Lawmakers Support U.S. Control Of The Internet
TechScam writes "A new resolution was introduced in Congress that aims to backup the Bush administration over retaining U.S. control of the Internet's core infrastructure. From the article: 'The resolution, introduced by two Republicans and one Democrat, aims to line up Congress firmly behind the Bush administration as it heads for a showdown with much of the rest of the world over control of the global computer network.'"
How did this ever even become a controversy? Isn't the internet as we know it an outgrowth and result of DARPA work? And didn't the internet essentially grow from those efforts and work?
This feels like envy and jealousy, the United States created a neat and shiny toy unnoticed by the world until it "became" the internet, and now the rest of the world wants some stewardship, whether it is warranted or not (in my opinion, not).
I don't think the U.S. is the wisest and most sage about everything, but seriously, what is considered the risk here for it maintaining stewardship. It may have misstepped once or twice but empirical evidence suggests competent management (note I didn't say the "best"), and I haven't seen any contraindications to the detriment of the rest of the world.
I think some of the threats made by the U.N., et. al., in these attempts to wrest the internet from the United States are misguided, immmature, and more seriously jeapordize the cohesive internet world wide as we know it today.
(Meanwhile, has anyone peeked at the ozone hole lately?)
Bush won't backdown. I predeict the US is going to win this battle, but I wonder what they will give up in another area to let the EU save face?
I suspect we will wind up giving them money, but in what area? Maybe we will back off the Airbus stuff at the WTO? Anyone have any thoughts?
Obligatory slashdot argument about which countries have the best freedoms.
Ooo man the floppy drive is broken. No wait. The computer is just upside down.
Considering the history of US tech lawmaking I'm kinda suprised they dident screw this up too and give it away thinking that "oh boy this will make everbody like us again whoo hoo!". Get over it the rest of the world has -never- liked us unless we were giving them foreign aid.
"It's so convenient to have a system where everyone is a criminal" - A. Hitler
if there is anything stupider than the (EU + UN)'s ignorant attempt to take over the existing DNS root, it just might be the US's attempt to maintain control of it.
what we need is to get some momentum behind a decent decentralized DNS-type system. there have been various proposals out there for a while, but there was never a strong reason to try switching... until now.
You know something's wrong when they have to bring Congress into this.
The US backs the US.
-RadioElectric
why is it that the administration wants control over the Internet. But when it comes to trade and the economy they want to "liberalize" it and actually give up control.
It's about time they legalize occupations, digital or land ones.
Film at 11! Is there really any news here?
The US domination of almost anything can't last forever. Chinas is growing to be the next "empire" and in this information-driven era, I think they would like to at least share the control of the Internet :)
Having the US keeping the root DNS servers doesn't equate to meaning they "control the internet". Exactly what can the US do that will so harm non-Americans in using the Internet? They can setup their own DNS at any time.
This "control of the Internet" is just inflammatory rhetoric to drive the US vs. the world posts. If you stop the hyperbole, it's obvious this issue isn't going to really affect Internet users much.
Zonk, stop baiting for pagehits on this topic. Your motives are so clear, it's sickening.
Shouldn't that read "U.S. Lawmakers Support U.S. Control Of The Internet" ?
It's phrases like "control of the global computer network" that make this whole issue so stupid.
Fool.
Lawmakers Support U.S. Control Of The Internet?! :P
I am quite sure that if you ask some of the lawmakers in Europe, they will disagree with you
Makes it sound like they only make laws in the US.
Any technology distinguishable from magic, is insufficiently advanced.
Really, no one is talking about taking the Internet away from the US.
.xxx TLD, nor will we for many years.
What is in question is what nation/organization should have the final say over the domain assignments, creation and so forth.
Because the US is still in control, we do not have the
Yeah, let's pay a little extra to give each of the Billion people in Africa a laptop with wireless Internet access. And who uses the Internet the most? It's the US, is it not? So we'd be forced in to yet another form of foreign aid. Lovely.
We *did* invent the damned thing... it is ours, there's no good reason to give it away!
Rob
When they say "control of the internet" are they just talking about the root DNS servers? There's nothing the US can do to stop other countries from designating some root DNS servers of their own, right? The only issue is whether or not they will share data with the current root servers. I'm not sure on the details, but all the root servers share data with each other now.I don't see the problem with more root servers being put up. Even if one of them didn't resolve some addresses based on nefarious ideas the other root servers would still be available for people to use.
A Multiplayer Strategy Game for Mac OS X, Windows, and Linux
How would you know that "U.S. Lawmakers Support U.S. Control Of $WHATEVER" if when it happens it NEVER makes the news?
Hahaha :)
Ok - Darpa invented the internet. If the EU/China care to do so - they can easily have an 'intranet' and disconnect 'we invented it - it is ours' internet.
All rights are gone - get ready to ease off!
If Yahoo can bend over and do what we want - so will the US of A.
"For every right, an equal responsibility..."
How can we possibly be safe without the UN controlling the Internet?
Lawrence Person (lawrencepersonh@gmailh.com (remove all "h"s to mail)
http://www.lawrenceperson.com/
I think we should give full control to Al Gore since he is the person who invented the Internet.
*ducks*
Oh my gosh... where to begin. Yes, Iran and North Korea suddenly decided to develop WMD's because of the Bush administration... years before it began. They must have good psychics over there.
Thanks.
America spent a trillion dollars building the internet economy, and then this Congress and President shipped it to China and India.
Fuck them.
Trying to kiss our ass by keeping control of the root servers is not going to save their jobs in 2006 and 2008.
Of course they do, they are U.S. lawmakers. Ask a different Government for different results. D'oh!
No new arguments here, just another "We want it all and We deserve it" statement. Not very helpful.
I hope I didn't brain my damage.
It is interesting to see that U.S. says that it is defendding free spech, while U.N. says exactly the same, that it is defending freedom of expression (check here)...
Very interesting, because freedom of speech for U.N. seems to be: "We want a rich public domain and no government looking into our conversation.", and for U.S., it seems to be: "If they make racism illegal, the next one will be porn.". I can see why U.S. government is concerned by the U.N. idea of free speech, but I can't see how U.S. people can't realize that the second argument is a non sequitur.
Also, I loved that phrase:
"Turning the Internet over to countries with problematic human-rights records, muted free-speech laws, and questionable taxation practices will prevent the Internet from remaining the thriving medium it has become today"
Let's forget that the U.S. viewed today as exaclty a country with problematic human-rights records and questionable taxation practices! Let's blame the rest of the World for those thigs.
Rethinking email
I think you've already got a full set there.
Beware the psychokinetic mimes!
Remember that the UN is the global organization that allows Libya to be a key voting member of the UN Human Rights Commission. The US is far more tolerant of dissent and free expression of ideas than most of the nations that make up the UN. As an individual who values freedom, I feel safer with the US in control.
..or that doesn't apply today?
The important thing is to have a DNS root Server everybody in the world, no matter their political point of view, can trust. When politicians (and especially presidents) starts to be interested in the "universal guidebook", no wonder people start loosing faith in the system.
Today, The Internet is not DARPA it is not American. It's international, global, something more that we all need in our daily lives.
The more US politicians, US lawmakers and US presidents tighten their grip and insists on control of The Internet, the more likely it is, that they will loose.
And just think of all the fun Internet content we're missing out on because of that:
www.WaffleHouseWaitresses.xxx
www.OverweightDeerHuntersFromAlabama.xxxn nyMetrosexualsWhoThinkGirlsAreImpressedByHomemadeP orn.xxx
www.JanetReno.xxx
www.Ski
If it keeps THAT kind of smut off the web, then by God I hope we keep control for a long, long time!
Is there really any news here?
;)
Nothing to see here, move along please, or Officer Bar-Brady will have to execute you with a gunshot to the head.
Next the news will be 'congress approves US bombing brown people', well *duh*.
In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
...and Congress isn't going to be able to stuff it back.
U. S. control of the Internet is about as likely as U. S. control of the atomic bomb was during the fifties.
The U. S. can certainly mess things up, and, along with other countries, partially fragment the Internet. Usually it is undemocratic countries like China that do things like this. The main effect will be to partially deny U. S. citizens access to the rest of the world, and restrict the ability of small and medium-sized U. S. businesses to do business overseas.
It is a negative-sum game, the opposite of synergy; it will hurt the world a bit and it will hurt the U. S. more than it hurts the rest of the world. But if the U. S. prefers a chaotic Internet to a harmonious Internet it is certainly capable of achieving that result.
"How to Do Nothing," kids activities, back in print!
No really - what would Tim Berners Lee do?
China is your biggest lender, Saudia Arabia is your biggest supplier of Oil, Europe is your biggest trading partner.
Since when did we suddenly become enermies and since when did you get the right to tell us how we should run our part of the Internet?
You forgot HillaryClinton.xxx, and MonicaLewinsky.xxx ;-)
It's either on the beat or off the beat, it's that easy.
I moderate therefore I rule!
--
*blinking cursor*
If the rest of the world ganged up on the US in the form of heavy trade sanctions it may result in the US being a little less bigheaded about... well... everything.
thank God the internet isn't a human right.
