote DNS. From a UI standpoint, addresses would get an over-the-top level domain so that we might have www.google.com.ru, www.google.com.us, www.google.com.ch, etc. would resolve to their respective zones.
Of course, the current install-base of systems might be somewhat unhappy (or at least restricted to accessing only their local zones), but I'd bet some clever individuals would create nice proxies that create backward compatible gateways. And given the massive size of IPv6, I'm sure someone can do an international version of NAT to remap conflicted DNS entries between zones.
Two wrongs don't make a right, but three lefts do.
It would be really really hard to get a good bagel.
the major advances in civilization are processes which all but wreck the societies in which they occur - A.N. White
The UN is nothing but a soapbox for petty dictators and thugs. I do not want an organization whose general assembly is dominated by autocrats to be able to censor domains based on their concept of what is acceptable. Everything basically works fine with the US running it with very little actual central control.
But the more important point is this: what would happen if China or North Korea were able to remove all domain names referring to sites advocating freedom, or Iran were able to pull all porn domains, etc.? Every client would simply switch to a different set of root servers controlled in the same lasseiz-faire manner as the current roots, and in 5 years we'd be back in the same situation.
I say we just send the UN some Dell brochures and tell them to set up their own damn servers if they want to control DNS so badly. Then we can laugh as they beg to get people in the free world to actually use them.
[ home ]
I'd call what we have not just broken but shot to shit. To quote Twisted Sister, "If that's your best, your best won't do!"
It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
To do business overseas, they'll just run another website overseas.
Compared to the effort required for l10n and i18n colocating overseas is next to nothing.
If it's not broken, then of course you don't try to fix it. But then again, you also have to be prepared in case it does break.
It's better for some action to be taken now, before the US government chooses to take a course of action that is detrimental to the Internet as a whole. At least then the rest of the world can have a somewhat functional Internet, even if the US is not involved.
Cyric Zndovzny at your service.
"We had a discussion about this the other day"
by admitting that this is basically a dupe,
is this some sort of a preemptive strike against dupe comments?
The problem comes with the assigning of IP addresses. If the USA refuses to recognise some that the rest of the world has given to Iraq/... and then gives them to someone else - we end up with two places having the same IP address. Chaos would ensue 'till BGP/... was fixed to hide the ''illegal'' USA duplicate addresses -- yuck!!
Admission: the UK government's use of lies to take us to was makes me ashamed to be British.
When we say "major conflict," do we mean "technically inept bureaucrats in human rights paradises like Syria and China are grumbling to the media about how unfair it is that the U.S. maintains the pieces of network infrastructure it designed, built, and paid for?"
Me thinks GWB maintains a list of things he'll like to fuck-up:
1) War on Terror - do something which will create more terrorists. DONE.
2) Mess up Iraq. DONE.
3) Piss off everybody in the world, including allies like Europe, Canada, etc. DONE.
3) Mess up this thing Al Gore invented (the Internet), coz i don't like him anywayz. ALMOST DONE.
4) Self-destruct America. ALMOST DONE.
Why should the US give over control of the root DNS to the UN? .uk and so on.
The US funded the construction of the Internet and has invited other nations to use it. Each nation has as much control over the network in it's contry as they want. Look at China and North Korea for examples.
Each country has control over it's nation level domain. The UK has control over
I do not see how the UN or anybody has the right to demand the US to give over control of the root domain servers or get bent if the US says thanks but we feel like that would be a bad idea.
If the member of the UN really feel like they should have root name server control well then I suggest that the UN gets a bunch of nations together and build the UNNet. You could use IP6 from the start and have point to point encryption from the start.
Knock yourselves out.
See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
So that's what Bush meant by the internets!
We are your overlords. It is a privilage that we grant to you to be allowed to use our internet.
.jp, .de) HOWEVER, when In the country, the domain mask will make your site accessible, by its exstention.(.com, .net) (if there is a domain of similar name in the US, you could alias it as .com.us. This could probably be done without infringing on anyone elses sovereignty.
But do not dispare, citizens of the world. As we have found in our rise to power there is nothing that innovation and technology cannot solve.
I propose massive (nationwide) subnets. In this way you could have penty of 192..... adresses.
Also, I propose that we develop some sort of "domain mask". How it would work, is that when in America.... all the European sites would be addressible with their country code extention. (.au,
Problem solved!
Anyone else notice Zonk's submitted ELEVEN stories today? Think Comment Spam is a problem? Now we have story spamming. I for one welcome our new Zonk overlords.
..on the internets!
if you want people to think you know what you are talking about, just put ".com" at the end of everything you say.com
I remember when all of this was a field.
Different DNS root domains only serves the cause of censorship so google might have some dancing around to do to avoid being blocked itself.
The reality is that ALL major (minor for that matter) corporations in the world would want to be on the US internet. All US companies would want to be on the US internet. At the end of the day, and after billions of dollars wasted, it would wind up looking like it does now. That said, don't other countries already get to manage their own root servers for their country extension, .ca, .uk, etc.? The UN is a colossal corrupt failure, I think someone else in the other post put it best, give control of the internet to the organization that made Syria head of human rights? What a joke.
But here is the real flame bate for all you liberals out there: The internet is a US invention that was shared with the world... it would be hugely successful today with or without the support of Bulgaria. Our closest allies and us have made the internet what it is today, not some third world nation. Australia and the UK have not been pushing for this issue, its coming from "developing" countries and France... the EU is very divided on most issues, and this is another one. I say screw the French and let them setup their own "super duper internet".
Any thoughts that the EU might end up with a more OSI Protocols based (EU)Internet?
This sounds like someone making a mountain out of a mole hill. I mean really, what's the big deal?
IP addresses are already controlled regionally, not by the US. Europe and Asia each have their own registries. Theoretically they manage the IP space under rules set by the IANA, but in reality nobody is going to nay-say them if they don't.
Law and regulation? Ha! The US will regulate for the US and anyone who doesn't like that can block our IP addresses at their border. That's not going to change. Get over it.
The DNS root zone? All 62kbytes of it? Shoot. If you don't want to run ICANN's root zone, download it and run your own version. I do.
Or is control of your own counry's top-level zone not good enough for you? Is there some special zone you particularly feel you need to add to the defacto global root zone? No? Then what the hell are you complaining about!
Don't get me wrong, the ICANN is run by a non-accountable bunch of bufoons, many from Verisign, the same company that somehow managed to lose money selling domain names and ssl certificates. If anyone deserves a comeuppance, they do. But that's not the point, the point is: the system as it is now is stable, functional and reasonably cheap.
