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The Internet Networking Technology

Final Decision Deferred On ".xxx" Domains 127

Posted by Soulskill
from the thinking-long-and-hard dept.
Hugh Pickens writes "The Associated Press reports that the board of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers has deferred a decision until June on whether to create a '.xxx' Internet suffix as an online red-light district, beginning a 70-day process of consultations on a domain that could help parents block access to adult sites. ICM Registry LLC first proposed the '.xxx' domain in 2000, and ICANN has rejected it three times already since then, but an outside panel last month questioned the board's latest rejection in 2007, prompting the board to reopen the bid. Backers of '.xxx' have billed the proposal as a way for the adult-entertainment industry to clean up its act, though some adult sites worry that governments would wind up mandating the use of '.xxx' and that sites with the '.xxx' suffix could easily be blocked by government web filters in the future. 'I am very concerned and fearful of censoring adult material that should be made available for adults. It scares the hell out of me,' says Malcolm Day, head of AdultShop.com, adding that if adult websites weren't allowed to have '.com' domains and could only register under the '.xxx' address, then 'many governments (across the world) would try to block them.'"
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Final Decision Deferred On ".xxx" Domains

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  • Exactly backwards (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Angst Badger (8636) on Saturday March 13 2010, @11:25AM (#31464070)

    People who want a "kid-safe" Internet should create a G-rated TLD for their material and block everything else. Having an adult-only TLD is just asking for trouble. I am reminded of the effort in the 80's spearheaded by Tipper Gore to label record albums. It started with profanity and sex, and before long, they we're trying to put "occult" warnings on anything that deviated from (their version of) orthodox Christianity. Ghettoization always leads to extermination.

    It's high time we called out the censors for using children as human shields.

  • by twisteddk (201366) on Saturday March 13 2010, @11:31AM (#31464088)

    I dont get this kind of thinking. Creating a toplevel domain surely would make it easier for people to find the porn they're looking for. Nothing less, nothing more
    But BANNING domains on that note, would as far as I can see only lead to the downfall of the toplevel domain, as porn providers would stop using it as it's not good business.

    And in any event, I dont really see the currently invested xxx providers as being willing to give up their lucrative .com or .org domains. So at most we'll get another toplevel domain that you need to register to "own" your own brand. Anyone for slashdot.xxx ?

  • by WrongSizeGlass (838941) on Saturday March 13 2010, @11:32AM (#31464102)
    Enough already. Clearly they are afraid to make a decision which is in and of itself a decision. If I keep putting off deciding to do something then I am in fact not doing it - only under the guise of indecision, procrastination or requiring further consideration. Shit or get off the pot, guys. Either way a lot of people won't be happy.
  • by tverbeek (457094) on Saturday March 13 2010, @11:35AM (#31464124) Homepage

    And who, exactly, would determine what is "obscene"?

    (I'd offer to do it, but I'm a bit busy.)

  • YRO? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by goldaryn (834427) on Saturday March 13 2010, @11:36AM (#31464132) Homepage

    It scares the hell out of me,' says Malcolm Day, head of AdultShop.com, adding that if adult websites weren't allowed to have '.com' domains and could only register under the '.xxx' address, then 'many governments (across the world) would try to block them.'"

    They better not try that here, we have the Human Rights Act

    (I don't care what anyone else says, fapping is a human right..)

    I have the weight of the legal world behind me! (most of them are wankers :->)

  • Re:Well (Score:5, Insightful)

    by sopssa (1498795) * <sopssa@email.com> on Saturday March 13 2010, @11:53AM (#31464264) Journal

    Why would you need a good excuse for porn anyway. You don't need to say "But I'm only human" or that porn saves people from getting raped. You can just say you enjoy fapping every now and then, it's not a secret that everyone does it. Even some girls do it daily, and it's also fun thing to do with your girlfriend. Those who are against porn have issues, not those who like to enjoy life and along with it sexuality too.

  • by Vellmont (569020) on Saturday March 13 2010, @11:55AM (#31464286)


    But BANNING domains on that note, would as far as I can see only lead to the downfall of the toplevel domain, as porn providers would stop using it as it's not good business.

    Until countries make laws requiring "all websites with adult content in them are required to register under the .xxx domain". No big deal you say. I certainly don't go to sites like that.

    Ever go to Amazon? Amazon sells adult videos. They also list a wide variety of sex toys, vibrators, etc that many people object to. Amazon doesn't sell this directly, but they do sell it through another company that lists on Amazon. Does that make Amazon belong under .xxx? Should the stuff that some people don't like be moved to a special amazon.xxx?

    Creating the domain is but one step in the process of segregating the internet into various categories. Once you require everything to be in neat little categories you can start to control access to those categories, track them, etc. More insidious is creating these dividing lines is an attempt to make adult products which are already mainstream and have been for at least 40 years if not more into something not mainstream.

  • by xZgf6xHx2uhoAj9D (1160707) on Saturday March 13 2010, @12:06PM (#31464358)
    No I think they got this going the right away around. The Internet will finally reach its full potential once everyone can filter out everything except .xxx domains.
  • by wisty (1335733) on Saturday March 13 2010, @12:30PM (#31464482)

    The same way you enforce adult sites to go to xxx - you don't. Embedded ratings could only be "opt-in" - just like most standards on the net. Just like .xxx would be. Anything else would just be too hard to enforce.

  • by tverbeek (457094) on Saturday March 13 2010, @12:31PM (#31464494) Homepage

    What happens when someone puts sex-ed info on a web site in the .kid domain, and American Puritan Society objects? Or someone creates www.heatherhastwomommies.kid and the anti-homosexual lobby cries foul? Who decides whether it's OK?