Anyone else think all this useless diplomatic handwrestling about the "control" of the internet is quite utterly useless (if someone starts to censor things or whatever, I'm the first in line to start my own linux boxen to take care of all my home network DNS needs)?
:P
Wish the opensource community developed a distributed system so we could all give the finger to the man trying to bring our internets down.
Build your own!
But, this is really mostly about the DNS name to address mapping though and, to a lesser degree, about traffic filtering.
That's rather like France complaining that the international dialing prefix for the U.S., Canada, and a few other North American countries is a convenient 1, or that they can't assign me a telephone number or even an area code because I live in Washington state.
Nothing stops any other country or consortium of countries from setting up their own root DNS servers and, if they want, mapping some TLD understood by their servers to he "U.S.-centric" name space, stripping thair funky TLD (though it ceases to be a distributed name service, then, as they'd have to proxy that mapping -- serves them right -- or not interoperate at all.
What's really scary is the degree to which the politicos "just don't get it".
If anything, base internet technology is the most free form of information out there: not kept secret, and not encumbered by patents.
You could've hired me.
"Turning the Internet over to countries with problematic human-rights records, muted free-speech laws, and questionable taxation practices will prevent the Internet from remaining the thriving medium it has become today," said California Republican Rep. John Doolittle in a statement.
Don't you think that will include the USA as well? (US soliders burning Iraqi bodies, police beatings caught on tape, journalists being prosecuted, IRS taking almost half of anything). An the Internet is not exactly a thriving medium. It's only in the infancy stage where the true potential is still yet to be unleashed. With all that fibre unlit, beaurocacy really speaks loudly there.
He's been wrong the last 100 random decisions he's made, so the odds are good that he'll be right this time. I have a good feeling about facing down those insurgent World people, or 'them' as I prefer to call them, God is on our side so we're sure to win over 'there' as I prefer to call it!
Ha ha ha! Excellent post. I wish I had not wasted all of my mod points earlier today on that "light the boat on fire with mirrors" story. :^)
-s
If US lawmakers could seize control over meatspace through legislative fiat, they'd be in favor of that, too. The real question is, how are they going to enforce the rest of the world not forking the internet into a disparate, regionalized network of networks with borders?
You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
New flash! US lawmakers want to keep US Internet control...! As do US administration and government! And for all those "ARPA is American", well, the Web is European. I wonder where the Internet would be today without the Web as we know it (there would be some kind of replacement, for sure, but would it be open and free? And maybe it would just have appeared).
.com and .net TLDs.. And we all remember the dreadly wildcard).
.org is now managed by SPI, a great German ISP really "for the public interest"). So now let's get a big hug ;) And hope nothing bad happens, I'd hate not to be able to read Slashdot, and for sure, everyone here would miss my INSIGHT ;) (HAHAHAHA).
Get your facts straight. The Internet is an international progress and profits to everyone. I haven't participated a "DNS control" topic yet, but I'm posting now since I find it really childish that American slashdotters are so reluctant to ONLY let countries manage their own ccTLD, and let ITU manage the gTLD (for the better interest of everyone, since for now the Bush administration is completely corrupted by VeriSign for
The ITU managing root DNS servers doesn't mean that the U.N will get to decide everything and that Chinese will have a say. And even if they did, why not? The U.N. privilegdes democratic thoughts, e.g Free Software (FOSS) is recognized by UNESCO, an U.N. branch? ITU has already managed discussions on IPv6 and is a very prominent actor in the world of networking and communication.
All in all, the US letting the U.N. manage the Internet won't change what we love in the Internet, but it will prevent bad political choices (e.g VeriSign having gTLDs that are supposedly ran as Public Service), and it is just the way it should be. And stop those redundants "If it ain't broke, don't fix it". It's not about fixing it, it's about making things equal. The Internet was made by all (maybe not by country still in development who couldn't possibily help, but does it mean we should say fuck to Africa when it wants to have some input in the future of our great *HUMAN* network?). Oh, forget it, Slashdotters are sometimes so conservative I don't know why I'm posting. Certainly going to burn some karma and getting tons of replies of how wrong I am and how we should just cut the transatlantic optic fibers so we won't bother each others anymore. Sorry, but I enjoy the American Internet. And I enjoy the European Internet. And without those peerings, it would feel like cold war. Think about it: Back in 1991, Linux would have had to be sent to the US by traditionnal mail (yeah, it was developped in Finland). Now that would have been bad for all of us, wouldn't it?
I don't care much about the issue. The US have not managed the root DNS servers too badly, except for the VeriSign crap (but the
I'm from New Zealand. The UN no more represents me or my opinion than it represents the US and its opinion. The rest of the world is far from united behind this UN resolution. I for one think the US has done a fine job and I would much rather it be controlled in the US than in some wholly undemocratic institution where repressive governments would get a say in governance.
dominionrd.blogspot.com - Restaurants on
What's the US gonna do now? Nuke the enternut?
In terms of root level DNS, I can be just as sure that my query for "update.microsoft.com" is being directed from my DNS to the root level DNS as I can that my ISP is trustworthy and secure. And their ISP. And the root level DNS. And Microsoft's ISP....
And I feel very, very bad for anyone who's autoupdate works solely through DNS. DNS is subject to man-in-the-middle, as is HTTP, so you better at least have some signing happening. And if you have that signing, what exactly are you worried about that'd be worse without root DNS?
Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
They are elected to give as much support/control as they can to their country/citizen.
Now a senator NOT supporting that the control of DNS server remain in the US hand, now that would be newsworthy.
C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
visit randi.org
retaining U.S. control of the Internet's core infrastructure
With control over infrastructure, it'll be easier to affect control over content. You know, so our morally superior country and government can wipe out all forms of violence and nudity and sex on the internet. It's so obscene and evil. But we're not as bad as the taliban, I swear. I mean... most of us aren't even brown so that makes is totally lawful/good.
Who's got most of the oil? <Insert Arabic country or Canada here>, not you.
--Ackbar
(Just pointing out how asinine the PP is, the Cold War is over)
There is another kind of evil which we must fear most, and that is the indifference of good men. -- Boondock Saints
You mean china?
What!? they already made the movie?
Damn hollywood is getting fast these days.
The discussion is in regards to the root of the DNS. This is NOT the Internet! The Internet is composed of many technologies, where the DNS is only a minor one.
The most fundamental is the wire! This is not made by the US, but mostly telecompanies around the world. But also some WIFI and other free networks has been build.
The core technology is based on the TCP/IP. This is like telephone numbers. These are distributed all over the world as we speak and it would be close to impossible to break this up.
In regards to who made the Internet, it was based on some ideas made by the US army many years ago. But the net was not build by the US. It was mostly universities who had local networks that over time got connected to each other, slowly building the Internet. It is not the US who went to every country and implemented it locally. If the rest of the world disconnect from the US, US will be alone.
The most common feature of the Internet; the World Wide Web, was not an invention from US at all. It started in CERN, and was made to provide scientific results out to a large audience.
So what is the fuss about? If the DNS goes offline (or I chose to use my own), all I need to do is to find the IP's I'm looking for. Well that's what I did before the DNS was invented. And there is no one who can prevent me from distributing my own phonebook (DNS) today, ignoring the US root.
So control of the Internet? It's a joke! The Internet is extremely difficult to control. Anyone who thinks its possible doesn't live in the real world. They are probably more political orientated than having technically knowledge.
The Internet is fundamentally a collection of networks that various people, regions and countries has decided to connect together.
-:) Oh no - not again.
www.rednebula.com
This is just simply not true. Some slashdotters here wish that was the case, but repeating it enough times doesn't make it fact. The core foundations of the Internet were invented in the US and is still being used today.
Here's one short history.
It's politically correct and nice to say "oh the whole world and everyone helped to invent it" but it's just PC bullshit. The lion's share of the credit goes to the US.
The thing is, whether Bush backs down or not is irrelevant. Despite the views apparently held in the White House and among a disturbingly large proportion of US citizens, the US has no authority over anyone outside its own borders. If the rest of the world wants to run its own alternative DNS system, then realistically there is pretty much jack the US can do about it, and if it tries to play the isolation/fragmentation game, it's going to miss the rest of the world a lot more than the rest of the world misses it. The only constructive thing the US administration can do is try to talk/bribe them out of it diplomatically and/or hope they decide that it's not really a good idea after all and drop it.
Personally, I have mixed opinions on this one. On general principles I think the US should be forced to relinquish absolute control, particularly since it has demonstrated a willingness to abuse the position by effectively vetoing the .xxx TLD. However, I maintain a healthy scepticism about the UN, which lots of US-based people seem to assume is the only option on the table here despite at least four serious proposals having come out of the EU already.
If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
Man, whenever I hear stupid drivel like this I'd like to remind the poster that the Otto internal combustion engine, the Diesel motor and the Wankel engine all were invented by German engineers, funded by German money and patented in Germany. So please, do stop using them, then you're allowed to complain.
Or better yet, force the designers to include remote control kill-switches that allow the German government to shut down each one. Don't worry, we'd never abuse that.
