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The Politics of ICANN

dstates writes "The good news is that the Internet has become a central enough part of global life that politicians are starting to pay attention to the details of Internet management. The bad news is that the politicians are paying attention to the Internet. Politico.com has an interesting note on the politics surrounding the annual meeting of the The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers which is opening its annual meeting in San Francisco today. While some people find it frightening that a US corporation controls name usage on the Internet, the prospect of a UN body assuming control raises its own concerns."

8 of 124 comments (clear)

  1. Better the int'l community, than strictly US. by Torinir · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Don't put all your eggs in one basket. It's an old adage that never seems to either go out of style or cease to be applicable.

    Putting all of the Internet naming eggs in the US basket is dangerous. With the strange goings on in US politics of late, and with the abuse by DHS/ICE, I can only see bad things coming in the future if the international community doesn't step up to the plate and offer something better.

    I really don't have too much of an issue with a UN controlled ICANN clone. It's not like they can screw it up more than a Republican controlled ICANN. THAT is the scariest part.

    1. Re:Better the int'l community, than strictly US. by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I have defended the United States' de facto control of internet policy for many years, but the unscrupulous and in fact unconstitutional and illegal actions by DHS/DOJ and other agencies in the last year or two has changed my perspective. We have lost the moral authority we once had to be impartial protectors of the internet, but the UN is not the answer. All the countries which already have filtering, censorship, tracking etc. will push that on an international level (which they already do, but the UN hasn't had any teeth to get it done), and even in a compromise between a free internet and a censored and tracked one, something still must necessarily be lost.

      The internet needs to be decentralized to be protected. Distributed DNS solutions need to be pursued. Barring that, root servers should be controlled by each sovereign nation for each national TLD. This at least will give people choices.

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  2. Re:No difference. by DittoBox · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The UN put Libya on the Human Rights Council. They only suspended their involvement when Gaddafi started fucking over the people who asked for better government. I don't want the UN involved. At all.

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  3. A little consistency? by ghjm · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So, let me get this straight. We're perfectly happy to have the ITU (which is a UN agency) in charge of international telephone calls, and we freak out when the US or any corporation tries to take control. But we're also perfectly happy to have ICANN (an unaccountable private corporation based in the US) in charge of domain names, and we freak out when the UN tries to take control.

    Huh? Is it just a matter of knee-jerk response and "all change is bad," or is there something more to it than that?

    For what it's worth, I think ICANN has been a disaster and something like ITU, or a new UN-sponsored agency, would be much better. We need a negotiated Internet equivalent of the ITRs, rather than the ad-hoc mess we have now.

  4. Re:No difference. by daemonc · · Score: 1, Insightful

    ...but they haven't bombed their own fucking people!

    The miners' unions in West Virginia would beg to differ. See: The Battle of Blair Mountain

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  5. Re:A fair way of doing things by Frosty+Piss · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Hate to break it to you, but the US has lost the moral high ground when it comes to internet freedom.

    When was the last time the US Gov blocked / turned off the Internet to deprive the people freedom of speech? Did they block WikiLeaks? No they did not. Your ideological rant is not supported by, you know, actual facts.

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  6. Re:A fair way of doing things by anyGould · · Score: 1, Insightful

    What US *POLITICIANS* call ANYTHING is almost certainly hyperbole and irrelevant. What has the Justice Department called it? Not treason, because it isn't.

    Ah. Good things politicians don't have any say over government

    And seizing "80,000" domains that may very well be involved in pirated software and other illegalities *IS NOT* even within 20,000 miles of what Egypt and China do.

    Ah, so glad you Americans finally stopped worrying about "rule of law" and "innocent until proven guilty" - Those Naughty People might be doing something we don't like, so they must be stopped!

    Question for you - are you comfortable with the reciprocal? As in, other countries taking American sites offline? Or do you believe that American law supersedes all?

    You're an idealistic college kid, I know, so I'll cut you slack on thinking taking down p2p and other illegal sites is on the same level with freedom of political thought.

    Nice try, but that's a swing and a miss, on three counts. I'm a lot older than that, I have no problem with bootleggers being prosecuted, and you're deluding yourself if you think those sites were offline for more than the day it took for new domain registrations to propagate.

  7. Re:No difference. by unity100 · · Score: 1, Insightful

    'your country' ? so, you are in the illusion that, u.s. invented internet ?

    who invented www protocol ? SWISS. who invented tcp/ip ? who made the first computer ?

    these all make up what you call the internet.

    though one thing you americans have in abundance - ignorance. you dont know shit, yet you brag about it.

    harsh ? no. your talk was the one which prompted it.