How The U.S. Government Undermined the Internet 394
sakshale writes "The Register has an article about U.S. Government backed policy changes that have led ICANN to redelegate top level domains in such a way as to provide 'greater state-controlled censorship on the internet, reduce people's ability to use the internet to communicate freely, and leave expansion of the internet in the hands of the people least capable of doing the job'" More from the article: "At that meeting, consciously and for the first time, ICANN used a US government-provided reason to turn over Kazakhstan's internet ownership to a government owned and run association without requiring consent from the existing owners. The previous owners, KazNIC, had been created from the country's Internet community. ICANN then immediately used that 'precedent' to hand ownership of Iraq's internet over to another government-run body, without accounting for any objections that the existing owners might have."
Idea Report (Score:5, Funny)
Interesting Idea (Score:3, Interesting)
http://imap./ [imap.]"joes butt"."Fuck you mama"/
would be a valid name. You would still respect ICANN's opinion on TLDs without whitespace or funny characters, but you start lessening your own TLDs with whitespace & funny characters.
Jeff
Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
Yea, never mind things like the Tsunami or Katrina or in the U.S. all of the controversies in government... I'm sure when I'm 85 years old this is exactly what I'll remember about 2005.
facts you might also remember about 2005 (Score:4, Funny)
As of 2005, in Kazakhstan [borat.tv], women can now travel on inside of bus, homosexuals no longer have to wear blue hat, and age of consent has been raised to eight years old.
Very niiice! High five!
Yes, 2005 was a bad year. (Score:5, Insightful)
Freedom of speech is important. I'm from New Orleans and still live in Louisiana. That ICANN is handing portions of the Internet over to government censors bothers me, and I consider it a large problem. Is my perspective warped? No. Without free speech, everyday can be like Katrina because your government can do whatever it wants to you. Just ask people from the former Soviet states what government housing and shopping are like.
Other disturbing US trends include re-centralization of telco into less than friendly hands. The destruction of smaller ISP continues. Blatant anti-competitive behavior by the remainder is tollerated and even encouraged. 2005 was another bad year for the world of ends.
Those bastards (Score:3, Interesting)
WTF, if the internet is in another country, the government of that country can do whatever they hell they want with it. That's how international law works. It's called respect for sovereignty.
Re:Those bastards (Score:5, Interesting)
Damned if you do, damned if you don't I guess.
I suppose they'd rather give it to (Score:2, Insightful)
What is it with people who think that ANY kind of government control of ANYTHING, ANYWHERE is unacceptable? Newflash people, "ownership" is a concept that _only_ exists within the context of a governmental legal system. Remove that and ownership becomes little more than possession.
That someone would complain about giving the Afghani or Iraqi government control of something that is by definition associated with the national state--immediately after the previous government has been removed from power
Re:I suppose they'd rather give it to (Score:5, Insightful)
Nonsense. Cats recognize ownership.
Title is a concept that only exists within the context of a governmental legal system.
KFG
Cats.. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I suppose they'd rather give it to (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I suppose they'd rather give it to (Score:2)
"Dead things go downstream, mother! We're going upstream!!!"
Most underrated movie of the 1980s, if you ask me.
Re:Those bastards (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Those bastards (Score:3, Insightful)
On what information do you come to that conclusion? Surely the point of UN control is that it wouldn't hand over control of anything to any individual country/government. Isn't that the whole point?
Re:Those bastards (Score:4, Informative)
Or, if your political tastes run the other way, consider the presence of the U.S. on the Security Council...
The problem with U.N. control over the internet is that it would give the worst offenders equal authority with those who do play well with others. Contrast this with the problem of "U.S." (i.e., ICANN) control: the U.S. may be an offender, but it's certainly not the worst, and it doesn't give the worst offenders much authority at all.
Re:Those bastards (Score:5, Interesting)
Apparently the main outrage comes from ICAAN reassigning control [opinionjournal.com] of the little used
I'm finding it difficult to get worked up about this.