-- Language is a virus from outer space.
Mmm... you, half the countries in the western world, my neighbor's dog and North Korea.
Anyhow, I think you'll find that there's bugger all you can do if those outside the US decide to point *their* computers and *their* infrastructure at a different DNS server.
You can say this is stupid, like it or not, complain that you invented the Internet (true) and sing the songs of Barry Manilow in the wrong key, but it's not going to change that fact. And I don't think nukes will be entering into it, silly boy.
Whats to win, its not a EU+World wins / America loses situation.
You can have control of your Internet, we can agree a different way. Worse that will happen is you'll have to register twice on two systems each new domain - hardly a big deal, we already register twice (Name server + DNS) whenever you register a domain name courtesy of the complicated ICANN system. Did you notice? No because your domain name registrar handled it all for you.
So if you really don't want to come along, then don't, nobody will miss you. All you'll do is piss off a lot of the world by treating them this way.
I can already see a near future with lots of other networks, alternatives to the internet. Maybe safer, no spam, trojans or other annoying stuff. This is where all these can lead to in my humble opinion. Is it goo? Is it bad?
Stop being so batshit crazy all the time, and we might trust you more.
Love,
The Rest of the World
"The UN no more represents me or my opinion than it represents the US and its opinion. The rest of the world is far from united behind this UN resolution. I for one think the US has done a fine job and I would much rather it be controlled in the US than in some wholly undemocratic institution where repressive governments would get a say in governance."
UN ITU is just a meeting place for government technical people. If they don't meet there under the UN, they'll meet at the London Hilton, or the Savoy but whereever they meet and whoever books the meeting room, it will be the same governments and the same technical people. It's not a *UN* resolution or *UN* control, since a UN is just a bunch of governments in a meeting.
You might not like some of the Governments sitting at the meeting table, but they're just one voice each in a big table, and some of them feel the same way about you!
That system works in all other telecoms, including the wires that carry the internet, so why wouldn't it work for DNS?
Misguided and immature?
Bart^w EU: By the way, your DNS servers suck!
Kid^w US: Oh yeah? What are you going to do? Start your own DNS server in your treehouse and get all your little friends to come? I'd like to see that. Ah ha ha ha...
[Everyone else points their computers towards Bart's new DNS server in his treehouse]
Bart: Hi, yeah, welcome. Have a great day. Mm hmm.
Kid: Well, he certainly showed me.
...but does it support Linux?
I am trying to understand here, how much of this is pure politics (ie, maintaining control), and how much of this is a technical issue. As a rule of thumb, if it ain't broke, you dont fix it. This isnt to say that the current setup if optimal, but this seems like a rush to remove control of TLDs from the USA without actually addressing any technical issue or problem? My other problem is that given how long it takes for the UN to do anything at all, giving them control of this seems like a potential mixture for problems down the road. Throw in the EU as a controlling party, and the mixture becomes more complicated further since its composed of member states that need to agree on this stuff as well as a whole.
I definitely agree that the process should be more international, but not a moment before there is something there that would make the transition as smooth as possible. Right now, this smells of "first we'll take control, then we'll think of what to do with it", and it will hang in limbo for a couple years while everyone is asking, "why did we do this in the first place, shit worked before?"
"What can a thoughtful man hope for mankind on Earth, given the experience of the past million years? Nothing." -Bokonon
Wanting freedom to choose, free from another's control, freedom on your own soil to choose and do what you want to do.
Damn that's silly of us, the non-US people of the World, to want that isn't it?
You keep control I'm sure you know what's best for the rest of us Internet Pilgrims.
Although I think that the USA/ICANN have done a good job handling DNS thus far and don't see any reason to change the status quo without a reason, I find that sharing control of DNS is preferable to fracturing DNS.
> Do you have any supporting stats?
/ stats/intnl.htm
Not exactly what you're asking for, but:
http://www.oclc.org/research/projects/archive/wcp
Also the majority of the top web sites are in the US.
As for who uses the net the most, a few years ago it was about evently split between ~50% US and ~50% rest of the world. But I'm sure it has changed since then as the net continues to grow in the rest of the world. Obvously the US number will fall over time, since it started out as 100% of the people on the net were in the USA. (That wasn't so long ago, I remember it well).
I think a lot of people are missing U.S. concerns. My main concern is that the corrupt organization known as the U.N. will tax the internet beyond anyone's imagination. This international body has been working for decades on how to tax U.S. citizens and now they have finally found out how. I personally believe that if the U.N. "controls" the root servers that there will be massive taxes on domains and whatever else they can think to tax. I think the root servers should be left in the control of ICANN. ICANN should become an autonomous organization that reports to no country or no international body, problem solved.
Ross http://www.hostdisciple.com
'Nuff Said.
Mainly due to the imprisonment of New York Times reported Judith Miller and judical action that is undermining the privacy of journalistic sources. Federal courts are getting increasingly bold about subpoenaing journalists and trying to force them to disclose their confidential sources.
At issue is the control of the DNS root servers. Nobody forced anybody to use the current root servers. It was all done by choice, and it just so happened that those who innovated first and did it right got the pie.
Now suddenly all these other countries are crying foul and want control of it like little children squabbling in a school yard. Here are a few thoughts:
1) It has worked well so far, so why re-invent something that already works? Seems to me nations are just doing this for EGO (yes the U.S. has equal amount of it).
2) This entire setup is VOLUNTARY. If any nation sees the U.S. as abusing it, they're always free to set up their own and force their citizens to switch.
3) When you come late to a movie, you have no right to cry that you have no seats. Sit on the aisles and make sure that for the next movie, you arrive early.
eTrade SUCKS
IIRC, what is being debated is who is responsible for the root DNS servers TLD creation and IP range assignment.
As I see, there is no good reason (except George W. Bush-style stupidity) to insist in keeping control of those. The TLDs and IP assignment should be managed by a supranational body. These guys are trying to make some headlines and get credit for "defending the Internet". I doubt they even understand what they are signing.
Besides, if all other nations decide to create new root DNS servers and reassign some unused IP ranges that are currently in the US, what exactly will the US government do about it? Sue them? Invade the UN building? Invade all other countries? If the US governent decides to sabotage the internet by doing something with the root DNS servers, it will take about... er... between 10 minutes to a couple hours for the rest of the world to restart functioning.
This is so much of a non-issue...
http://www.dieblinkenlights.com
I read that first paragraph and, upon coming to a conclusion about your lack of intellect, decided to not finish reading the rest of that post. Let me put your logic into a different, yet similar, situation:
Cars. That's it. You're telling me that because a company (or organization), invented this magical horseless-carriage, that the parent company has the right to dictate and control speed limits, road-laws, licensing, taxes, and everything else that goes with the car in every country in the world?
Sorry to spoil it for you, but the internet is the internet, and every country has jurisdiction in its own area. Now, if *all of the internet* was hosted on servers in the U.S. and the rest of the world were just clients connecting to it, then I might agree. But as it stands, I don't.
Nobody's gay for Mole-Man.
So, for example, if those wonderful bastions of free speech, the French, wanted to, they could make an .xxx.fr domain. Whatever interference is exerted by USGOV to prevent .xxx, there also must be hundreds of other countries preventing .xxx.$(cc) as well.
I personally oppose .xxx, but not for the reason you might expect. I think people (including my own brother) who demand that the Internet be made safe for the Precious Children<tm>, perhaps by ghettoizing 'adult content', have it backwards. The Internet was built by and for adults, and the presumption should be that a site is for adults unless otherwise specified. I'm all in favor of .kids or other mechanisms to 'whitelist' G-rated content, but want no part of a system that requires consenting adults to do anything to keep kids out. That's their parents' job.
[100% ISO 646 Compliant]
SVM, ERGO MONSTRO.
Let's not argue who created the internet here. (Shoutouts to Al gore). The internet simply isn't the internet if USA cut's off the rest of the world (Or if we cut of you). The internet is ..... international, and ...... a net. No government should claim ownership. Lets keep control where it belongs, in a nonpolitical organisation.
European and japanese investors probably own majority of ICANN anyways, hell they pwn more than half of USA. And just what will USA do if the european and japanese threatened to pull their money off the US markets? It would cry like a baby =)
Let's quit calling it "Control of the Internet". NOBODY controls the internet. Those organizations that seemingly are in a postion of authority, such as ICANN, ONLY have such authority because the individual networks on the internet choose to acknowledge them. I'm not even talking about countries here.
We are talking about DNS, something that can and will be routed around should it stop doing it's job to the satisfaction of all.
Here's a couple of analogies that I think may highlight some of the absurdities and some of the hazards. Consider these two restatements of a line from the summary:
The resolution, introduced by two Republicans and one Democrat, aims to line up Congress firmly behind the Bush administration as it heads for a showdown with much of the rest of the world over control of the global road network.
The resolution, introduced by two Republicans and one Democrat, aims to line up Congress firmly behind the Bush administration as it heads for a showdown with much of the rest of the world over control of the radio frequency spectrum.
And guess which organization handles international conflicts and allocations of the radio frequency spectrum?