If it ain't broke, don't fix it.
Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
If other countries don't like it, they can get the f*** off and start their own. Why should we capitulate on this issue? Ridiculous.
>> Except, of course, that the government currently has its finger in the pie.
How exactly, other than funding ICANN?
Say China splits off from DNS - I can point my servers at China's root servers and if the gov't want to stop me they can kiss my butt. I know this argument may not penetrate your tunfoil hat, but they can't stop me without filtering packets, and fighting the US telco indutry tooth and nail over that.
Give a man a fish and you have fed him for today. Teach a man to fish, and he'll say "WHERE'S MY FISH, YOU IDIOT?"
How does a group being "international" always equate (in the bizarro leftist /. world anyway) with "independent"? as in:
The US is against an independent international body to do this.
Independent of what? A single country? And if so, so what? The UN is independent of a single country and it's the most corrupt organization on the planet (see Oil for Food amoung others).
The US built a house. It was called the internet. We invited everyone over to enjoy our house. Stay as long as you like. Hell, take a dip in the pool. Set up shop in the garage.
Now, the houseguests are bitching because they don't own the house. Fuck you houseguest. Its our house, its always been our house. If you are so inconvenienced, build your own house, but don't cry to me when its a crappier, less desireable house.
Yeah, I don't like current US goverment too (no offence to US citizens, lot of good things coming from you, just sometimes all that shortsighted greed from your coorporations are killing common sense in me), BUT please please PLEASE don't mess with INTERNET infrastructure. Because it works now and there is NO need something to change. Please drop your arrogance from both sides. I don't see reason why Internet should not stay that way it is now. Yes, there are always room for improvement, but please...
Simply. Don't. Do. That.
user@ubuntubox:~$ stfu This server is going down for shutdown NOW!
Why not? They should and get the rest of the world using it so they aren't at the mercy of US control (I'm sure few would object).
As it grows larger and more dominent than the US internet, people from the US will switch over as well (at least the ones pissed about privacy issues and all the other Orweillian type BS that seems to be taking place in the states these days). Of course this would take decades to accomplish. But aparently (as usual), the US needs to be subborn about just one more important worldwide issue.
There should be no single country controlling something that's so important to us all. Different viewpoints and compromising is important for the net.
The Economist? LOL.
Try such pesky venues like Scoop or the Guardian or pravda or AlJazeera. Venues which can and do publish stories which the U.S. government would rather you not see, like the election fiasco or the pictures of atrocities we commit or the fact that the war on Iraq started well before Congressional authorization.
Meanwhile, here in America they've got our whore media turning their backs as the caskets are unloaded at Dover and in Iraq our military appears to be actively hunting down foreign journalists. It's clear that they seek to control all access to information, the only question is, to what lengths will they go to do that?
--
You didn't know.
It's occasionally influenced by the US Commerce Department, which is occasionally influenced by the Bush Administration, who are occasionally influenced by right-wingers, rich corporations, or cosmic rays, but AFAICT, the only effect the Bushies have had on it is to suggest that they'd like ICANN to create
The "IP" that ICANN cares about isn't the "Internet Protocol" - it's "Intellectual Property". The real influence behind ICANN is the WIPO-mongers, whoever they are, that have gotten ICANN to insist that anybody who registers a domain name anywhere under their control provide enough information to serve them with a subpoena for a trademark lawsuit (and possibly for a website-content lawsuit from RIAA, etc., but it's really trademarks that matter.)
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
Can you reach any of those pages?
b s&sbrftog=1&catref=C6&fstype=1&from=R10&satitle=na zi+hitler&sacat=-1%26catref%3DC6&bs=Search&sargn=- 1%26saslc%3D2&sadis=200&fpos=ZIP%2FPostal&ftrt=1&f trv=1&saprclo=&saprchi=&fsop=1%26fsoo%3D1&coaction =compare&copagenum=1&coentrypage=search&fgtp= from Germany or France.
http://english.aljazeera.net/HomePage/
http://www.korea-dpr.com/
http://www.iran-daily.com/1384/2389/html/
http://www.cubaweb.cu/
If so, you're making use of a system maintained by the US Government.
Now try acessing
http://www.gpoaccess.gov/coredocs.html/ from China or
http://search.ebay.com/search/search.dll?sofocus=
Seriously, who would you rather have in charge of the internet?
The US is hardly unique in having a constitution or more importantly a bill of rights.
Are you implying that all the non-third-world countries would prefer it to be controlled directly by the US as opposed to the UN?
Seems to me like a strange opinion for Americans, considering the UN would be a more democratic alternative...
Given that they pretty much had no other option (and that it was politically convenient for the great firewall of China), what with the pathetic number of IPv4 addresses allocated to them (amusing considering the amount that IBM and GE etc. own with having entire blocks of class A), China's done a pretty good job of "creating their own" Internet.
Exactly... these people are using something we have graciously provided to them. Now our generocity is rewarded with bitching. Bitching that they want to OWN what we built. They want to OWN what we let them use.
And they even bitch at the idea that they build their own! Jeez... I guess we shouldn't have built the internet. We should have just bitched about how nice the French phone system was, and how mean it was of the French not to hand it over to us. All that complaining might have got us a French phone system right about now. But it would not have created the internet. Only willpower can do that.
These ingrateful, rude, international socialists need to take a good look at their soul. What in the fuck is keeping them from being as successful as we are? Why can't they make their own network? Why do they have to constantly bitch and complain that we arent' giving them enough? Why does Bush control their destiny? Why aren't they in charge of their own lives?
Do you think our ARMY our DARPA cried and whined when the Soviets made some kind of tech advancement? Do you think we went to the UN and wrang our hands about how "unfair" it is? I swear to god, Slashdot users are the most coddled babies on the fucking planet.
Hehe. You're funny.
That's ok, just hate them back. :)
Fracturing? lol. First of all, it's ISPs in multiple countries that control the majority of DNS and IP allocations, not ICANN or whatever. Have any of you actually managed DNS servers before? TLD servers only manage what their name implies - TOP LEVEL. Around 99% of DNS servers are not top level servers, and they also handle around 99% of all DNS traffic (correct me on this if I'm wrong). The funniest thing is this point: where did the Internet originate? In Europe? - the entire thing resulted from merging US academic networks with US government networks; so just like the people in here who would want to see the US destroyed (I noticed one post with a guy who said that nothing would really happen if the US just "disappeared" off the face of the Earth), did you ever think about what would happen if the US wasn't around to create the Internet? If someone disagrees with me, then they should easily agree with the wacky idea that Linus Torvalds should cease being the lead of the Linux kernel project - hey, he created it, he manages it, but why not turn control of it all over to the UN or something? lol.