Re:Those bastards (Score:3, Interesting)
The point that the article makes is that the USA's government is turning the assignment of domain name ownership to the perogative of national governments. The author isn't getting worked up about the two Iraqi domain owners, but about the government assuming the power to withdraw a domain from people it doesn't like. Currently, domain ownership (including top level domains) is a commercial affair run by business. The US government has no right to interfere with this save that of being big and pushy.
Giv
Re:Those bastards (Score:3, Interesting)
Given that as time goes on, control of domain names will come to be a vital resource that can make or break people and companies, the author is probably right that national governments should not be able to mess them around with impunity.
But businesses can operate them... with impunity? Without oversight? So, would you say that reassigning control of the Iraq domain from two jailed Palestinian immigrants in the United
Re:Those bastards (Score:5, Insightful)
How trite, condescending, and intellectually dishonest. Do you have anymore useless mudslinging rhetoric to spew?
You're exactly what's wrong with the world. Dismissive, close minded, and all-to-willing to disparage anyone who criticizes your source of pride.
Really, I could be wrong. If so, enlighten me, please. That is, if you have anything intelligent to say.
Re:Those bastards (Score:3, Interesting)
Result if the US had denied control over the .kz domain to the government of Kazakhstan : "The US refuses to allow a sovereign country to control their own TLD! They want to tell the whole world what to do!"
Re:Those bastards (Score:2, Insightful)
Don't be silly. Slashdotters aren't very "consistent" in their desire for the US to respect other countries. It's only acceptable when it suits their own personal politics.. It doesn't matter which side the US came down on, the karma-whores and left-wingers on this site would have blamed the US.
The US was either
Re:Those bastards (Score:3, Insightful)
It's not that I want the information for karma-whoring, I just want somebody to tell me how to think. (You know, 'cause thinking's hard.)
Re:Those bastards (Score:3, Insightful)
This whole story oozes UK politics. El Reg is a UK paper and the UK 'net is up in arms about one of their Sr. ministers claiming that they have no knowledge of use of t
Re:Those bastards (Score:3, Funny)
From Chapter 7 of the Karma Whorer's Manual:
In order of precedence, and to maximize your karma-whoring potential, you should always speak out against the first thing you find on the list:
1. Microsoft
2. The US Government
3. The military
4. The patent system
5. The republicans
6. Any government agency collecting information via the internet
7. emacs
8. karma-whores
9. Jack Thompson
10. CowboyNeal
Re:Those bastards (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm just curious as to the method that you've used to test Slashdotters for their IQ?
Observation: Agrees with me. Conclusion: IQ over 120.
Observation: Disagrees with me. Conclusion: IQ below 120.
Re:Those bastards (Score:3, Insightful)
This one of my all-time favorite lines. Do you do IQ tests to your friends? Or do you infer IQ on slashdot? What exactly is your need to justify your politics based on 'intelligence'? Does it make you feel better to think you are smarter then people you disagree with? Do you realize that no matter how much things work out, on average, there are right-wingers in this world smarter then you and all
Re:Those bastards (Score:2, Insightful)
WTF, if the internet is in another country, the government of that country can do whatever they hell they want with it. That's how international law works. It's called respect for sovereignty.
Don't be fooled. The internet is going in the direction of uniting the world to one standard. China might not want information about topic X, Y, or Z in their nation, but it is there. Maybe the people of China can't go to www.cnn.com for their news, but I am sure there
Re:Those bastards (Score:2)
In case you have been living in a cave the United Nations, the EU, and pretty much the rest of the world have stated for the record that TLDs should be under international control instead of under control of one particular government agency.
Since the Internet _is_ an international entity, why should one particular government agency have control of the root DNS? Don't you see the implications of this? If you don't, see line #1 of this reply.
A more open, international approach to this issue would have pr
Re:Grow up Bambi (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Those bastards (Score:5, Insightful)
TLDs are not property.