Nor should we. Every country in the world has been assigned a 2-letter top domain, and we should be using them. Rather than creating new 3-letter TLDs we should be adding ".us" to the current ones. Those ".com"s that are not in the USA probably already have a matching address in their own country's TLD anyway. Sometimes it redirects to the .com (microsoft.ca redirects to microsoft.com/canada) and sometimes the redirection works the other way (google.com redirects to google.ca if you try to connect from Canada).
Once the whole world isn't fighting over the same TLD there won't be any call for the USA to give up control because it would only control the ".us" domain anyway.
This fight is about who gets to profit from issuing and owning "vanity plates".
You really don't get it. ... under .com .xxx it is much easier to filter stuff out. .xxx comes to be; many of the companies that provide that kind of smut will use the .xxx because then they are easy to find.
The "smut" is already on the web
if you have all the smut under
lets assume
easy to find means dollars
the entities(liraries, schools, families) that DON'T want that smut on their computer screen can easily filter that out and sowith protect the innocent eyes of those they want to.
cheers
It just proves how idiotic the ma$$ media is regarding technology it doesn't understand.
The only power the US Government has over the core infrastructure is veto power over ICANN in making new top level domains. A veto power, which IMO, we haven't used as much as we should. (.biz? please.) Otherwise ICANN, and *international* organization set up to make sure IPs and domain names and such are dispensed properly, can do what it pleases.
Beyond that, it is all standardized, meaning if Europe wanted to make it's own IP protocol stack, by my guest... you just won't be able to talk to the rest of the world.
So, everyone let their balls go down a notch, this isn't a power play, just media hype.
So, let's apply the US logic:
...and so on.
- Television standards should be controlled by the Scottish Parliament.
- Postage regulations are controlled by the British parliament.
- Ballooning is controlled by the French (even in the US!)
-
Stop being so fucking paranoid about the Internet. So DARPA funded it years ago. Big fricking deal. We've moved on since then. Get over it and deal with it.
http://www.insovietrussiainternetcontrolsyou.ru
1. America is the most aggressive nation right now.
2. What America does after the aggression (i.e. independent nation building) is irrelevant.
3. Independent nations are neither here nor there. The capacity of a people to be and remain free however is.
4. Just cutting a long enslaved people loose from their captors is not enough to make them free. A mindset change is required.
5. Agression upon an immoral opponent is still aggression.
Interesting how one comment attacking the UN's integrity gets modbombed, while a reply that attacks the US's integrity is unanimously "insightful".
This is a perfect reflection of the US-hating on slashdot. Everybody else is ignored, but when the US isn't perfect, it's never offtopic to trot it out.
It's sad to see the left wing nutjobs taking over this place. It's been all downhill since slashdot got political.
I think its wonderful that the 100 or so odd (very odd) .mao high level domain right now!
UN butcheries and autocratic pranksters want a run at
who can read what. Lets put the Chinese in charge.
Then the internet can be one very happy collection
of the thought of Chirman Mao. In fact.
lets add a
I think the point of the grandparent was that anyone can offer or use an alternative dns system. Such systems already exist. Most of them can easily copy a lot of the IP addresses and names from the current system.
And if some governments unite and offer their own dns system, and tell their ISP do use it , then this dns system will be a main one.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alternative_DNS_root
http://european.nl.orsn.net/
http://www.opennic.unrated.net/
There are plenty of ways out of this other than a "showdown". And the fact that it should even be seen as coming to a showdown is a sad comment on the Bush administration's grasp of foreign policy, considering all the other far more important issues troubling the USA and the world. Some ways to take the heat out of the issue were mentioned in the article in the Economist.
In any case, you can't have it both ways. If the internet is just another utility as many proponents claim, then it is about as interesting as gas, plumbing or electricity. By this argument, moving some aspects of internet regulation to an international body isn't remotely controversial and not much different to the international postal and telephone agreements that have been in force for years. These work well and so unremarkably that no one gives them a second thought. Why should the internet be any different? No one is suggesting that the internet be given away or placed in the hands of a cosmic villain.
On the other hand, if the internet is a some kind of special case and qualitatively different by an order of magnitude from simple utilities, they let's hear some reasoned argument from the US establishment instead of jingoism (and a lot less hype from the big IT companies about a global inforamtion economy).
Alas, it looks as if this is developing in a way all too typical of the current Administration. We begin with intransigence and hostility. This gives way to bad-tempered haggling which eventually results in a sour US withdrawal from its position. Eventually there is a compromise. Everyone is left feeling crap and the US, most likely, is left with less than it would have achieved had it been a little more thoughtful and subtle in the first place.
Some form of international settlement for the regulation of the internet is absolutely inevitable, imho. Unless you are a flat-earther, the only next question is how best to achieve this. Unfortunately it looks as if the US Administration is settling for flag-waiving. I don't think this has yet been backed up with fire-breathing quotations from the bible, but it probably will be. It ain't gonna fly.
Las qué passoun
tournoun pas maï
Hmmmm, European empires (large and small) blew out of Africa, Asia and the Middle East leaving ill defined boundries and illegitimate governments in place and pretty much expected us to step in an clean up the mess. Foolishly, we even tried. The EU is hardly an entity with clean hands.
Perhaps return the funding DARPA sent his way during the "formative" years? Subsidies, remember those?
Who is going to force all those porn sites to go to .xxx? If there's no enforcement then the .xxx domains will just have a second .com address pointing to their IP so they won't be filterable by domain anymore.
Amazing all the U.S.A. haters on the web....first time one of them gets bombed/invaded by someone else, "who they gonna call"? Russia? France? Spain?, nope, since the late 1800's, anytime there has been a major war, it's usually the U.S.A. that eventually comes to the rescue and cleans up the mess. And this drivel about no WMD's being found. Those that think this way need to quick watching the Clinton News Network and do just a little research.....It's been proven for months that some WMD's were found. Not to mention the BURIED in the desert aircraft....The rest are probably hidden in Syria.....we'll get to them later!
if you have all the smut under .xxx it is much easier to filter stuff out.
.xxx domain, under penalty of law? If so, then who gets to decide what's porn? The U.S. religious right? Iran? Me?
.xxx domain solves nothing, and serves only as a potential tool to oppress others - especially the owners of sites which aren't pornographic, but which certain religious groups would like to classify as such in order to drive them off the 'mainstream'.
And what exactly are you going to do. Force everyone who serves up porn to move the
The
Max
My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
Oh no, you can't have any news organization that has any relation to religion can you? Oh not the "media"...can't have that......No bias, can't have that! LMAO.....the mainstream media has been so left wing'd socialist for the past 40 years it isn't funny. The news execs can't figure out why their ratings are sinking. DUH! There are A-L-T-E-R-N-A-T-I-V-E-S to them now!
Your Kantian viewpoint ignores the fact that the end result does matter. Don't get me wrong, the means is important, but it is not the only factor. (and in my opinion less important than the end result in many circumstances)
Maybe a better place to begin a discussion would be the question of which governments have the most control over their citizens. When someone's in position to take away your "freedom" whenever they want, then it isn't freedom anymore, it's permission.
We shouldn't pay dues......heck, the stupid UN is on USA soil, the amount of money "given" (stolen) by the UN is criminal. Plus, I wouldn't give 2cents to the UN in dues. They are an anti-Capitalist organization if there ever was one. And the "human rights" crap is just utterly amazing! Putting such countries like China, Lybia etc on the human rights campaign is just one of the stupidest things in the world.
Ok boys and girls let's see if we can come to a basic understanding that the world is not perfect and sometimes imperfect responses are necessary.
Argue whether a particular action is warranted or not. The fundamental basis for a government is to protect its citizens. Sometimes that means siding up with unsavory characters.
Given enough history all nations (probably individuals too) have had to make Faustian bargains. It's basic survival. Get used to it.
Now that Europe has the EU there is no reason not to expect that it will deal with the US in any but an adversarial manner. It wants to, and will, push its weight around to force its agenda on the (entire) rest of the world. I got used to that quite some time ago.
That's just the way it is. Now grow up and worry about something more important. Like, what have you done today to make the real world a better place.
Personally, I'd like to see the USA cut off the rest of the world for a while. Stop bailing out all the countries that STILL owe us tons of money. Ok, let the rest of the world start trade sanctions and you'll see the USA cut off the rest of the world from the $$$ we give to all these countries. Plus, we'd freeze and take any assets they have in any of our banks.
First get the plank out of your own eye...
.com TLD because that's the one that is notable. If it was on .xxx you can put a large bet on it being porn, but there would be no less porn on .com because it's dot-com. Also because people would depend on porn being .xxx making it easier to 'pop-up' un-announced.
.biz other than as a compliment to their .com?
.xxx will do is make it easier to find porn, and give funny people a whole slew of word-play domain names to play with. www.than.xxx www.ha.xxx www.getthefa.xxx the list goes on i'm sure. How many days before there is a www.goatse.xxx ?
That 'smut' dosen't WANT to be filtered out. There are millions of non-businesses using the
Honestly... can you see a line of porn-sites lining up to be filtered out of 90% of computer screens?