And for those who would agree with that guy I mentioned, would you like it if the companies and organizations that own the oceanic fiber lines to shut them down, cutting off all communication between the US and every other country? Just like that one guy said - "If the US disappeared off the face of the earth tomorrow, there would be a brief hiccup and then it would be business as usual. After all, what is it we do for the world exactly, other than bully people?" lol. Basically the perfect response would be "ok, we'll ship you off to some random country in Europe, and then cut off the fiber lines connecting Europe to the US. Then I guess you'd get your wish, and be in utopia." - then you'll suddenly realize that you've lost access to over 80% of the entire Internet, including the cores. Or you could go the opposite direction, and make the IP allocation open to everyone; then you could have fun watching the entire Internet slowly come to a screeching halt, as everyone just sets up IP networks with any addresses, and everything starts conflicting. What about MAC address allocation? Who needs to control that? Why not just let everyone choose their own random MAC addresses when they get a new nic? lol
Btw, while we're on the topic of a UN-controlled Internet as some people have said, why not just go all the way and start a global ID system for every person? lol. Wouldn't that be lovely... sure.. whatever.
-eventhorizon
#Secret Windows Source Code, in MS C% - if (uptime >= "24 hours") then bsod() else print "Windows License Violation!"
There are currently two choices to who controls the Internet; either the United States, or the United Nations. Contrary to PR, the United Nations is not an "independent, international body." The United States is, for the time being, satisfied with leaving the content of the Internet up to individuals, and only coming into play with technical issues. The U.N. has repeatedly stated its desire to control the Internet for purposes of censorship and crushing dissident speech. Do we really want to move control of the Internet to a body where governments like China and Iran will have a say in what we can and can't say about their human rights abuses and totalitarian regimes? Far better to leave it in the hands of the United States, which at least has a tradition of freedom of speech and open dissent against the government, if not always in practice.
Slashdot: Playing Favorites Since 1997
"It's a very shocking and profound change of the EU's position," said David Gross, the State Department official in charge of America's international communications policy. "The EU's proposal seems to represent an historic shift in the regulatory approach to the Internet from one that is based on private sector leadership to a government, top-down control of the Internet."
To the horror of the assembled delegates, the dapper State department official started making guttural grunting noises - his eyes bulged, and his body seemed to almost triple in size, muscles bursting out of his clothes. "HULK SMASH INTERNET!! RARRRGH!" Witnesses report his skin had an unnatural, greenish tint.
You can't talk about Wikipedia's flaws on Wikipedia
Lets face it Amerika is to blame for everything wrong in the world.2 0-%20Military%20Deaths%20since%20October%201979.ht m
Bush is stupid, Republikans are evil, Libertarians are lazy, Demokrats are kommunists, Amerika is to blame for global warming, krappy water in Afrika and trash in the oceans. Karl Rove forsed Bush to go to war to steal all the oil to fuel his V-10 Ford Exkursion. And I am a moron bekause I kan't find the key that sits between the [x] and [v]. The Internet was born of the military, what better way to conqueror the minds of people than offer them the one thing Governments and Tyrants fear most the Freedom for people to express themselves. Nations were not forced to participate in the Internet, they joined on their own accord. Wonder what would happen if the U.S. just decided to take its "ball" and go home, seal our borders, stop all foreign aid? Hey we as a nation are not perfect, we make mistakes. Do I really care about 2, 200 or 2,000,000 A.I.D.S cases in Africa? Does it really matter to me if someone half a world away dies of a horrible death, it won't change my having a nice cold Molson tonight while watching SG1, but contrary to what some people think it does matter to me. Go ahead and blame America for all the problems in the world. My wife paid the price so you can bitch and moan. Her name is in this list http://www.koreanwar-educator.org/topics/dmz/DMZ%
Now if you excuse me I have to get a beer and watch my favorite Canada show SG1
The internet is an international community and the top level control should be managed by and international committee of geeks. The only reason US management has worked well so far, is the actual amount of political meddling has been minimal to this point. Unfortunately, I could easily see the current administration abusing it as a negioating point with foreign powers. At the same time I don't want to see it fall into the UN's hands. As many previous posts have stated, they screw up everything. I don't like the ICANN scenario, but admittedly they are not nearly as bad as the other choices. My problem with ICANN is members of the body are not selected by the community, nor is selection based on relevant knowledge.
The only fair solution I see is creating an international ruling body that the geek community has some say in the selection process. Politicans and executives don't understand TCPIP, IPv6, DNS, routing or anything remotely useful when it comes to running the internet. Keep them out of it and everything will be fine.
It doesn't directly control ICANN, but it does retain a veto--a right which it has infrequently exercised.
.org and .org domain names to their own search engine page. Yeah, I'm happy that governments aren't able to defend people's rights when such things happen...
Somehow I find that Internet would be much better by the "intergovernmental body" the EU is proposing than by a PRIVATE entity. We all saw what happened with verizon, when they set the IP addresses of all the unregistered
"another view of the discussion" - is that the new Slashspeak euphemism for dupes? :)
quidquid latine dictum sit altum videtur.
I don't see the internet being mismanaged. So what's the big deal? I think this would be a different issue if the US was using it's influence to beat out foreign interests but this isn't the case. The UN certainly hasn't done anything right in it's existance, why would this be any different?
Dedicated Cthulhu Cultist since 4523 BC.
Shockingly bad analogy, dude. Please try your argument again later. This is a recording.
3000+ comments meta-modded. 0 mod points awarded.
Lesson for other meta-suckers: Don't believe the hype!
there are more differences than that.
r ity.cfm?ID=9154&c=111
You claim, consulting a judge is not required "AGAIN" and I would say, now due to the patriot act, a judge is not required the first time around.
http://www.aclu.org/NationalSecurity/NationalSecu
and (iv) allowing the FBI to use its "intelligence" authority to circumvent the judicial review of the probable cause requirement of the Fourth Amendment.
any thoughts on that small bit of research?
every day http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random
"Consider that the US is the only country in the history of the world that was founded on principles of individual liberty and the protection of individual rights"
founded yes, adherant no. I'd say canada is the closest nation today to what the united states was the last time its laws actually adhered to the constitution.
let's have a look at the most egregious laws:
-nixon's drug control acts, which gave some non-accountable fda yokles legislaive power in violation of the constitution.