Lessons of history - Finland's access to internet (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Lessons of history - Finland's access to intern (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Lessons of history - Finland's access to intern (Score:2, Insightful)
However, since when did US start contributing anything to the internet after 1995?
Maybe traffic to US domains should start dropping.
Finland has the highest inernet penetration (pun intended).
USA has rural parts where even telcos won't provide telecom lines let alone broadband.
And, no, DRM enabled iTunes traffic is not counted as traffic.
Re:Lessons of history - Finland's access to intern (Score:3, Funny)
What an odd comment from someone who READS SLASHDOT.
Re:Lessons of history - Finland's access to intern (Score:4, Insightful)
You seem to be painting this as if someone in the US was limiting internet access for Finland and they were somehow convinced by Linux to let Finland "join the club". I think it is more likely that changes in Finland's telecommunication regulations [finland.fi] and deployment of ATM between Finnish Universities had more to do wtih it.
Read The Guidelines (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Read The Guidelines (Score:2)
> (a) Delegation of a New Top Level Domain. Delegation of a new top level domain requires the completion of a number of
> procedures, including the identification of a TLD manager with the requisite skills and authority to operate the TLD
> appropriately. The desires of the government of a country with regard to delegation of a ccTLD are taken very seriously.
> The IANA will make them a major consideration in any TLD delegation/transfer discussions. Significantly interested
> partie
Think Of It As Brand Management (Score:2)
Did I miss something? (Score:5, Insightful)
Shouldn't the own governments handle the NICs in their own countries? I have to be missing something - otherwise all I can think is this is what the UN would probably have done anyway.
Re:Did I miss something? (Score:3, Funny)
Yes, the fact that its a slow news week.
Evidence? (Score:5, Informative)
Really? They have plenty of other links to information in that article but nothing about this particular tidbit. I did a quick search and found nothing in the first 100 results. Granted, I didn't do as much homework as I should have but I would have expected that the author of this article would have provided something more than a simple paragraph making such a claim.
Anyone else have some more evidence or is this another piece of sensationalist journalism that's meant to fire everyone up over nothing?
Since When Is the Register Become a "News" Source? (Score:2, Interesting)
But setting aside the Bush administration's shoddy record, it is somewhat contradictory that the article first criticizes the US Gov't for maintaining too much Internet control, and then criticizes it for inducing ICANN to forfeit Internet control over to non-US entities.
While I'm not a supporter of this administration, it seems they can't win
Re:Here is the evidence for you (Score:4, Interesting)
Although I think the first letter is suspicious enough in itself.
Kieren
"turn over" has two sides (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:"turn over" has two sides (Score:2)
Who wants to eat crow? (Score:5, Insightful)
Regulation does not help the needy or the poor. It does not help those who can not do something for themselves. Regulation does not make a safer or better product, and it does not create a cheaper marketplace.
Regulation gives those in power the ability to put friends, family and cronies into high paying monopolistic jobs, determine which companies can enter a market and prevent everyone else from competing or making a better product.
Those who know me (even if you don't like me) know I am anti-DNS. I don't have a free market solution YET, but I think about it every day. DNS will be the fall of the Internet, until there is a decentralized version, and I believe that Google or another major search company will find a way to replace the central authority version.
I know we need DNS today -- links, bookmarks, advertising, all that. I also know we needed coal burning stoves just 40 years ago in some parts of the U.S. Without government, society tries to find ways to become more free by competing with others. Everyone wants a profit, but we believe we'll earn more by underpricing our competition and offering a better product. With government, society tries to find ways around the bureaucracy, red tape and restrictions. We have markets that have an excessively high cost of entry, but it is not always because of the equipment needed -- many markets are expensive because of government regulations and restrictions.
In the end, our freedoms are destroyed, our hard work is overtaxed and our children are left with the burden of paying off our mistakes.
