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US Tech Firms Urge Congress To Allow Internet Domain Changeover (reuters.com)

Dustin Volz, reporting for Reuters: Major technology companies including Facebook, Google and Twitter are urging Congress to support a plan for the U.S. government to cede control of the internet's technical management to the global community, they said in a joint letter dated on Tuesday. The U.S. Commerce Department has primary oversight of the internet's management, largely because it was invented in the United States. Some Republican lawmakers are trying to block the handover to global stakeholders, which include businesses, tech experts and public interest advocates, saying it could stifle online freedom by giving voting rights to authoritarian governments. The years-long plan to transfer oversight of the nonprofit Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, or ICANN, is scheduled to occur on Oct. 1 unless Congress votes to block the handover. The California-based corporation operates the database for domain names such as .com and .net and their corresponding numeric addresses that allow computers to connect. In the Sept. 13 letter, a copy of which had been reviewed by Reuters before it was sent, the technology companies said it was "imperative" that Congress does not delay the transition.

8 of 128 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Why the hurry? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And the hundreds of domains already ceased by the US government are _in no way_ censorship, right? Double standards, double standards....

  2. Re:And companies aren't willing to uphold it becau by aliquis · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I would had run my own freedom communication platform if only I had a jurisdiction to do so from.

    Try to uphold as much of full freedom of speech in the US since you are one of the few where that kinda is a thing. Everywhere else it's accepted or even viewed as good that people aren't allowed to tell their opinion or spread new ideas.

  3. Why by TFlan91 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I see a lot of posts about "why".

    Well the reason is that if the US doesn't give up control, countries have been threatening with building their own internet infrastructure to run in parallel.

    If these countries (Brazil, Russia, etc) did create a "second internet", then Google, Facebook, Twitter, etc, would all be shut off from their customers in those regions.

    Can't do the math?

    They get a lower customer base, lower potential profit, lower actual revenue. Unless the spend the R&D on developing their platform to conform to the "second internet".

    1. Re:Why by Red_Chaos1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well the reason is that if the US doesn't give up control, countries have been threatening with building their own internet infrastructure to run in parallel.

      Since when was "do what I/we want or I'm going to take my ball and go elsewhere" been a valid reason?

      If these countries (Brazil, Russia, etc) did create a "second internet", then Google, Facebook, Twitter, etc, would all be shut off from their customers in those regions.

      As far as I can tell, they'll do the same thing once control is globalized. At least now, they can say "fine, we'll make our own Internet" and the rest of the sane world can say "cool, see you later, good luck with your Internet without any of the shit your people actually want because we don't care to jump through your retarded hoops to appease your insignificant ass" (and yes, it really is a matter of insignificance because the shit most of these countries are yammering about and want control for is to further enforce their own restrictions on others, whereas we enforce openness (for the most part anyway, far more open than many of these other countries would have it be)). Besides, regardless of how it works out, we already know most big Internet businesses will do what they need to to ensure their service is still available, but I'd rather that choice be at the corporations level, and not made a requirement at the behest of tantrum throwing nations/governments.

      Can't do the math?

      They get a lower customer base, lower potential profit, lower actual revenue. Unless the spend the R&D on developing their platform to conform to the "second internet".

      Why yes, yes we can, and it's already been done. Look at what Google did with China. We didn't have to give up control of the openness of the Internet to the rest of the world. Let the nations that hate all that freedom build their own fucking Great Firewall and control their people that way. As I said above, if the Internet companies give enough of a fuck, they'll find a way to make stuff work, and that's as it should be, IMO.

  4. Re:Cynically thinking... by Nidi62 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I get a bad feeling for the transfer just from the list of supporters: Facebook, Google, Twitter, Amazon, Cloudflare and Yahoo. It feels, to me, that they are not doing it for freedom but rather for money. They are going to have services or other means of making money off the transfer where they cannot do it currently.

    The problem is the Congressmen trying to block the changeover aren't doing so in the interests of online freedom, but rather in the interests of maintaining control over the internet. Either way it's all about power.

    --
    The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
  5. I don't know ... by NoSalt · · Score: 4, Insightful

    For some reason this sounds to me like one of those situations where we say to ourselves, "What could happen if we cede control of the internet's technical management to the global community?" Then, six months, or a few years down the road, we look back and say "Ah ... that's what could happen; wish we hadn't done that."

  6. Re:And companies aren't willing to uphold it becau by hairyfeet · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Haven't been keeping up with current events, have you? YouTube is demonitizing (thus killing) channels that don't meet their vague as all hell "guidelines" that include "political or controversial content". Wanna guess what is happening?

    Well those "#killallmen" "DieCISScum" and "lets kill whitie" channels? They are all fine, none of them are being affected no matter how racist and sexist they are, but any that call them out on their bullshit or point out SJW insanity like Trigglypuff? Well I hope you didn't need that channel for anything,they have even shut down a channel multiple times that does nothing but host news broadcasts of crimes from around the USA because it makes the BLM movement look like shit by showing who they are protesting for.

    Considering the fact that the head of Google is the CTO of the Clinton campaign should not make this surprising to anyone, but between this and Google manipulating search results to aid Clinton they are about as fair and balanced as Jezebel or Twitter.

    --
    ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
  7. Re:Why the hurry? by cayenne8 · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Here's my main question.

    How is this in the best interest of the US to cede this control to someone else?

    Our govt is supposed to try to make the BEST decisions for US, not the world...the USA.

    Can someone explain to me, how ceding control of ICANN could possibly be in the best interest of America?

    --
    Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........