-the DMCA, which subtlely overthrows personal property rights and gives movie/record/software cartels the right to make technology illegal.
-the tellecommunications acts, which give the FCC legislative authority which should according to the constitution be congressional alone.
and those were just the government exceeding the constitution's definitions of legislative power. There are the greater political hotbeds of guantanamo bay, and unfunded federal mandates upon states, but we won't get into those.
VLC FOR MAC IS DYING! IF YOU DEVELOP, PLEASE SAVE IT!!
The US is the best shephard of the Internet - after all, we invented it. If the rest of the world wants to play along (and have access to the US economy), they can play by our rules. If not, they can go start their own internet - FSK EM! I don't want my freedom of speech to be on the dinner plate of Eurocrats, or worse, the Chicoms. It's bad enough that the US doesn't truly respect our freedoms as it is!
However, most of the proposals for "Internet Governance" that the WSIS gang have come up with have been evil, clueless, or both.
- ICANN doesn't control the Internet, only DNS policies and IP address assignments, and expanding that scope would be Bad.
- China wants to "govern" the Internet by getting the rest of the world to enforce their censorship policies, which are currently too easy for Chinese citizens to evade by using non-China-based websites, email, and IM servers. A few other governments also want to use "governance" to censor pornography, free speech that criticizes them politics, and pornography. (Really, it's just about pr0n and evil nasty terrorists, pay no attention to that press censor behind the curtain.) ICANN currently has no control over this except perhaps blocking registry of Fulan-Gong.com
- Some third-world countries want "Internet Governance" to tax rich Internet users to subsidize internet connectivity into their countres. Not only do they fundamentally misunderstand how the Internet works, the major problem in many of those countries is telecom monopolies that provide overpriced inadequate service, and the first step in getting their citizens decent internet access is to get the telco monopolies out of the way. That doesn't mean there aren't also infrastructure problems, or that an infusion of cash couldn't be useful, but in general they'd be giving more money and power to their PTT monopolies, which is mostly counterproductive.
- I really hate treating ICANN as the Good Guys here, so I won't - this is a conflict between the Bad Guys and the Worse Guys.
DNS isn't The Internet - splitting DNS would be ugly, stupid, and easily repaired, e.g. by creating records like [newTLD].[existingTLD] or [newTLD].[NewTLDowner].net.Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
Seriously, do we need to see more political e-penis waving over who "controls the internets?"
The 'Net was doing pretty well until everyone wanted to control it. Yes, you had the occasional spammer, troll or complete retard, but the general surfing was decent enough and you could even find your favourite style of pr0n without being inundated with popups, popunders, exploits and virii. And no government watchdogs to harass average people about what they can and cannot view or download online.
I don't know about the rest of you, but I think the government can take their "legislation for the benefit of the people" and shove it so far up their @$$es that they'll be spitting it out for a week. It's amazing how the "anarchistic" Internet of even 5 years ago had a lot higher quality information than today. I honestly don't expect it to get better either, regardless of who is in "control."
Weapons of Mass Destruction
MMmhh, you mean like the whole XXX domain idea?
Right, because as you can see in the UN getting everybody to agree to enact things are such an easy (and fast) task.
An international body would most likely have less influence on the DNS System then when the Mothership (aka US) decides to forcea block / change.
I think you miss their point entirely.
M.
If you want to e-mail me, use my PGP Key.
The US and other nations who have been BUILDING and using the internet for longer deserve to keep what they worked hard to establish, you cant wrestle away control of TLDN from a group that EARNED THE RIGHT to the RESPONCIBILITY of handling dns just because some developing nations that didnt help build the internet, and dont even have as many netizens as the rest of the world, suddenly want 'a fair share' , what the hell is a fair share? what is wrong with the way the TLDNS works now? they have been doing a phenominal job for decades. and are not controlled by the government. Other governments DO have control of 'their peice of the pie' with their own extentions. I think this is a clear case of jealous smaller nations wanting to steal what we have worked hard to create. whats next? you cant just steal something away from an organization who is being nice enough to SHARE it with you in the first place. what if other countries decided our space program gave us an unfair advantage and demanded we hand over control of nasa and all our facilities/shuttles/programs that we spent our money funding. why should we have to plan it out, plant the seeds, grow it from nothing, make it flourish, and then HAND OVER THE TREE? just cause we were nice enough to share the fruit? and now everyone wants more?
"It sounds good in a meeting to say "you control the Internet and that isn't right."" ;)
So you've answered your own question
Also if countries were to implement their own local DNS systems, there would need to be a gateway between local traffic and foreign traffic to handle IP address translations, but other than that there wouldn't be any real changes to the system (at least that I can see), and I don't think throwing an additional router into the mix at each country's border is going to bring the 'net to its knees anytime soon.
i'm afraid of americans.
DNS isn't "The Internet" - it's just DNS. Fracturing the root would be stupid, especially when it can be easily glued back together by sticking ".newTLD" under an existing TLD or 2LD, e.g. ".newTLD.net" or ".newtld.neustarsucks.com". But it wouldn't break The Internet - IP would still work, and protocols that embed DNS names into their interactions such as HTTP and SMTP can all support multiple names, e.g. the people who own foo.newtld might need to accept connections for www.foo.newtld.net and user@www.foo.newtld.net or they'd find that lots of people can't access their sites, but that's really no different than the problems faced by people who used the earlier Alternate Root projects such as Orange Root or ORSC or whatever.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
I understand the idea of the root DNS servers is to allow clients to locate com., net., etc, but can't this be distributed? I mean, isn't there a way to allow several root DNS servers (I know it's distributed now, technically, but I mean with regard to control)?
Say, EU controls one, China controls one, India one, etc. One of these decides to add a new TLD. Given a system to control/arbitrate collisions and some basic rules of etiquette, what's the big deal? Let the root-level sync up a couple times a week (I mean, how often are TLDs added, anyway?!).
The only thing I can think of is that one country starts creating TLDs en masse in an effort to grab all the 'good ones' (sovereign squatting?).
I haven't put a lot of thought into this, but it seems like the internet was generally designed around distribution and delegation of authority -- can't we work it out with DNS as well at the root level? Why does it have to be an all-or-nothing thing?
If everyone would stop the dick-slapping, this might actually work out to a technical advantage allowing better redundancy. The biggest trouble is making sure that no one takes advantage of their control, and that they all stay in synch.
*shrug*
Just a thought. It's Friday and I'm feeling optimistic.