Re:Who wants to eat crow? (Score:2)
Re:Who wants to eat crow? (Score:2)
Re:Who wants to eat crow? (Score:2)
We have some interesting directions we're heading in with torrents and IM and RSS and other processes which are currently reliant on DNS but could be a whole new form of information flow without a central authority. The question is how to address where given information is at any time. A link (to a domain name) makes sense, but you could also make a link to an IP address.
I'm thinking links could be objects instead of just plain text. Instead of hxxp://slashdot.org it could be
Re:Who wants to eat crow? (Score:2)
Also, when you do that, remember to clear any legal (patent) hurdles early, or your rollout could be stopped dea
So nu? (Score:2)
The IETF's motto is "rough consensus and running code." When you've got a running-code alternative which does not use DNS, but still provides the hostname IP address mapping as effectively as DNS does, then I'll be interested. Until then, being "anti-DNS" is roughly like being "Anti-IP": not going to get you very far.
Re:Who wants to eat crow? (Score:5, Insightful)
Not to say that all regulation is good, mind you, but there are many instances where our government did its job and represented The People, all those tired and poor masses, and helped America acheive a better standard of living; lassiez-faire capitalists seem to forget that, and also seem to forget that a 'free market' only exists on a level economic playing field -- get some ill-behaved 800lb gorillas-of-industry out there, and the little guy needs some help on his team, and fast.
Re:Who wants to eat crow? (Score:3, Insightful)
Minimum wage laws provably hurt the poor by giving them no entry level positions they are worthy of. You get paid less while learning, and as you prove your
Re:Who wants to eat crow? (Score:5, Insightful)
The FDA also does a great deal of good; sure, getting drugs to market takes forever, but the drugs that do get to market usually work. Look at a 1920s pharmacy, and you see 'guaranteed' cures for the common cold, measles, influenza, and every other ailment under the sun, and of course, none of them could back their claims scientifically; the idea of a 'prescription' didn't even exist, which didn't matter, because there was no market incentive to produce functional drugs. Repeat business for drug companies was encouraged, of course, but why go through the trouble of making drugs that work, when you can just add some cocaine or heroin to those Wonder Pills?
I never said the FDA was perfect; I'd love to see an 'opt-out' for patients that want to try the latest and greatest that modern medicine has to offer, but the pre-FDA America was not a happy place to live.
UL is also a regulatory body, but one missing a lot of authority -- I could easily sell non-UL tested goods, and consumers wouldn't care. I doubt most of the public even knows what UL *is*.
The minimum wage laws destroy the poor neighborhoods. If minimum wage was so great, why not make it $50 per hour?
If '$50/hour' was the definition of a minimum survivable salary, than it would be minimum wage. The point of minimum wage isn't to guarantee luxury; it exists to keep people from starving to death, which is what often happened before minimum-wage laws became, well, laws. People were forced into living in tenements, with little money for the basic necessities of life, because it didn't matter to the companies whether or not their employees survived to work another day or not -- after all, there's a lot more workers than employers, so if one dies, you can just replace them.
Furthermore, not everybody is cut out to be a rocket scientist, or a skilled laborer; some people are going to be stuck at the bottom for their entire lives, and I think it's utterly inhuman to ask the bottom rung of society to starve to death -- after all, they clean our hotels, serve our coffee, and, most importantly, they are also human beings.
Pre-FDA and pre-labor law US was a mercantilist society based on elite controlled by the party that didn't support these laws. The laws just switched the elite from one authoritarian channel to another.
Um, this isn't much of an argument -- laws exist to exercise authority; we call 'non-authoritative' laws 'suggestions'.
Furthermore, the US would still *be* a mercantilist society based on elite control if it wasn't for laws that pushed for the little guy; it didn't just happen that, one day, the elite decided to start treating all those assembly-line workers like human beings.
Business exist to make money; which is good, they should do that. Unfortunately, there's no inherent moral code as to how a business should go about that, and without government regulation, businesses do some pretty disgusting things.