    If people want to create a walled garden online for their kids to play in, and use software to keep them there, I'm perfectly supportive of that. But the top level of the domain hierarchy is the wrong place to do that. Do it at the second level. Let private independent agencies or communities or whatever create walledgarden.org or keepmybabysafe.com or ohlookabutterfly.net, let them manage the content there according to their own standards, and let parents choose to use any of these sites (or none) to entertain their children. Restricting one's children to *.walledgarden.org is no more difficult than restricting them to *.kid. And meanwhile, the rest of us, who are not children, are free to use an internet that doesn't make decisions about content for us.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday March 13 2010, @12:42PM (#31464548)

    I couldn't agree any more on this. .KID should be created, not .xxx, .xxx won't solve a damn thing.

    Any websites out there are free to create kid friendly versions of their websites too.
    Of course, they'd have to follow very strict rules as to what people can do, such as no content embedding unless it is verified by staff. (which would essentially put most off from allowing it, period)

    Of course, kid friendly websites are going to be the target of another person, why it is everyone's favorite friend, the pedofile.
    Nothing you can do there really, unless you go through the awkward route of having to force any accounts to be verified by an adult and checked out through some route to make sure said kid actually exists.
    Of course, if THEY have a kid, that is a whole other problem.

    And a whole load of other tangled mess, but this is what happens when people get over emotional and start some bullshit Protect The Children crusade.
    More like "Protect my kid because i never taught them a damn thing about life, give me free money too!"
    Better yet, introduce a license to HAVE a kid in the first place. If you are too stupid, you shouldn't be allowed, period, getting a bit sick of having to pay for other peoples stupidity.

  • by russotto (537200) on Saturday March 13 2010, @12:43PM (#31464564) Journal

    The issues aren't separate. Once you ghettoize porn into an .xxx domain, it makes it much easier (both technically and politically) to block. In fact, it's likely the default would become to block the .xxx domain. Not just for corporations, but for ISPs (at the urging of the more prudish members of the community). Oh, and when the company filters websites at work it IS censorship, just on a smaller scale (and perhaps more justifiable).

  • by langelgjm (860756) on Saturday March 13 2010, @01:59PM (#31465064) Journal
    s/TLD/playground/g
  • as usual... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by hitmark (640295) on Saturday March 13 2010, @02:09PM (#31465164) Journal

    i say the basic problem is the non-national TLDs, at least as long as this planet is not under one government.

    why? because as long as that is the case, there will be multiple, conflicting interests about those TLDs.

    and sadly, thanks to the dot-com era and similar, the economic sharks smell money in relation to trade in domain names, meaning it will be nearly impossible to dismantle the existing system unless someone pays the owners of the non-national domains at least as much as they payed for them in the first place.

  • by Alsee (515537) on Saturday March 13 2010, @03:04PM (#31465592) Homepage

    I completely agree with all the problems you cite for a .kids type domain, and I completely agree the correct thing to do would be for people to use second level walledgarden.org type domains. However the world sucks, stupid people routinely demand idiotic and destructive things, and politicians all too often give it to them.

    So while I agree with everything you say, I support a .kids type domain to the extent that it can be used to siphon off these people and their bad ideas. It provides an outlet where these people can satisfy their crusade-compulsion and they can play out their bad ideas. A place where they can fight with each other over all of the problems you list, a place they can do all the dumb things they like and cause all the damage they wish, all within a contained area. All without causing any harm or damage outside their pointless harmless .kids domain.

    You're right the correct thing for them to do is just apply for a routine second level domain where they can do whatever they like, but obviously they already can do that, and obviously they are not going to be satisfied with that. These activists don't actually want to set up some kid-safe area, they don't actually want to do anything themselves, they are fighting to make the do something. They don't want to solve their problem, they want the government to solve it for them. And their "problem" isn't that they don't like what they are accessing on the internet, their problem is that they don't like what other people can find on the internet. They don't want something fixed for themselves, they are crusaders who want to forcibly impose their "help" upon everyone else. They are fanatically "helpful" people who want to run around forcibly applying leaches to everyone in order to prevent fictional diseases.

    I say a bad idea such as a .kids domain might be a useful idea if it gives these destructively-helpful people the illusion that they are successfully helping their intended victims.... err I mean helping their intended beneficiaries.

    Now I admit that it may lead to a problem with these people making demands that schools and libraries have some sort of mandatory filter restricted to the .kids domain. And yes, I acknowledge that some children (and adults) may become victims of that sort of idiocy. However I believe that attempting to impose that sort of filter would be completely unworkable and it would be an almost instantaneous blatant failure. I believe it would result in far less harm than their current efforts to impose upon students some ideological-candyland version of the full internet.

    Hell, in an ideal world I would fully support a .xxx domain. In theory it's a great idea. Let porn sites or anyone else grab a .xxx domain if they like, cool. The only reason I don't support it is because in the real world idiots view .xxx as some sort of "fix" for their "problem", and then they obviously expect that "fix" to actually work for solving their problem. They expect "bad" stuff is supposed to be in the .xxx domain, and only within the .xxx domain. So they expect laws to make that true, they expect laws to force things to actually work the way they want and expect them to work. They start demanding stupid destructive and unworkable laws to imprison anyone who puts "objectionable" material on a normal general website. And then all of the problems you list in your post become a catastrophic plague upon the internet itself.

    The only problem with your post is that you offered a reasonable rational solution. You often can't fix an unreasonable irrational fanatical people-problem with a reasonable rational fix.

    -

  • by jonwil (467024) on Saturday March 13 2010, @09:02PM (#31468504)

    The answer is to make the kid-friendly domain a .kids.us domain
    Then anything that is considered "G rated" by the US (i.e. what would be G or safe for kids if rated by the MPAA, ESRB or TV ratings people) would be allowed.

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