We all learned from starwars that the first thing you do in an invations is cut communications. Does the EU know something we don't? Lets see the EU seems to be doing pretty good at managing thier own countries why not the internet. They would propbably pose a 60% tax on it domain name registration to support all the sybersquatters that don't have jorbs. What does France care anyways don't they still use the MiniTel?
to the Tech Party? If there was such a thing, they could help keep members of our government from trying idiotic things such as this.
Furthermore, why should the govenment, ANY government have a say in global culture, online or off? Such things seem inherently in the power of the people.
I guess what i'm trying to say is this: Information wants to be free; it should be the masses that give it its destiny, not a threatened gov't. It scares me to even think of a government like china having a say in the way things are run globally. *shudder*
If each country maintained its own national DNS servers I would not have a problem with it, then you script in only the countries you needed, leaving the rest commented out. Since I already block free.spam mails e.g. hotmail, aol, and yahoo, ignoring one country would cut my 419 scams entirely. As a work issue, in my work environment, no one needs access to any foreign sites in any way, this would greatly simplify all our firewall and access issues.
Then we need to pass some laws eliminating the ability of federal or state governments to apply any restrictions to which countries a person has the right to access from home/library.
They want to play me? I can play them too. Meh.
Blar.
"If ye love wealth better than liberty, the tranquillity of servitude than the animating contest of freedom--go from us in peace. We ask not your counsels or arms. Crouch down and lick the hands which feed you. May your chains sit lightly upon you, and may posterity forget that ye were our countrymen!" --Sam Adams, August 1st 1776
So are you proposing that it would be better that people register anonymously? What if there is a real need to know who the real person behind the domain name is, such as in the case of someone running a spam operation? While there have been admittedly few convictions for spamming, in many cases it was the domain name registration info that led to the real person.
While I will say that the conduct of organizations like the RIAA is certainly still cause for concern, it is in no way as much an issue as freedom of speech, and that is what I would be more worried about if control went to the UN. At least under the current system, I'm free to register a domain name whose purpose would be to speak out against the RIAA and there is nothing that they can do about it. Several members of the UN have expressed a desire to have a say in the content of the internet. Even ICANN does not have a real say in that, except where possibly copyright law is considered.
Karma: Frotzed (mostly due to the Frobozz Magic Karma Company)
This could fracture the Internet into multiple country and regional mini-internets, with conflicts over IP and Domain Name assignments, with no interconnects between them
Won't happen. I think history has shown that, like how the Internet routes around network failures, business routes around government.
Perhaps not one country or organization should have control but rather
the United Nations?
Hopefully it would make a good protocol for finding dates too.
Abstinence is a government conspiracy. www.SafeSexZone.co
They why don't they do what they want with it! Bwahahahaha.... don't make me laugh....
Between the "in what way has the "American control of the internet" thus far been at fault - it works for me?" school and the "how can one country have control over such a global thing?" school. One representative from EVERY country on earth appointed to a global body that controls the net is the ONLY natural/obvious/fair solution.
I was surprised that no one has brought up a source of motivation for internet control being taxation. If the UN gains substantial control over internet domain name assignments, this could be an opportunity to implement a global tax. Say the UN gets control over .net assignments-- the next time you renew your domain name, you may be paying a percentage to the UN as an effective global tax.
For instance:
http://www.newrules.org/retail/EUtax.html
> We all saw what happened with verizon, when they set the IP addresses of all the unregistered .org and .org domain names to their own search engine page.
:P
That's VeriSign. Verizon is a phone company.
And I did see what happened--DNS operators the world over upgraded their DNS software. The new versions of BIND then returned NXDOMAIN, following appropriate standards, when it was told not to allow delegation for that domain and someone was returning a wildcard record. VeriSign then finally quit the damn stupid idea after realizing that it wasn't going to work, anyhow.
Next time, pick something you know more about
In Europe, the elites have always regarded the "masses" as ignorant and dangerous. That's why when radio and TV came along, they made it a state monopoly (i.e. the BBC). That's why countries such as France bribe their newspapers with various benefits and subsidies. It keeps them compliant, particularly over political corruption. That's why Germany bans Nazi-like speech (and sales of books) but for some odd reason doesn't do the same for Marxist ideas that killed far more people. The elites fear rabid nationalism. They don't fear equally murderous Marxism, and their illogical political bigotries rule. Clueless as to how to integrate Muslims into their societies, Europe's rulers think they can solve their problem with terrorism and a rapidly multiplying Muslim population by their usual means--controlling the Internet like they've controlled publishing and broadcasting. It didn't work with Hitler and it won't work with radical Islamism.
In the Arab/Muslim world, both democracy and western culture are feared. That makes them rather odd bedfellows with the Europeans, but politics is never about logic, it's about power. Europe wants the Arab world kept stable by tyrannies but don't want that poison to spread to them. Those tyrannies don't want to be unseated by democracies, and need to keep destablizing ideas out. That's also why France and Germany opposed the Iraqi war. They benefit from Arab tyrannies.
And China is the worst offender of all, which is why it's the biggest promoter of a UN-run Internet. If the Internet were to be structured to make censorship far easier, they'd be delighted. And the UN, which in recent decades has shown no interest in promoting either democracy or human rights, would be the perfect tool for making the Internet easier to censor. (Look at the countries the UN leaders put on committees to promote 'human rights.'
In short, if you want the Internet to remain free of virtually all censorship but child porn, you want it to be run by the U.S. and not paternalistic European elitists, Arab tyrants, or the Chinese dictatorship. You want to make sure the UN had nothing to do with it.
--Mike Perry, Seattle, Editor: Dachau Liberated
Hmmm....well as a "house guest" (and member of the rest of the world) if thats what you think you really want, lets build our own house and see how you like living in your empty dwelling listening to the party next door.
As an American citizen, I'm ashamed of my government's behavior in this issue. We don't deserve control. I'd like to see the internet fracture into many pieces so that it's more difficult to censor / regulate. Fuck our power-grubbing leaders.
If the internet had been designed from the beginning to be a global service, this criticism might make sense, but the internet started, and existed for many, many years afterwards, as an *internal*, US creation. Only in *hindsight* do those IPv4 allocations look wrong now.
Yea, because those international bodies (like the UN) have proven time and time again that they are so fast to respond.
.net, etc)...and let me guess...the real people behind this are likely to be for-profit companies in the EU instead of the non-profit companies based out of the US (like ICANN and OSRC)...
The backbone of what is now known collectively as "the internet" was originally a collection of "fragmented networks" which can trace their origin back to ARPANET (a project done by the US DOD)...at some point in time these countries were begging to become part of "our" network (or someone elses that would eventually become part of "our" network). But, in 1998, ICANN won the bid to take control of the contract to take control of the root dns servers from the US Government...