I think our differences come from different viewpoints -- I hold the view that, in a just society, I should be willing to live an any socioeconomic strata. That is to say, while I might be unhappy doing so, I would be willing to be a member of the bottom rung of society. Which is why I believe in things like state-run homeless shelters, soup kitchens, libraries, public education, minimum wage, and a mixed public/private healthcare system -- cheap on the taxes, great for the masses, and even with room for the capitalists to play.
Basically, I try and think about walking in other peoples' shoes.
Re:Who wants to eat crow? (Score:3, Insightful)
Proper tort laws are what would regulate grocery stores in a free-er market. If a grocery store sells bad meat, you can expect them to go out of business. I don't fear the days of The Jungle because muc
Re:Who wants to eat crow? (Score:3, Funny)
Who Wants to Barf Up Platitudes? (Score:3, Insightful)
There are probably a half a dozen ways in which DNS isn't anywhere near the weak point you suggest. For one thing, DNS only gives an authoritarian thug marginal censorship abilities beyond what you'd otherwis
Re:Who wants to eat crow? (Score:3, Interesting)
Bookmarks and links are a technology which actually eliminate the need for DNS[1]. If you could pass bookmarks and links around in a user-friendly manner, why would you need a global namespace like DNS? The links could simply be IP addresses, or preferably, a cryptographic identifier [2],[6]. Finding an entity with an introduction occurs via a e-mail, links on the web, etc. Search engines are used for finding an entity without an introducti
Re:Who wants to eat crow? (Score:2)
This article, I believe, supports my last year of ranting against ICANN. It doesn't support my view, necessarily, but it does go to show that any government control could lead to censorship -- and does. Maybe th
Misleading headline (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Misleading headline (Score:2)
Propaganda is SUPPOSED to be misleading. Duh.
So how long.... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:So how long.... (Score:3, Informative)
Bad news for non-us countries (Score:2)
"Governments have legitimate interest in the management of their country code top level domains (ccTLD). The United States recognizes that governments have legitimate public policy and sovereignty concerns with respect to the management of their ccTLD. As such, the United States is committed to working with the international community to address these concerns, bearing in mind the fundamental need to ensure stability and security of the Internet's DNS."
If that doesn't say 'we'll co
I am the first one to admit... (Score:4)
So... (Score:5, Interesting)
And what is wrong with this? Isn't this how it's supposed to be?
Nice use of the word nuclear, by the way. Its good to see that propaganda is alive and well.
Re:So... (Score:2)
Who should get final control of
The beauty of the 'give it to whoever set it up' system is that it's pretty hard to question that kind of thing. What I mean to say is, it's pretty hard to argue that you were the first person to set up a TLD if you weren't. It's a fact of the past.
Borders change, and things can get hairy (like in the Taiwanese example).
While Iraq was without any real form of government, who should have had control?
Re:So... (Score:2)
And what is wrong with this?"
The Internet is, at heart, a phenomenon created by the free interaction of hundreds of millions of human beings. People and private companies improve the Internet every year by forming and contributing to standards groups, trade associations, open source software projects, and so on. Had the Internet been kept firmly under government control, it would never have become what it is n
When asked why... (Score:5, Funny)
The sky isn't falling... (Score:3, Insightful)
Amazing how some people scream censorship at the drop of a hat but can't see where they censor each other.
Censorship (Score:5, Insightful)
Now, is this right? This is debatable and surely will be debated over and over here. Is this censorship? Hardly. We are not talking about some Great Firewall preventing the people from visiting any site of Cohen's. This is the WWW afterall and he can easily have the site with a different domain avoiding the
To say this is the beginning of state sponsored censorship is ridiculous, of course we are trusting on an article from The Register, so inflammatory language is a requirement, as is misinformation. Trust me, if a country was really wanting to censor anything they would do it one way or the other even if it meant "cutting the line". So let us all calm down and put the little tin foil hats away.
