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.
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.
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.
Film at 11! Is there really any news here?
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.
It's phrases like "control of the global computer network" that make this whole issue so stupid.
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.
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You know something's wrong when they have to bring Congress into this.
But that's exactly the way to preface a controversial and important action. You know, so that later, there won't be any whining. You know, like how Congress saw all the same intelligence, and then voted for the action in Afghanistan and Iraq. That way, no one can complain about it only being the executive branch that... oh, wait. Never mind, people will whine no matter what we (with or without congressional activity) do about DNS authority. Since we're going to hear it anyway, we might as well take the opportunity to solidify our position on the matter, and make sure that at least most of the pieces of the 'net that we care about continue to function. Without some UN sub-committee, chaired this week by the technical experts from The Sudan, deciding that Allah doesn't the ".com" TLD should be used by women, etc.
Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
How can we possibly be safe without the UN controlling the Internet?
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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.
Well if the UN Security Council for example controls it, you think China, France, UK and Russia will be more in favor of a xxx TLD? Or lets say Iran, China, US, UK, Tunisia, Thailand and Cuba are deciding, you think it'll happen then?
The nation/organization that should have final say at this point, is the one that does have the final say right now.
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.
the simple fact is that more Europeans do business with US companies than American's doing business with European companies.
So American companies have more to lose than European companies in any trade conflict? Somehow that doesn't seem comforting.
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.
The EU can poison all the DNS servers they want. It will hurt them more than the US because the simple fact is that more Europeans do business with US companies than American's doing business with European companies.
Poison is a pretty emotive word, and I'm not convinced it applies here. Unless you see everything in black-and-white with yourself as the fearless defender of God's own American values against the heathen Socialist cheese-eating Europeans.
My guess is that in the short term the US will win this one, simply because it isn't currently worth the hassle to set up an alternative DNS system.
However, I expect that behind the scenes- or away from the present "controversy"- if the US maintains its current position, then other countries will make moves to create their own root DNS server system anyway. This will almost certainly mirror the existing root servers, and be used in conjunction with them.
Only if US control grows too great will they fully switch over to use of "their" root servers and stop mirroring. In short, people will be migrated to the "new" systems with no noticable effect on their use of the Internet, whilst allowing government X (rightly or wrongly) to control the servers better.
Personally, I think that this story is way overdone. There was nothing to stop this happening before, and if places like China felt like doing it for reasons of repression, they'd have done it anyway. That's not to mention the vagueness of the reporting; the BBC basically said "The Interweb is going to split/break", and didn't go into more detail.
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No really - what would Tim Berners Lee do?
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.
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.
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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.
"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?
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.
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.
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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
I think your missing a huge point. The UN does not seem to care about what China does but yet the Americans drop a bomb on the wrong house and the world freaks out. There are some serious double standards when it comes to America.
-Iraq commits genocide, barely makes the news.
-US soldier kills innocent people by accident; whole world hears about it and screams at the US.
-China censors its Internet; UN does nothing nor says anything.
-US invades a country for invalid reasons and people flip out; they have good reason too.
- However, France has hundreds to thousands of troops in the Middle East for even less reasons then the US; barely even heard about.
-France was almost charged with genocide, and is the reason why they stopped their nuclear testing; barely makes the news.
- Women stoned to death in Iran because it is believed she cheated on her husband; not a single word of it reaches anybody.
- US troops die in a bombing and the whole world tells the US, "hey thats what you get"
- China imprisons/kills someone who attempts free speech on the Internet; no one even knows his name.
No country in innocent. Countries all across Europe and Asia do evil things everyday. The difference is that those countries will imprison reporters who say anything about it. In America, the government doesn't do that and when they do the public freak out on them. See the difference. Europe has done just as many horrific things as the US you just never hear about them. Socialism is a wonderful thing no?? Your country could be killing hundreds of innocents right now and no one would no. The US does it and the whole world knows. That seems a bit unfair, no?
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.
"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."
How sure are you that your senator understands the difference? Maybe they are indeed advocating controlling the internet and not just the DNS servers.
evil is as evil does
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
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.
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?
I agree entirely.
The whole issue seems a bit pointlessly theoretical now, however it would be naive to think the issue won't arise in the distant future (i.e. sometime over the next 50 years). Particularly in the case of emerging superpower like China and the EU.
I think the U.S. lawmakers are missing the point of the technology and of international politics entirely. There is nothing the U.S. can do to stop these Countries/Unions just using there own alternate servers/protocols which would in the long run be bad for everyone.
Such fragmentation is in a sense the one flaw with the internet which could destroy it as the international network we currently know. Just like other international treaties, internet control should therefor be handed to the U.N. so that no country can shout 'Foul play' at the U.S. and try and split the internet up which is surely the most likely scenario (over the distant future) with the current setup.
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?
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Robert
The point is that who created it is not in discussion here. We are talking about the Internet as a whole. And DNS is a big part of that. You are afraid of other countries controlling the internet just as much as the rest of the world is afraid of the US doing so, with the difference that the US would not have anyone to tell them not to do it, while the rest of the world would take care of regulating each other in that respect.
The question is: will the US take into account my rights as a foreinger when they make their decisions? Or would they promptly ignore them if my rights collided with the rights of some american or with the government? Is freedom only important when US citizens are involved: why shouldn't the rest of the world be free to choose wether they want an
Seriously, this is not about making decisions for Americans. We don't care about censoring you... we don't want you to censor us. IMO we have the tools to bring forward a decentralized DNS system in which each government has the right to filter what they don't want for their citizens, while not having any power at all when it comes to other countries. How can this be bad for you?
After all the US government is not sovereign where I live, so why should I live by their rules.
Just sit down for a second and think about it. You even agree with what I'm saying to some extent when you declare that you don't want other governments messing with what you do online. Guess what: we don't want that either.
Care to explain this to me? Seriously, I fail to see what makes a US citizen "more free" than I am, but it seems like you know better... so I guess you can give me some examples that clearly demonstrate your point.
diegoT
>>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
This is the very point, they don't need permission! .tw domains, it would be bad for taiwan and the entire world if half the internet (i.e. the west) see one set of .tw domains and the other (the middle and far east for example) see another set.
But if countries like China setup their own systems without the "permission" of the U.S. it is unlikely that the competing systems will interact the way they do now. With the example above of
"How does handing control over to the U.N. prevent this problem?"
It may not be a failsafe, utopian solution but the U.N. has maintained peace among the world's most powerful nations/unions for 60 years now. Historically that is pretty much unheard of. The U.N. has for decades been dealing with far more contentious issues than root server control and so should be quite equipped for the task of overlooking ICANN.
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.
I live in Australia and have heard of most of the things on that list through our mainstream media.
,etc (of course before the internet most of the people i know thought that was just a fabricated attitude and the actual citizens of America would be more pragmatic about their position in the world, fuck were we wrong). So when the self proclaimed leader, the 'god of all countries', starts doing fucked up shit, then yeah people will talk about it.
I hardly think you can blame Europe or whatever for your own countries ignorant & impotent media coverage of the world.
Not to mention that for the last 40 years the American propoganda machine (hollywood & media) have been screaming to the western world that America is the 'leader of the free world' the 'freest and fairest country in the world' and 'better than your countries', etc
Btw nice tactic associating the idea of press cencorship with socialism and European countries without actually saying it, learn that from your current political administration? The press is just as free to report on the government in France as it is in Australia, the US, New Zealand, the UK, Germany, Sweden and most of the other western coutries in the world.
It saddens me that you actually seem to believe the words you speak, the pooor US gets bullied so much in the big bad world, boohoo. Seriously, can't you see why the things are the way they are? If someone continually carries on about how they are the greatest person in the world, better than everyone else and makes disturbingly ignorant arguments about other people and why he is better than them, normal people will think that person is a wanker. See what i'm getting at? That person is the US for the last 40 years.
This line is probably the best:
"your country could be killing hundreds of innocents right now and no one would no"
You mean no one in the US right, because the US media wont give it air time? Please dont take this the wrong way but get it through your thick bloody head that there is people outside the US that *will* know, and that it's not other countries fault if *your* insipid whorish media won't give world news more air time.
Your entire argument is that because *you* don't hear about world issues that means every other country must be living under some jackboot of oppression. I should feel annoyed at such stupidity, but i've come to accept it as just typical American IgnoranceTM.
....why shouldn't the rest of the world be free to choose wether they want an .xxx domain or not.....
/. tell me that the US has mandated that China, Brazil or any other country can't set up a server system that allows for a .XXX or .YYY or any other domain for thier respective countries?
Can anybody here on
All theory is gray
yes .. so you can pretend it's all not happening
keep them where you can see them
instead of make them hide
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.