So, the "fracturing of the internet" is a step backwards...and if it actually happened, then they would essentially be stepping back into the days of compuserve...which may be just fine...I mean how many sites in the US do people in the EU visit? Google? Yahoo? Slashdot? Wikipedia? Micro$oft? Cisco?...nah...just cut the cord...remember that even resources that have servers located in other countries share information with the US centers of operation...
Maybe they would come up with good alternatives to the more popular sites, but what's more than likely to happen is about a week later...once all of the sites that use ICANN's servers (everyone right now) started blocking the new "rogue dns root(s)", the people on these networks would be calling to be reconnected to the American resources that were previously available to their countries. What's funny is there ARE actually a few "alternate dns roots" that hand out top level domains that many are not too familiar with...what it sounds like they are actually arguing for is control of the "generic" tlds (.com,
Let's be accurate about that. The EU, with it's hodgepodge of restrictive, leftist politically-correct speech codes, is trying assert control over the internet. If the EU is going to control speech on the internet, why don't we go one better give China control over the internet? I for one feel more comfortable with the US in charge.
Give each country there own giant NAT box and be done with it!
The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
Why the UN? Because there's no corruption in the UN, right?
So given that several people have come out in favour of the US retaining control given that they invented the Internet in the first place, do these same people think that Britain should have control over what stamps countries are allowed to use in the postal services since it invented the stamp? Yes I know that is a completely insane idea...but so is one country trying to control all IP addresses and names.
when I tried to get control over something I could already use, what do you need it for?
The following news story shows exactly why the UN should not be allowed to manage the Internet. They are holding their tech conference in Tunisia, a country that to Reporters without Borders. Say what you will about the US, but at least this isn't going on at the root level.
2 .html
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20050929/D8CTK2SO
If it ain't broke, don't fix it.
TANSTAAFL
The third world war will not be fought over land, power, or religion. The third world war will be fought over DNS and IP addresses. In the midst of the fight, Google will release GoogleNet in an attempt to unify the internet under a single problem. At 11:10am on March 7, 2014 Google will become self aware and launch a nuclear attack against mankind.
I'm not saying it's "wrong" as such (I guess it was a pretty negative statement though), I'm just pointing out facts which happen to be amusing (to me :-).
didn't read the fucking article, but let's see if I can summarize why whoever wrote it, posted it, and replied to it with anything unlike this reply is a complete douche. /. by a douchebag.
The internet already IS a bunch of mininets. there already are conflicting dns servers. the writer says the mininets won't be connected and have the same ips? hmmm, so not a single person will have connections to two networks and plug them into a router with nat? you know, kinda like everyone with a home network? nothing to see here - just the used bag of douche thrown in the trash that is
douche
The control of the internet by U.S. interests is stronger than some have intoned. The following excerpt and link are informative:
MASTER OF ITS DOMAIN (AND YOURS)
Hidden amidst the technology parks of Northern Virginia is Network Solutions engineering building. Its address is unpublished and the actual building bears no identification that might suggest its tenant or its contents. Entry into the building is restricted by electronic key cards
Read more:
http://www.bizforward.com/wdc/issues/1999-08/anal
While in principle the idea that an international body should control an international resource seems to be a good one I am cautious about the pragmatic realities of an international body doing this. In particular I worry about DNS and IP assignment policies being used to suppress certain kinds of free speech.
Even other western democracies have much less protection of free speech. Germany prevents racist speech as do many other countries. Will domain names be denied to people with racist propoganda? If this is a UN controlled organization will the generally assembelly have power over it? Could the many islamic nations ban together to prevent anti-islamic websites being given domain names?
I know some of you will object and say the US isn't perfect in terms of free speech and cite examples like the DMCA and various federal wiretap laws. My response is severalfold, first it is important to distingush privacy concerns from free speech concerns and I think the later are much more important than the other. Secondly while the US doesn't extend free speech rights as far as I would like in terms of copyright type information this is still commercial speech not personal/political speech. I mean can you really deny that it is more important to be able to make political or religious statements than ones about how to hack an xbox? Moreover, the problem with the DMCA type laws is that they are spreading so moving it out of the US gains no benefit.
Ultimately because so much of the infrastructure is already in the US the internet is already at the mercy of the US government and giving another body power only increases the number of people who can censor it. Moreover while the US isn't perfect it does seem to have one of the strongest protections of free speech in the face of majority oppossition.
If you liked this thought maybe you would find my blog nice too:
Actually, this is all about choosing a DNS root within or outside U.S. or U.N. jurisdiction. The whole "power" of ICANN is that We, the People^WUsers, choose to connect to ICANN controlled root servers. Nothing prevents us (in theory) picking other root servers at all.
Now comes the catch: Microsoft controls over 90% of the market share; and they configure the resolvers to query some root servers. Whatever Microsoft chooses to be the default, will effectively de facto BE the default. If they (Microsoft) choose to side with the US, the DNS will be US controlled as it is now. If they choose to side with the U.N., it will be U.N. controlled.
It's really that simple.
cpghost at Cordula's Web.
Meh.
.sex domains who hijacked network solutions (before they were netsol) - his name eludes me - who cares anyways??) and it bombed because there's no need - DNS is functional for the entire world - and if it aint broke don't fix it.
This whole thing is just daft. If the rest of the world really wants control, they should build their own DNS system and issue their own frickin' root zones file. Not likely; its already been tried before (who was the guy with
There's nothing to even really be concerned with regarding the root zones file - if we need more root servers we set up a DNS server thats up to snuff to handle billions of queries per day, and you add it to 'the' file. Anyone who wants to politicize this process needs a good whack in the head with a binder full of RFCs.
Meh.
UNITED NATIONS (AP) - Facing heated protest, the United Nations on Wednesday defended Tunisia's hosting of a U.N. summit about Internet access in the developing world, even though the north African nation has been repeatedly accused of rights abuses that include blocking Web sites it dislikes.
Earlier this week, a coalition of human rights groups known as the Tunisia Monitoring Group issued a report that declared Tunisia unfit to hold the World Summit on the Information Society, set for November, because of reports that the government has stepped up attacks on the press and civil society.
The group, which has frequently criticized the selection of Tunisia as the host country, said the government has blocked access to Web sites belonging to Reporters Without Borders, other human rights watchdogs, and the independent press, while police monitor e-mails and Internet cafes.
"It does question to some extent the U.N.'s credibility that a world summit on the information society is taking place in a society where access to some Web sites is restricted," said Alexis Krikorian, of the International Publishers' Association. "It's amazing that such a summit would take place in a country like this."
Why don't we just make "meta domains" or "hyper domains" and give each country one of them to manage themselves, then they could assign all the subdomains themselves, any way they want. We could even make an abbreviated name and just tack it onto the end of the domain names. Something like ".uk" for the domains controlled by the UK, and so forth, you get the idea.
It that a great idea, or what? I can't believe that no one's thought of this before. Maybe I'll get a Nobel Peace Prize for coming up with the idea that brings harmony to the internet.
So. How much of this stupidity is manifest through the shortsighted policies of the current administration? In so many of its actions, it has led the US on a path around the globe, blatantly indifferent of those trod underfoot. Presidencies here last at most eight years; yet, it is difficult to say whether the next will be more mindful of other nations. Let us hope.
It's the business of the US populace who they elect as their leader.... that goes without saying, but one has to realise there will be a reaction to who they choose.
Electing Bush as President once could be put down to an accident.... a second time and other countries started to question the stability of the country that elected him. Now all these other countries may well be in the wrong, and the US may have the right of it, but widespread polls outside the US consistenctly show the people in other countries regard Bush as the single most dangerous man on the planet, and more dangerous that S. Hussein..... in short they're no happier with a country that Bush is leader holding the reigns that they would have been pre regiime-change Iraq.
That is what a large portion of the planet is reacting to. Not the US in and of itself, but the man you elected as your leader twice (to the amazement of anybody not American), and to whom most of the rest of the planet wouln't trust the running of a corner store. Truthfully, everybody else may be wrong, I'm just trying to convey sentiment in large portions of the rest of the world... we think Bush is a moron, and we don't trust the people who decided he was they best they could find as their leader.
For the record, as I realise this does wade into traditionally anti-American flame territory... I'm English, I've traditionally been very pro the Anglo-American relationship, and a Europsceptic, but I want nothing to do with a Bush lead regime, and if you elect another muppet as your leader then yeah, I'm in favour of the EU backing away from the US on any matter of international import... and that includes DNS
The man's a nut job..... That's what most of us out here thing. We may well be wrong, but right or wrong it's how we view him. In light of that we view the US as a country whose leader is a nut. We therefore don't consider the US a safe and stable country to entrust anything in.
It's your president we don't trust, not the US. Your trustworthiness is only in question because you elected him.
I'm sorry if this gets read as anti-American as I enjoy the company of a fair few American colleagues, and more than a few online friends. I think the world is a better place to have had the US in it, but men of worse character than normal have convinced enough people to fear all else but their vision.
Good luck over the next couple of years, and I look forward to you electing a leader that might actualy qualify for a McJob before you attempt to make him Leader of The Free World.
Okay, I'm not a know it all, but I'd like to think I know quite a bit in this area. So I'd like to throw some ideas out, because I'm interested in the oft insightful freedback from /..
Okay, first thought: this wouldn't cause a split in the net, just in the Internet's DNS system. Although this would be bad, it isn't the end of the world (wide web). One simple work around, is that consumers could use multiple DNS servers, depending on which root server the intended site is using. Inconvenient, yes; impossible, no.
That being said, my second thought is this: what is keeping the US as the authority? Might I suggest that this is a case of build it and they will come. It seems to me that if some international org. starts an alternative name service, perhaps one that simply augments the data from current root servers, it would be up to the larger ISP's to decide to start using the new augmented service.
So, thoughts? Am I way off base here, is that really that simple? Thanks!
The more complicated something is, the more opportunities for those who can figure it out. If the Internet becomes fractured, think of the market for clever ways to interoperate seamlessly across the fractures! Mr. Crusher, ahead frac factor five!
Try such pesky venues like Scoop or the Guardian or pravda or AlJazeera
You forgot the NY Times, The Wapo, and CNN.
The 'caskets' meme is *so* old. It's now Judith Miller!( gee, what happened to 'Mother' Sheehan? )
Anyhoo, your obviously lax on your medicinal schedule.
HA time to stop opening the mouth before the foot enters.
... not even countries... Just Commercial companies. The Goverments contribution is now and for a LONG time has been, barely a fraction of the total invested in the net. The companies own it. Not the USA. Get the facts.
Check the total Investment in the Internet GLOBALY by the US goverment and then compare with the investment by other COMPANIES
Oh and dont play the "But their US companies!" card... You know its stupid, if you dont... well then... guess that makes you [ fill in your own blank here ]
XML - A clever joke would be here if
There will be two internets, one controlled by the USian government that's DRMed to fucking hell, and another by the UN for the rest of the world to enjoy, with no access from the fucktard USians. Finally, now the USian economy will finally crash and burn. woot woot!
But back to IP - a split may actually be good in this sense, as the new system could use IPv6. About fscking time! The new international/EU body would be responsible for dishing out IPv6 addresses, with possibly a new namespace too, while the 'old' internet would still be accessible through a gateway.
But back to DNS - This is probably going to be a moot point before too long anyway - who needs DNS when you have google? (Oh the irony!)
I read quite an interesting proposal for a DNS system based on FreeNet - completely distributed and just about uncontrollable, but based on popularity. If georgewbush.com wants to take over gwbush.com, then it just has to be more popular. Now _that's_ democracy.
"I think it would be a good idea" Gandhi, on Western Civilisation
The problem is that the current "U.S. controlled root-server" addresses are "hard coded" into tens of millions of BIND dns server installations. (The default named.ca file shipped with BIND) Defaults are also hard-coded into various resolvers for DNS (for browsers, etc).
So, we have the issue of installed-base = current-root-servers. It would be like starting from zero to overtake the existing MPEG formats for music, video, etc. Could be done, but tough task ....
Amen, the Internet isn't perfect and there is definitely room for improvment. Show me a perfect network and I'll show you a flying cow. The last thing we need is the UN to "fix" the Internet. It would be like having 100+ network administrators and more red tape than we can imagine.
this is why we must have Yards and Meters....
I'm not American and I really don't like the way that the US has been behaving like assholes in almost every respect of international relations, but I'd much rather have the current status quo than having China or Cuba or any banana republic have say on the running of the Internet.
It resolves to an IP, but nothing loads. So is that guy in the whois lookup a terrorist or what.
The U.S. is pro-democracy? - only insofar as it serves their intentions by giving it lip service. Historically the USA has been for Democracy only when the democratic process results in a government they find pliant or tolerable.
Our current pretender, Mr. Bush is allied with Musharraf, the Pakistani dictator who overthrew a democratically elected government. The Bush Admin has expended great efforts stretching the truth about N.Korea, Iran and Iraq, while hiding the truth about Pakistan's exportation of nuclear tech to other countries. Up until recently the Bush Administration was happy to ally with one of the world's present day devils, Uzbekistan's Karimov, and even after last May's Uzbek government's Andijon massacre of their protesting citzenry, which was described by one of the protestors with "They shot at us like rabbits", equivocated before supporting the EU demand for an International Inquiry. While this was going on, they had actively tried to destablize Chavez in Venezuela, who won his election. Then there is the Abdullah love pecks.
Are these allies of ours liberal and limited governments? The only reason the Bush Admin presently loudly touts democracy, is that it's the only even half-assed rationale left for Bush's War Upon Iraq. It certainly wasn't waged to get our real enemy, the 911 perps, many of whom have licked their wounds received from Afghanistan battles up in Pakistan.
And this is only our present Administration. The Pro Democracy spin is hype. The American Government is comprised of powermongering control freaks, the truth notwithstanding.
Yeah, so The USA is better than the Dynastic Maoposeur gang's Great Firewall of China, and mainliand's i-net policy of Hu owns Yu; so all your posts are belong to the People's Republic, but the US government is still insidious, and still without a clue. I was spooked to see how a weird-assed robot with a dot mil DNS resolution made a jump across two web domains on a previously invisible thread, in the temporary weblogs, only to have both providers(1 UK and 1 US based) erase its tracks on the permannent logs. Especially since the pages had nothing whatsover to do with "terrorism". One was a satire about Mike Savage's and Alan Ginsburg's frolicking relationship from the past, and the other some political cartoons.
The great terrorist hunters of the Naval War College , investigating adolescent humour poking fun at right-wing homophobia in their herculean attempts to probe and root out the evil doers. They aren't called Rear Admirals for nothing; In The Navy...
The USA politicians want control of the internet only for the sake of control, and for the advantages they can then provide to their cronies.
Rush Limbaugh is a perfect real world example of an oxycontinmoron
Thanks, US, for invading Cuba and Philippines when it was Spanish. Thanks for helping Europe AFTER you were bombed by Japan (prior to this many american fortunes were made trading with nazi Germany). Thank you for helping Europe in the WWI... but not from the beginning. Thank you for letting Franco stay calm in Spain BECAUSE HE WAS A NATIONAL-CHRISTIAN DICTATOR. Oh, and thank you too for pushing patents laws in Europe.
Yes, we Europeans have to give many thanks to the US (government).
Stop thinking 'Hollywood movies' = 'real world'.
Because you must click and post?
Of course not. Are you implying that I should refrain from pointing out what I consider to be obvious because Slashdot is a "free" site? I'm not sure that makes sense, or is even relevant.
Why do you care?
I'm not really that bothered per se. I just think the explanation that all the dupes are down to simple incompetence has become rather implausible.... it's the five-ton elephant in the middle of the room that no-one notices. Perversely, the more commonplace it becomes, the more it seems to get accepted; it started off being joked about, and now people are used to it, no-one stops to think how implausible the whole "incompetent editors" thing is, in spite of the increasing silliness of that explanation in light of recent dupes.
I mean, Zonk posted both stories himself.
I don't get this whole "OMG its a dupe" fad that's come into being
I don't either; and for a different reason- namely that for all the bitching about dupes that goes on, it's always complaining about the supposed incompetence of the editors.
I mean, there are footprints all over the butter, and they aren't even considering the elephant in the fridge as a possible cause!
Is this just the post-modern version of the "neither news for nerds, NOR stuff that matters!" troll
No, I'm not a troll (check my posting history; plenty of lightweight crap, but nothing really trollish). I'm just someone who, having read the same "OMG its a dupe, the editors suck"-type post several times, then seeing someone else who'd spotted the elephant in the room had to reply to it.
I really think you missed the point when you put this done as another "OMG it's a dupe!!!" post. It's *about* the lack of insight in such posts as much as it's about the dupes themselves.
Anyway, Slashdot are a free site, so I'm not going to lay into them for trying to increase their pageviews; I'm just not going along with the 'incompetence' nonsense.
"Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
If someone was to setup a World root DNS server, which basically was to check its own records then failing a match check ICANNs records ( for a legacy match :P ) It would slowly solve this whole problem...
.com .net .gov .com.au .net.au .gov.au .co.uk .net.uk .gov.uk
Even if ISP's and the like didnt have their records point to the World root DNS Servers when people started to complain that they couldnt acess website x because their ISP didnt point to the World root DNS server, ISPs would slowly migrate until hey presto no one uses ICANN anymore they, instead register with WRDS... and US loses control... Easy...
you could even have some sort of setup where the worl root dns server just held a list saying
goto ICANN for
goto (insert new australian root dns server here) for
goto (insert new english root dns server here) for
etc...
each country will them have control only over the top level domain name assigned to them and there will still be a world controled body which oversees everything and is used as the root dns server by everyone ( it could even mirror the records held by each of the countries
"I reject your reality, and substitute my own" - Adam Savage
The U.S. has shown no signs of censoring the internet at the DNS level.
/ 08/1239221&tid=95&tid=219
If ICANN would be politically independent the iraqi TLD would be operated by an iraqi organization.
See http://politics.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/09
Concerning Aljazeera, here is an interesting article that shows how corrupt our admin is, but you will not see it on fox news.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
Inter-Continental Ballistic Missile- addresses??
Rise up in the cafeteria and STAB them with your plastic forks!
It is all about commerce! Can the business world really afford to allow a body like the UN control the internet? They can't even decide what to do when people are being slattered in Rwanda. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/evil /
If you think the red tape on progress is bad now under US control wait until every nation in the world has an equal vote on the direction of the interenet.
What happened to the xxx domain? The moral minority were outraged. There could be rude things, tits, gay people. So the president intervened and put it on hold. That is why we can no longer tolerate US control of the internerd. We want our filth and we want it now. Rise up and overthrow the imperialist prurient opressors.
Don't put off until tomorrow what you can leave until the day after.
The EU may not be the rest of the world... but it's the *free* world - standing proud and free between the twin insanity of JesusLand and Wackjobistan.
.xxx tld approved, and see why the Eu is sick to death of America's bone rattling fundamentalists dominating your politics.
Witness the debacle of trying to get the
In a twisted way, you are as bad as Iran. Substitute Jesus for Mohammed, and it's getting kinda hard to tell you apart.