Re:Censorship (Score:4, Insightful)
This is a case of a government using it's authority to supress speech which they find objectionable. It is a textbook example of censorship and the fact that he can work around it by publishing in an area they don't control doesn't change that, any more than the fact that you could publish a book in the US that you couldn't in soviet Russia means that they didn't have censorship.
but who is to deny anyone, government controlled, influenced or not the right to protect their perceived "integrity".
There's this thing called free speech. A few people think it's important. Lots of other people wouldn't know it if it kicked them in the ass, and do stupid shit like nodding to each other about how sure, free speech is important, but you don't want anything bad out there, right?
Is this censorship? Hardly. We are not talking about some Great Firewall preventing the people from visiting any site of Cohen's.
Are you an idiot? Certainly. Any time *anyone* uses authority to suppress or alter someones speech, that is censorship. They don't have to kill you or prevent other people from listening or even be successfull. It's still censorship.
To say this is the beginning of state sponsored censorship is ridiculous
Yes, because it's not "the beginning" of anything. It *is* state sponsored censorship. It's what the word *means*.
Re:Censorship (Score:3, Insightful)
In the end, I do not believe The Register's example is a good one for arguing state sponsored censorship, and I think, as with a great many of their articles, that the article is highly inflammatory and missing a great deal of supported fact.
No, trust me, I believe in free speech. If we didn't have it, I would be one of the first peop
USA meddles in the affairs of others! Shocking! (Score:2, Funny)
Whoop-de-do.
If this is news to you in 2005, you need to read the front-page of a newspaper once in a while.
What policy changed? (Score:5, Informative)
Principles for Delegation and Administration of ccTLDs Presented by Governmental Advisory Committee [icann.org]
The relevant section (I think) says:
And there is a lot more language like that. The way it reads to me, ICANN does what the local government says regarding the TLD, as soon as possible - and this has been policy since at least February 2000.Re:What policy changed? (Score:2)
E.g. ICANN will ignore the wishes of all governments but the USA? How would that make sense.
I cna't imagine any other policy they would encode, except to ignore governments completely (except for the USA, of course).
What's the big deal? (Score:3, Insightful)
However, it's hard to justify not giving control of a COUNTRY'S TLD to said country's government.
Another poster posted ICANN's guidelines for the country code TLD's and they clearly state that the government's wishes with regards to it's TLD management are of paramount importance.
That's just how it should be.
Re:What's the big deal? (Score:2)
Add to this the fact that there is a republican in the Whitehouse, and that republican's name is Bush, and you get stories like this, or the one on the NSA hiding those supersecret spy tracking files...errr, cookies, on people computers.
Its been a slow news week. A slow deranged news week.
It's a consensus... we change change it (Score:2)
So created, so destroyed (Score:2)
If you shouted the former, do you believe the latter?
If not, explain...
Rut-roh! (Score:5, Funny)
Grotesquely-attired monster struggles in ingenious, home-made trap.
Fred: "Now let's see who's really trying to control the Internet!"
Fred pulls off mask.
Velma: Jinkies!
Shaggy: Zoinks!
Daphne: Why it's...
All (in unison): Jack Thompson!
Thompson: I have to save the world from itself! Too much garbage on the Internet, perverting the minds of our children! And I'd have gotten away with it too if it weren't for you meddling kids!
Re:Rut-roh! (Score:2)
"We want some pus.."
"I'll save the day!"
"Curses!"
not surprising (Score:2)
Nothing wrong (AFAIU) (Score:2)
1) Remove the (possible) control of the gTLD by the US governement
2) Stop the abusive contract signed with Verisign
3) Provide cheaper gTLD domains (real price) -- today it is too expensive for the inhabitants of a poor country)
4) Set at least one gTLD registar in each country
Is this such a big deal? (Score:2)
First, it doesn't seem like a big deal that government agencies should have control over that country's TLD, even if that means taking the ownership from an individual. Or did I misunderstand the article?
Second, who needs all those TLDs anyway? I know it's been tried in the past but I see a day where a successful "alternet" will be created, with TLDs and DNSs and everything else completely run by individuals and non-governmental organizations.
People are pretty satisfied by how things run now, though.
Sensationalized? (Score:2)
2005 will be forever seen as the year in which the US government managed to keep unilateral control of the internet, despite widespread opposition by the rest of the world.
Well now I'm interested, pray tell why?
At that meeting, consciously and for the first time, ICANN used a US government-provided reason to turn over Kazakhstan's
WTF - the US gov't CREATED the internet (Score:2, Insightful)
When the internet grew, and the
ICANNot believe this (Score:2)
Remember Alternic? (Score:3, Insightful)
Bigger picture (Score:4, Insightful)
How do you think World War II and the post-war period would have played out if Curtis LeMay and Douglas MacArthur had been in charge instead of FDR, Marshall and Eisenhower? Most historians agree that the Cuban Missile Crisis would have resulted in the Global Thermonuclear War if Kennedy has listened to LeMay and invaded Cuba. Damn Massachusetts liberals.
Of course, if Truman had listened to MacArthur during the Korean War, we wouldn't have made it to 1962.
I'm looking around, and I don't see a new FDR, JFK, or Eisenhower waiting in the wings. Or maybe they are there, and the polarization of American politics is silencing the moderate voices of reason.
We've now been fighting the War on Terrorism longer than we fought WWII, how do you think the results stack up? If George Bush had been president during the Cuban Missile Crisis, do you think he would have listened to LeMay and invaded Cuba?
Re:Bigger picture (Score:3, Interesting)
Opinion of the United States has waxed and waned since WW2. Viet Nam and the deployment of Pershing & cruise missiles in Europe weren't any more popular. If you judge by protests, they were less popular. More Europeans will come to see the light as the Islamists continue attacking Europeans in Europe. It is amazing how quickly that clears t
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Bigger picture (Score:3, Interesting)
You had no measure, implied or otherwise. I chose mine.
I am a veteran of the U.S. Navy. I was in the first Gulf war. I saw the bu
Attempt at understanding (Score:3, Insightful)
1. Ownership of general domain names (x.com, x.net, x.biz)
2. Ownership of country-specific domain names (x.eng, x.usa, x.fr, etc.)
3. The mapping of general domain names to to IP addressess
4. The mapping of country-specific domain names to IP addresses
3 and 4 are kind of related since they may conflict if not coordinated and thus perhaps should be considered as one. Or else we can add another one:
5. Assign suffixes and IP ranges to countries.
#2 obviously seems to best be left to specific countries. If the IP addresses are blocked off such that groups/ranges are assigned to countries, then #4 could be left to individual countries also. However, #1 and #3 and #5 seem to require a central or cordinated body to manage.
I believe the US wants to keep control over #1 and #3 and some of #5 because they don't trust a UN-like governing body, partly for allegedly being slow and wasteful.
If other countries don't like the US control over #1 and #3, then they can simply use or demand country-specific domains and IP's be used by their consituents, skipping domains such as x.com. Maybe groups of countries can be given "group" blocks, such as x.euro or x.asia or x.groupfoo or x.alqueda (just kidding) domains and related IP ranges.
Would the UN have handled it differently? (Score:3, Insightful)
Anyway, I understand that people want to take a whack at the US for their role in that debacle, but, would the UN have done differently? I don't know that they would have.
I don't necessarily think that the US should have done what they did, but bouncing out to say that somehow international control would have resulted in a different outcome seems a bit incorrect. Am I wrong?
Re:Decentralized Internet (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Decentralized Internet (Score:2)
The reason that connecting to, say, Slashdot is easy is that there's a unique IP address for this website; for the sake
Re:No real "undermining" here (Score:2)
Re:It seems legitimate, Maybe i'm confused. (Score:3, