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United States Cedes Control of the Internet

greenechidna writes "The Register is reporting that the U.S. is relinquishing control of ICANN. The story states: 'In a meeting that will go down in internet history, the United States government last night conceded that it can no longer expect to maintain its position as the ultimate authority over the internet. Having been the internet's instigator and, since 1998, its voluntary taskmaster, the US government finally agreed to transition its control over not-for-profit internet overseeing organization ICANN, making the organization a more international body.'"

7 of 508 comments (clear)

  1. Has The Register become The Inquirer? by winkydink · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Here's what the LA Times has to say, which is quite different from the "day in history of the Internet" crap:

    U.S. Unlikely to Yield Web Oversight Yet
    Federal officials seem inclined to extend a deadline for privatizing control of the Internet's address system.
    By Jim Puzzanghera, Times Staff Writer
    July 27, 2006

    WASHINGTON -- The federal government appeared unlikely to relinquish oversight of the system for assigning and managing website domain names after a Commerce Department hearing Wednesday raised broad concerns about giving an obscure Marina del Rey nonprofit unsupervised control.

    read the rest

    --

    "I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey

    1. Re:Has The Register become The Inquirer? by andrewman327 · · Score: 4, Interesting
      From the first hit in the parent's Google search:


      "I have to give it to ICANN. The group tried to help VeriSign to save face by asking it to voluntarily remove the service when the first request could have easily been an order and not a request. Rather than take that opportunity, VeriSign rejected ICANN's request."


      ICANN took the action that had to be taken in a gradual manner that it thought was fair to Verisign. After the latter party refused to comply, they fixed the situation with an order. It should never have happened in the first place, but ICANN did everything they could have to fix the situation.

      --
      Information wants a fueled airplane waiting at the hangar and no one gets hurt.
  2. Internet as a Sovereign Nation by Foofoobar · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I've often said that the only way you can solve most of the issues revolving around the internet today is to make it a sovereign nation. That way one set of laws, one set of taxes, one set of decency can apply to all thus avoiding lawsuits in a million different countries due to your content.

    Hopefully though, an international body can agree to some basic tenets so that we can establish so we can limit trivial laws and lawsuits due to localized laws.

    --
    This is my sig. There are many like it but this one is mine.
  3. concern by herbiesdad · · Score: 4, Interesting

    i fear that internet regulation will devolve into internet bureaucracy and politicization, a la the united nations. simply having a diverse or shared governing board does not ensure that the product will remain diverse or shared. the u.s. has a significant interest in maintaining the network and its development, and i think the continued managment by the u.s. would leave the internet in safe hands.

  4. Domain suffix migration? by Eleazer · · Score: 5, Interesting

    So does this mean we'll see a transition from .com to .co.us for US hosted domains?

    1. Re:Domain suffix migration? by hotspotbloc · · Score: 4, Interesting
      I'm hoping for:

      - .mil to .mil.us
      - .gov to .gov.us

      --
      "I hate to advocate drugs, alcohol, violence or insanity but they've always worked for me" - HST
  5. Re:Prioritized Citizenship? by Alexandra+Erenhart · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Occasionally, we catch ourselves engaging in activities that would indicate we are world citizens first and citizens of the United States second

    Just think about online activities. Most of them aren't country-specific anymore (I'm thinking about things like online gaming, or even here in Slashdot). Everybody is connected, no matter where do you live. I feel the way you're describing. I'm a citizen of the world, and since I've been using Internet (when it became massive here around 1995), being Chilean is just one more tag I carry. Is the place where I was born and raised. But it doesn't mean I only think about my country and I don't care about any other place. I have the impression that many U.S. ppl are just too much into their own bubbles and don't realize there are more countries outside. Like when I met my fiancee's parents (Texan people). They had a very wrong idea of what a chilean woman would be or look like. And they were impressed when they met me:P (points for me lol).

    What I'm trying to say is, when everybody starts opening to the rest of the world, political limits will become just that.