How many businesss's use
All
The real reason that the US government asked for postponement of the .xxx domain is because some lawmaker realized at the last minute that instituting a .xxx domain specifically for adult content effectively legitimizes it. It would give defense lawyers for those accused of violating "obscenity" laws new ammunition, allowing them to claim that the government effectively gave its blessing to adult content by granting this domain for that use. By preventing this from happening, the government eliminates this potential defense.
Karma: Frotzed (mostly due to the Frobozz Magic Karma Company)
Some times I sit back and think do these conservative or Republican or ultra-patriotic Americans believe the crap they say in the vain of never saying anything against US policy.
"Turning the Internet over to countries with problematic human-rights records, muted free-speech laws, and questionable taxation practices will prevent the Internet from remaining the thriving medium it has become today"
The US has one of the most REGRESSIVE tax systems in the developed world, tax cuts to the wealthy with giveaways to companies that do not pay taxes while public programs get cut like HUD. Plus I guess we can forget the whole firehoses and attack dogs thing since that was in the past, no human-rights issues there. Prisons for profit filled up with minorities as street-sweeping by the police, yadda yadda.
And for free-speech, in the US it isn't free and it has already been bought by those who own all the major media outlets.
We don't want to turn over internet speech over to the Chinese but do we want to turn it over to the US Christian Right. They exchange the idea of censoring ideas from the west for censoring sexual material. I'm sure the very moral people can make that choice easily but have we put them in charge of our speech.
If the people who actually built the internet we making the decisions of its future I would be OK with that, but I cannot turn it over to politicians or companies that have bought up all the votes to do whatever they want.
Euphemism, what is that a euphemism for something.
bla bla bla.... dns != internetbla bla bla bla bla...... we invented the internet we are teh k1ngz0rs!!1blablablabla.... human rights..... blablabla..... dumbass UNblablablabla bla bla americanz0rz r teh n00bz0rz 3ur0p3 r0xxxx!111blablabla china in charge of the internet oh noes!blablabla another post about dnsblablabla bla can't we all just get along?bla bla etc etc etc etc etc etc etc
In short, I don't think I've ever known a topic cause the same ground to be covered so many times that I memorise every single angle, and I'm including the age old Linux-on-the-Desktop argument in that as well. I wish there could be some mass slashdot boycott of this story. Not for any hugely idealogical reason, it's just boring. Maybe just you karma-rich moderator types, who are the most likely to read some random AC post anyway - you guys could just stop moderating these stories. Sure, they could probably tweak some balance setting to keep a front of normality, since slashdot runs like a puto mmorpg, but with a bit of luck it would bother them too much and they'd tire of the story.
Is the internet about to become yet another great American invention that gets handed over to the rest of the world to control and dominate?
We invented the dam thing, we should be in control of it. If they want to split off and make their own nets so be it. Everyone wants a peice of America. Actually everyone wants to chip away a peice of America. We've lost so many other industries... why not hold on to the one tech industry giant that we invented?
1. America is the most aggressive nation right now.
There is an objective measure with quantitative proof of this of course. Be sure that ALL possible nations and ALL forms of aggression are included.
2. What America does after the aggression (i.e. independent nation building) is irrelevant.
Really? Probably not to a prosperous Germany and Japan.
3. Independent nations are neither here nor there. The capacity of a people to be and remain free however is.
And the people would be whom? A collection of individuals who band together as a group and call themselves a nation?
4. Just cutting a long enslaved people loose from their captors is not enough to make them free. A mindset change is required.
Agreed. But, until the captors are eliminated they don't really have much of a chance now do they?
5. Agression upon an immoral opponent is still aggression.
Yes. And sometimes it needs to be done. Hitler, Mussolini, and Tojo come to mind. Something more recent? How about Bosnia, Rwanda, and Darfur.
It doesn't ignore the fact. The fact isn't true. There is no such thing as the "end result". We are still here. There is no eternal balance sheet that closes at the end of the world. There are repercussions being felt from things that happened more than 2000 years ago. The Gregorian calendar is a testament to this fact. Our very dependence on oil , oil being something that is the result of a process that takes a long time, testifies to this fact.
That's what Tim Berners Lee would do.
"A new resolution was introduced in Congress that aims to backup the Bush administration over retaining U.S. control of the Internet's core infrastructure."
It's about time. That's what their job is. Finally, something I can support our legislative branch for.
The core of the internet and it's underlying technology was largely developed in the United States. Even most of the hardware is created by U.S. based companies. Other than infrastructure, other nations did little to "create" the internet - although you could argue that the infrastructure is the internet - but then we wouldn't be arguing about the US keeping control of it, would we?
.xxx or .sex TLDs (note that not liking them is NOT the same as saying you can't have them). If France, Germany, or England was running it as well as it's being run right now, *I* wouldn't care. China, or say, North Korea, running it would be another story entirerly.
In any event, if there was a flaw with the current system, or it was broken for other nations, I could understand such action. But as it currently stands, their sole reasoning for wanting control is because 1) America "controls" it (despite it ICANN being an international group) and 2) The Bush administration doesn't like
As for other nations not being as democratic as the United States, that is in a sense true. Other nations certainly don't enjoy the freedoms that American's enjoy (despite their continued non-sensical bitching about the Patriot Act).
I don't want to see DNS under UN control because the UN is the most useless and corrupt political body ever devised by man. Any group which frames itself around the principles of human rights and personal freedoms that lets as blatently self interested and oppressive nations like China in doesn't deserve my tax dollars or America's support.
The Internet is bigger than the United States. DNS is not.
"The US having absolute control of that much economic infrastructure would give them the same willies that your fore-fathers got.
Then - like the US - they should declare independence and build their own."
Yeah, cos the world is better served by fragmenting the network. Actually giving an independent body control of the internet ressource assignment would serve to stabilize and ensure cohesiveness of the network. The US clamoring for control can only lead to what you're suggesting actually happening, and then everybody loses.
The internet is an international techy gadget, it has certainly grown to be in the public domain, and the US setting up 7 computers to communicate via phone lines half a century ago does not change that.
Am I the only American who opposes this? Sometimes I feel like I am.
/tells government to go f*** itself.
IMHO the US is a bit to posessive of it's own IP, but when it comes to someone else... "you can't own that!".
"Waiting For The Valerie Plame Wilson Grand Jury: The Big Question Is Whether Dick Cheney Was a Target"
"2 Brits nabbed with $3 trillion in fake US fed notes"
Robert
I would give you a mod point if I had any and wasn't the parent of your post.
Amen.
Best "I wish I had Mod Points" post ever.
"Everything you know is wrong. (And stupid.)"
Moderation Totals: Wrong=2, Stupid=3, Total=5.
We won't be affected if the U.N. takes over, things might move more quickly and domains will probably be cheaper and not get stolen by big companies quite so easily but other than that nothing will be diffrent.
If the U.S. keeps it nothing will change they will probably re-evaluate who is in control and maybe make some cosmetic improvements no bigie...
However if the net splits that will be interesting, will the U.S. force 'it's' sites to stay in their registry? Will they be allowed to double dip? How will new allocation be handled? When they are eventually remerged will there be conflicts?
I'm pretty concerned because I'd like to be part of the global web not the U.S. web and I live in Canada. I'm pretty sure most major backbones run through the U.S.
What will Slashdot do?
And how will this all influence the upcoming transition to IPv6?
http://netsukuku.freaknet.org/?p=About
"Most of people that I have met in the UN do belive in the UN"
Well yes. If the UN goes away, then they have to find a real job.
situation. I would read Kant, but I keep running into various problems when reading philosophers.
A. They don't seem to use definitions that are common use.
B. They build on unreferenced previous work in thier area.
Then there are desired end results vs. actual end results. One may see something as a way of achieving a end result, that does not mean that the desired end result will naturally flow from it.
Apparent progress towards a given end result is also not actually achieving that end result.
Plus, correlation is not causation.
In 2. and 5. the point was that what they do after the aggression is orthogonal to the question of whether or not they are in fact agressive.
3. and 4. was an attempt to consider the utility of the suggested end result because it was a precursor to the case that Europe should ignore the United States' aggression to the extent that it provides a utilitarian function.
3a. By "independent nation" I mean a nation to some degree free from the influence of the U.S. and not the independence of its citizens. However, when it really comes down to it, those "independent nations" aren't actually as free from U.S. influence as the U.S. government likes to promote.
Furthermore, while the U.S helped the countries that were long-established after WWII, there were a bunch of countries that were created with the sole purpose of making sure they were not a threat to the long established countries, which was a primary causation of Bosnia and contributed to our current problems in the Middle East.
>>if you have all the smut under .xxx it is much easier to filter stuff out.
.xxx domain, under penalty of law?
.COM porn sites? It takes a LOT of memory.
.com and .net porn sites... but those domains are anarchy.
.XXX domain someone set up as a joke, but oh well.
.XXX would force people to stop using .COM for porn... you just want to believe that is the reason, without any supporting facts.
>And what exactly are you going to do. Force everyone who serves up porn to move the
You are jumping to a conclusion, and if you think about it, you might admit you are wrong/
He said it would be EASIER to filter out. Do you have ANY IDEA how large a memory table it takes to filter out KNOWN
Along comes a new TLD and you can match it with *.xxx. You will STILL be using a bunch of memory blocking
Doesn't this sound EASY? You're talking 1 rule. Perhaps you would block a non-porn
No one said that the creation of
And what exactly are you going to do. Force everyone who serves up porn to move the .xxx domain, under penalty of law? If so, then who gets to decide what's porn? The U.S. religious right? Iran? Me?
.xxx ones to use if they wish to continue business, allow forwarding to the new domain for a transition period as well?
.com and .net domains, and wouldn't be bothered by filtering them out.
Well... since we have control of the master DNS servers couldn't we do that? Just take away the domains from all the "adult entertainment" sites and give them new
If it's a foreign domain, people can just choose to filter any webistes from outside the U.S. TLD's, so those countries can run hand out their domains as they wish. I'm sure there are many people who don't even visit websites outside the
Not saying we should, be we have the ability, no?
I personally think that no one should have the final say about what domain gets what. Whenever countries like China whine about things like how' they're not involved enough in stuff like this, I have to take their argument with a grain of salt. Really, a communist country should have no right to talk about... well... rights. I thought as it is now, people are on the first come, first serve basis. I personally don't mind that. (with a few exceptions, of course, i.e. registering someone's name, squatting on it, and force them to buy it from you.) But I don't think the internet should be something that any country or a group of country gets to regulate. It should be regulated via agreement from the netizens, you know, the people that actually run webservers and contribute to content on the internet rather than some politicians that want to control it for their own purposes. That's my 2 cents. If any facts I stated needs correction, I'd greatly appreciate it.
please... let me sleep... a little more... yay, no longer annonmyous coward.
Keep your filthy yanky hands offa my porno...
Due to its questionable foreign policy history the US's refusal to relinquish control over a planetwide communications structure should be viewed with suspicion. The argument that the US started it is irrelavent. There is no logical or technical explanation as to why the US will not allow the internet to be governed by a worldwide body and no one here has posted a decent argument either!!! Why exactly are they so adamant that they want to retain control, it makes you wonder?
- Stopping spivs stealing TLDs from small, and naive states.
- Stopping spivs hoarding domain names thus creating a very expensive market for what should be an administration-cost only resource.
- Stopping organisations hoarding many millions of unused IP numbers.
- Stopping the registration of Out-of-Country servers and email addresses.
- Stopping the largest supplier of software foisting insecure by default machines on innocent customers who then use them on the 'Net, thus allowing the creation of million machine bot-nets to be used for criminal purposes.
- Stopping the broadcasting of billions of spam messages which are mostly used for criminal purposes.
- Controlling the veritable flood of revolting, depraved, and offensive images and film clips.
Once the addressing of these issues has at least been attempted by the US Government and its co-conspirator the ICANN, the rest of the world might agree that the Internet is being properly administered. Until that time, so sorry Uncle Sam, but you are a failing parent.Strongly put maybe, but as far as the rest of the world is concerned that's what the issues are all about. In a word, shared Sovereignty over what has become an internationally shared resource.
How is the U.S. congress going to pass a law that requires the non-U.S. portions of the world how to operate their portions of the internet? Is national security or the U.S. economy threatened by this issue?
What does DNS have to do with the ability of repressive countries to repress usage of the internet in their countries? Aren't those countries already doing things to restrict internet usage? (heck, aren't U.S. companies selling them the software to do it?) It's probably time to stop thinking of the internet as a technological trojan horse that will magically set the people of world free despite efforts of their local governments to prevent it.
Why do so many posters get so worked up in defending the U.S. right to operate DNS or whatever for the benefit of the entire world, and why do they get moderated so highly? Can somebody please tell me what the change here actually threatens?
http://www.xanadu.com/
Tim Berners-Lee's HTML (which not coincidentally uses Ted's term "hypertext") implemented a small subset of Ted's vision. It was of course based on SGML, the offspring of GML, which was also created by a US national, Charles Goldfarb.
http://www.sgmlsource.com/history/roots .htm
"National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
A. You are correct that it seems obscure, but people make the same arguments everyday not knowing that is their origin, which is not a problem.
Case of everyday use: Should i sell the drug knowing that it will help 90% of people, or should i not sell the drug knowing that 30% will die.
B. N/A
Desired vs. Actual: In the case of regime change, would the rest of the world prefer that a dictator or communist stays in power instead of someone acting? You will never find out if you never try, we don't see much trying going on over on the other side of the pond. That is a problem, the rest of the world wants have free control of the root servers when we:ie the US, started this network as ARPANET with US taxpayer money. We need to see some trying, lets see someone across the pond take down the great firewall of china.
An "independent nation" with some promotion of American ideas is better than a dictatorship or communist regime, don't you agree? If those across the pond took some action there would be promotion of everyone's ideas.
If those across the pond want to complain about how we reach the end result, they need to take some initiative and take action according what means they believe are necessary to reach the end result instead of sitting on their asses and complaining. Also, If those across the pond figure out a better method of regime change to take out communists and dictators, more power to them, this is getting a bit expensive for US.
You fool... using your logic, we should create a .KKK domain for the neo nazis who want people to know about them. And supposedly, just telling your Internet Explorer to filter .KKK will keep your internet experience free of nasty thoughts. Yeah Right.
Well that and I don't trust any news organization that thinks Saddam Hussein is in league with Satan.
The dispute over who has ultimate control over DNS is of very little practical consequence, given that the US has barely exercised any control over ICANN, and if some other body (the EU, the UN) gained that control, I would wager they would exercise no more control than the US has.
What this is really about for the countries involved is more the principle of the thing, flexing their muscles against the US, demonstrating their independence from US dominance. In particular for the EU it is a demonstration of their commitment to the building of international institutions instead of the US' go it alone, "no one is going to tell me what to do attitude".
That said, while the way this dispute plays out will certaintly have significant implciations for international and especially transatlantic politics, whatever happens will likely have little effect on the commercial or technical worlds.
The attempt of some parties to paint this dispute as having some dire practical consequences ("Watch out, freedom-hating totalitarian dictatorships take over the Internet!") is just a way for those parties to play the transatlantic political game.
OK... so guns and violence are bad. We create a .GUN TLD and force all the "pro gun / pro violence" content into that system. Then supposedly just filtering .GUN TLD will make sure you don't see anything violent on the internet? Are you really that naive?
.xxx subject just make you so emotional you lose focus?
Does the
OK... so guns and violence are bad. We create a .GUN TLD and force all the "pro gun / pro violence" content into that system.
.xxx subject just make you so emotional you lose focus?
Uh, yeah. There's the slight difference that providing access to pr0n to minors is illegal, whereas showing pictures of firearms is not.
Does the
Speaking of losing focus, the last line of my post said that I didn't support forcing a system like that, just that it was technically possible given the current control situation. But that's for the hamfisted reply, dumbass.
Yeah, I can't wait for certain countries to band together and demand that all sites that use unsavoury words like "sex" or "democracy" be boxed into the .xxx TLD.
Why can't it be split such that different countries control different portions, such as domain names for their country and pre-designated blocks of IP addresses based on population and usage size. I suppose "generic" names like .com are a problem, but otherwise just make the Internet a bunch of seperate internets the can communicate with each other.
.com problem can be resolved by having a country of registration for each one.
The
What are the technical obstacles to such?
Table-ized A.I.
"two Republicans and one Democrat, aims to line up Congress firmly behind the Bush administration"
Everything else is noise.
--
make install -not war
The US also "invented" the constitutional democratic republic (as we know it). These days, that godfatherhood is used as a club to enforce dangerous US foreign policy. We're reaping the harvest we've sown. Most other countries don't fear US invasion as much as US spying or crippling their Internet dependence. We're viewed by many people as a rogue state, and are much more easily cast as such by our enemies. There are serious consequences to destroying our reputation for integrity and leadership. I hope this kerfuffle over Internet governance is the worst that happens, but I have no reason to believe that the way Bush and Bolton handle it will make it anything but worse.
--
make install -not war
Immediately. They should only be allowed to use .us.
We are talking about DNS here. The root zone is administered by ICANN, a US orginization. All but two of the roots are run either by the US government (DOD mostly), US universities (paid for by US tax dollars) or private US firms. The two roots that are not run by a US intrest (K and M) still choose to use the ICANN root file. Nobody is making anybody litsen to the root servers, you can modify your DNS server so it doesn't, and nobody is making those root servers use the ICANN zone, they do so because it's the defacto standard.
So here we have a system created, paid for, and run by US intrests that is purely optional. Nobody is forced to use it, in the US or out. In fact, there are rival orignizations such as OpenNIC. The US government does NOTHING to force people to use the ICANN set of roots. However, for all that, people still seem to think that some random other body should be given control.
What the fuck?
To me it sounds like a bunch of little kids. The EU likes to play with the US's toy, and so now they think they should have control of it. No, wrong answer. Feel free to setup your own root system, you can mirror the ICANN zone file if you like and thus have it compatible with ICANN domains or you can go your own route. Either is fine, the US will do absolutly nothing to stop it.
However don't whine and pretend that because you make use of something, you have a right to say how it should be run. You don't have any right to force the Slashdot editors to do anything a given way. You can suggest they change things, but if they ignore you, your choice is to either accept their decision and use it anyways, or reject it and stop using it. You cannot demand that they give you some kind of control just because you happen to use it.
For all the things that you or I may hold against the US government, its administration of the Internet can't be one of them. The only thing we need from whoever controls the internet is for it to 1. not break and 2. not be censored. Until the US screws up either of these things I don't see how giving control to the UN will help things. I'm not some arrogant American who thinks that we're the only country on earth that respects freedom of speech, I wouldn't object to giving Europeans, Indians, Japanese or Brazillians or any other reasonable democracy a greater say. In case you guys missed it, 2/5 of the security council (don't anyone dare call Vlad Putin's Russia a democracy) and a very sizeable chunk of the general assembly are NOT democracies and have nothing approaching the same regard for free speech.
I am tired of how Europe governments attack the USA for anything and then wants to kill off or limit US companies and now wants to control the Internet.
Anti-American, Anti-Christian, Anti-Jewish, Pro-Liberal crap from Euro governments. It's really sad.
If the US sneezes, the whole world catches a cold.
That's a very old saying and it plays out in economic trends time and time again. If other countries tried to fuck us with sanctions, it would hurt them far more.
The US is the worlds biggest, richest market. No one wants to cut themselves off from that for any significant length of time.
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms should be the name of a store, not a government agency.
as Colber[t] would say, the student has indeed become the master.
Free Speech Zone
Yea, except for the Americans...
"This feels like envy and jealousy, the United States created a neat and shiny toy unnoticed by the world until it "became" the internet, and now the rest of the world wants some stewardship, whether it is warranted or not (in my opinion, not)."
Just so you know, Mr. Ohh-so-enlightened-mind, Tim Berners-Lee (here and here), like countless others, is not American.
He's not saying "poison" in the poetic sense you dunce, he's saying it in the technical sense. You completely misunderstood what the poster was referring to and went off on a sort of "You're an ignorant American" rant regarding "US Values" and the idea that Americans think that Europeans are all "Socialist Cheese-Eating Europeans".
Several things. First of all, look around in Europe, they have some of the most socialistically set up economies around, so that's a valid point. Also, the internet has nothing to do with values, or America, so please stop trying to turn this into an "Americans think they're so good, blah blah blah" argument. The simple fact is, it ain't broke, so stop tampering with it.
WE NEED DISTRIBUTED DNS. No government should have a control over DNS at all due to the threat of censorship. This especially applies to China, Governments with Religious Law sets (Sharia, et al) and other authoritarian regimes. My personal vote goes for Switzerland.
As for Europe, here's my issue. Just what have your countries contributed recently compared to the US? Not a threat, not an insult, just a simple question. Name some positive things you have done that come close to what the US has done. I won't even bring up the issue of WWII etc. Or WWI for that matter. What have you folks done lately?
Seriously
Anything?
Happiness does not come from having much, but from being attached to little.
NOW this is NEWS... U.S lawmakes support the U.S control of (put in subject here). Go figure... now why would U.S lawmakers want to kee the control in the U.S?
-=Linsys=-
http://www.intrusionsec.com
"The real reason that the US government asked for postponement of the
Nonsense. Cark Rove needed to get a religious group off his back by doing them a favour. Rather than delve into the stem cell issue or any of the other thorny problems on their shopping list, he glanced at their "stop
The whitehouse doesn't legitimize porn, the supremes do.
And it doesn't legitimize porn, it migtates it away from
This is why it's bad to use the legacy root servers. Consider this: say in once scenario eveybody primaried the root zone for themselves; everybody was their own root server, that is they declare themselves authoritative for the "." root zone. Now their comnputer knows where all the tld servers are and can find the
Under this scenario, how would the US government block a tld it didn't like? It can not. Nor can any government.
Under the current scenario, if thew USG shut off the legacy root servers (which it *can do* and no argument to the contrary changes this fact) the internet goes away, worldwide.
Before DNS was invented, everybody downloaded the "hosts.txt" file and your computer in that day knew the names and addresses of all the other computers on the network.
When DNS was invented, the notion of your own compter doing your own nameservice was absurd - about 5 guys worldwide had working nameserver code, so it was a great convenience that DARPA ran a half dozen nameservers that resolved the root and everythings else. And it was great that the NSF paid for these servers, deployed at the most robust points around the network. Through 20 years of sheer laziness and lack of innovation (with a good measure of subterfuge, graft and greed thrown in) we still, for some reason not well understood by me, rely on those 13 IP addresses for all names. Biz-zarre. It's *convenient*.
But, as a citizen of a country not the US I think now the convenience of the US controlled root servers is somewhat diminished.
Need Mercedes parts ?
It seems a lot of comments here are nothing more than slaves wanting their slave-master to be the one controlling the DNS servers. Do I need to say that it sounds completely pathetic? Here's an idea, I don't want any MoFo government agency, real or quasi, controlling the net in any way. If it's the tyrannical US or the tyrannical UN/EU government controlling, we still end up with an organization that gives about "two shits and fuck" about your individual opinon on how things should be ran. For those who can't handle a little crude language, it all boils down to CONTROL. Some may have noticed that across the globe Thought Crime legislation, aka Hate Speech, is either being proposed, quietly slipped in and enacted, or already enacted law. Those laws coupled with the so called debate over who controls the DNS servers spells the death of easy access to alternative news sources and any that goes against the gain of the the offical propoganda line from your respective government. Nothing screws up a good thing like a overzealous, pompous beaurocrat.
This has nothing to do with democracy or morality, those words are just hollow argument points, internationally speaking. Just who will have stewardship over domain names etc will be determined by who wants it most and who has the heaviest clout. The U.S. having possesion is a strong position, as "possesion is nine points of the law".. The E.U. being labeled as whining ladies is apt :)
It can be easily argued the U.S. has supported/partaken in at least as many atrocities as any other nation one might care to name. Please don't badger me with accusations of being anti-American, I am not. I am not blind either.
Don'ts worries. The rumorses are falses :)
Technically possible but a political minefield which I suspect would be used by various groups (from religious to "womens rights" groups) to push material they haven't the maturity to filter out themselves into the .xxx domain.
Lets turn the damm thing off. Sure, we may loose instant messaging, screen shots of next gen games, and penis enlargement spam. I would feel sorry for the lonely wife who can't make her 23871 post on a vbulletin forum about croche, wait that might be a good thing.
He's not saying "poison" in the poetic sense you dunce, he's saying it in the technical sense.
:)
What? Did you think I was imagining him cackling and holding a small bottle with a skull and crossbones on it?
Of course I meant the technical sense, and I'm still not convinced that "poisoning" is a good description of what the EU (or whoever else; let's be honest, this isn't just an EU thing) would be doing. "Splitting" or "forking" are more accurate.
"You're an ignorant American" rant regarding "US Values" and the idea that Americans think that Europeans are all "Socialist Cheese-Eating Europeans".
"Poisoning" implied wanton destructiveness on the part of the EU. This didn't describe the reality of the situation (see above).
No, I don't think that all Americans view Europeans that way. But I'll bet a notable minority do; and I wasn't necessarily assigning this view to the guy I was replying to.
First of all, look around in Europe, they have some of the most socialistically set up economies around, so that's a valid point.
I don't think any country in Europe is especially socialist, except in comparison with America, perhaps. Which ones did you have in mind?
Anyhow, the example was a deliberate caricature (and not especially exaggerated) of how some Americans see Europe; and how anything smacking of "socialism" is Godless and basically just communism by the back door.
Also, the internet has nothing to do with values, or America, so please stop trying to turn this into an "Americans think they're so good, blah blah blah" argument.
*I* didn't say that. However, use of a similar argument has been used by Americans elsewhere in this thread. If you disagree with that, please take it up with them.
No government should have a control over DNS at all due to the threat of censorship.
So you're saying the US government don't have a disproportionate influence over the current set up?
As for Europe, here's my issue. Just what have your countries contributed recently compared to the US? Not a threat, not an insult, just a simple question. Name some positive things you have done that come close to what the US has done.
The World Wide Web?
It's sure as hell more usable than gopher.
I won't even bring up the issue of WWII etc.
You just did. The EU didn't start that; actually, the EU was set up to avoid things like that ever happening again. If you want to start blaming the Axis powers specifically, be my guest.
"Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
Maybe we should just set up our own one, and not let idiots or politicians (but I repeat myself) join in. The problem is, the moment we do set our own one up, we become both (idiots and politicians).
It's better to be the foot on the boot than the face on the pavement. ~~ tkx Kadin2048
look .. no perfect solution
but I don't believe that a xxx site "wants" to be read by 14 years olds .. they don't spend money on this stuff.
the guys that do spend money on this are going to be the driving force ... capitalism at its best.
prohibitions dont work
cheers
yes .. so you can pretend it's all not happening
keep them where you can see them
instead of make them hide
well .. .biz doesn't really define anything IMHO. ... .sex .xxx .groceries .books .blogs .egosites .hardware .u-name-it
let's assume they come out with a whole slew of new TLD's
wouldn't that make internet search easier
I actually buy that one
One persons "Smut" is another persons "Art." Who are you to decide which is which?
There are no loopholes. It's either legal or it's not.
While I do understand the US reticence to permit the UN to 'control' aspects of the Internet, particularly as the UN does not come across as particularly efficient/pro-active/effective, it is surely inevitable that either a global body is created to administer dispute resolution etc or one day the network will fracture.
When China, India etc become fully connected and their economies overtake that of the US, which they inevitably will, probably within our lifetimes, they will have little need to allow the US to control such a key resource.
I hope that a middle way can be found before then otherwise I can imagine rival networks emerging.
> Do you have ANY IDEA how large a memory table it takes to filter out KNOWN .COM porn sites? It takes a LOT of memory.
Since you asked, I created a ternary tree of 1 million words/phrases - that took up 30MB.
How is this flamebait if it is true? Perfect example of the censorship we are trying to keep off our internet.
Definitely a good response. I'm sorry I didn't see that you DID know the technical term. I've just seen a lot of people ask "How do you poison DNS? Its a computer!" /. admitting he was wrong!
I guess the socialistic comment is more of a "by comparison" issue. For instance, I see the european setups as EXTREMELY socialistic. And again, my apologies for erupting, I'm just sick of the "americans are ignorant brutes" comments I hear on here so much. Forgive me ^_^
I wasn't just referring to the internet however when I asked what Europe has done lately
Referring more to economic developments, inventions etc.
Yes it was shameless to bring up WWII. Sorry.
as for what I said about no one should control DNS, I stand by that statement. Ideally I don't think the US should either. However, the US has done quite a bangup job basically leaving ICANN alone.
well, sorry I misunderstood some of the stuff
Cheers ^_^
----- There's something you don't see often, someone on
Happiness does not come from having much, but from being attached to little.
I'm sorry, but Cencorship, Control, Taxation, History or technical "we-do-it-best" doesn't affect the above.
It's the US responsibility to participate and to try to affect the outcome of voting on these issues in the UN. That, my friends, is how democracy is supposed to work.
"If it can be thought up, there exists at least one person trying to make it happen for real" - Phil
We can absolutely, vigorously, and freely debate ad nauseum who "the" authority will be to control "the" namespace and "the" numberspace. But, in the end, we all must agree on one authority, and there is no debating that.
It seems the US lawmakers don't understand the "we all" in "we all must agree on one authority".
If they persist, there will be a major DNS fork.
It seems the US lawmakers don't understand the "we all" in "we all must agree on one authority".
:^/
Seems so.
-Eric
SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
This conflict is really about the control of infrastructure. Every country wants control of it's own (important) infrastructure.
...and that would've been the excact moment where the europeans would've needed it the most.
I'd like to draw a parallell to the GPS-system. It was developed by the US and shared with the europeans. After some time the GPS became an important part of the europeans' infrastructure. However, since US would not give up controll, or even share it, the europeans was forced to build their own system.
As far as I remember it was feared that the USA would turn the systems off in case of an emergency.
Seriously though....I'm from America, but what right to we have to control the internet. It shouldnt belong to anybody, if one country controls it, they can choose to block out whatever doesnt tickle their fancy. It shouldn't be owned by any country but by the whole world!
who says that religious groups are going to be in control of what goes on the domain. The switch .xxx would be _volintary_, meaning that, as mentioned previously, pornographic sites could move their site to .xxx in order to be more easily found, or simply out of general courtesy. No one is going to _force_ anybody to use the domain, for opression or otherwise.
ignorance will killus all --eric
So which TLDs should we assign necrophilia? Which TLDs for infanticide? Which TLDs self mutilation?
Your domain system will become a laundry list of every deviant or objectionable activity known to man. This is why slashdot kids don't run ICAAN...
You would reward the KKK with recognition that they do not deserve. You would enshrine their organization in the servers. You would mark their logo in the source code of every browser.
.ORG and .COM. People would STILL log onto slashdot and say "I hate blacks" "I hate jews" or whatever the objectionable content you were trying to block. Back to square one, except, now the KKK's name is in neon lights.
And all for naught. Because the hate would still be said in
Liberalism is a mental disorder.
i had always agreed with the .xxx domain, but reading your comment i had a thought...
.xxx sites are easier to find, then the illeagal (and typically much worse) porn will stay in the large dark corners of the .com domain
if
Beta tested, Mother Approved
You would reward the KKK with recognition that they do not deserve.
... on the other hand, it gives the haxx0rs a DOS target :o) .scheissnazi would be a better one
... or whatever the objectionable content you were trying to block.
... Prohibitionism? ... yeah, that worked so much better.
Yes, you are probably right on this one
maybe
[snip]
I have made my mind up about the world I live in and there is very little that will change that. But I personally don't need to see pages like goatse.cx, so I can simply put that filter into MY browser and can assume that I now filtered out "most" of that kind of content
Back to square one, except, now the KKK's name is in neon lights.
And you, as a conciencious parent, can now point your finger at it and teach your kid(s) that these are ideas that are no longer fit for current society.
Or would you rather have your repressed kid, that isn't allowed to do or see anything controversial, to find that info somewhere in some dark night at the keyboard and think those ideas might actually have value?
Liberalism is a mental disorder.
Whats the opposite
What about the ISPs. I mean, in many parts of the country you only have one choice if you want high-speed internet. What if they decide that it is immoral to go to such site. Like AOL, or an even better yet Blockbuster. It is mormon owned, and thus they do not sell smut on a moral stand against it. But, the thing is local stores can't compete them, so they close, and you lose access to such information without your consent to have it removed. If an ISP felt the need, they could just remove access to the domain. (remember when that Canadian ISP banned the sites protesting it.)
Beware the observant.
this is probably the most compelling argument against the .xxx
... oh never mind
I guess leaving it under one, uncensorable umbrella is the only solution to keep free information going.
(free as in free-thought, not no payment)
but it could still be offered, then
end of thread
Yep, no prob.
"Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
Dumbas.... you won't have nukes any left after you've gone to war with China over pirate CDs, like your government threatened they would.
:-P
Whassat? They didn't *actually* mean that when push came to shove? Well then, I doubt that they'll have the guts to whip the nukes out when the rest of the world decide to point THEIR computers wherever the hell they please.
You can point your own computer towards the DNS server embedded in your overstretched goatse asshole, but don't expect the rest of us to do the same
Uh, yeah. There's the slight difference that providing access to pr0n to minors is illegal, whereas showing pictures of firearms is not.
That's not entirely true. It may be illegal in the US (I'm assuming you are from the US), I wouldn't know since I'm from Denmark. But it's not illegal everywhere, which just proves the point (at least the point I read) of the original discussion: No one country should be the governing body of the web, since no two countries agree about everything.
A comment like yours, that states as a fact that something is illegal, without moderating it with 'in the US', just helps to strengthen the image of the americans as a peolpe that (either by choice or because they waven't been taught better) is totally ignorant about the world outside the US. I know this image is not true (a lot of my friends are from the US [sic]), but your comment just doesn't help.
And before this degrades into a mudslinging contest about pushing porn on minors: It's not because I think that minors should be subjected to porn, without protection/guidance. But there are several points to think about:
*) Some would say that a girl in a bikini, but striking a sexually insinuating pose is porn. I wouldn't. Some might not think that a still picture of a naked couple lying next to each other, and almost touching each other genitals is porn. I might think it is, depending on the context. In 1972 a lot of people thought that the sex-scenes in "Last Tango in Paris" were pornographic. Today I'm not so sure you could get the same across-the-board agreement. What I'm trying to say is: One man's smut is another man's art. And if we try to cater to the least common denominator, we might end up with all pictures of females covered from the neck down, so we'll have to guess if they are dressed, because otherweise the picture is porn.
I know that in the US, the word 'bang' is slang for an activity not discussed in polite conversation, but in Denmark it is either the sound made by a firecracker or the name of a famous Danish author: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herman_Bang, whom I don't think I'm related to.
-- Jens Bang
well yes and no...
.xxx TLD wouldn't help this either. Granted .xxx would be ALL porn, but the rest of the TLDs would be no less infested with it.
.xxx TLD would only make it easier to find porn, but no easier to avoid it.
It would make it easier to find the sites that actually use it correctly. Unfortunatly millions of porn-sites would register things like "havingsexwhilebuying.groceries" or "stickingitwhereever.u-name-it".
Anytime you give the power to the site itself to categorize itself, the sites will take advantage of that and screw up the system. This is exactly why meta-tags are generally ignored by search engines. They just become a tool to get to the top of the first page of results by scamsters.
Having a
It would be like building a whore-house in Las Vegas... You would expect to find whores in the house... but that dosen't mean they wouldn't be everywhere else too.
Bottom line... having a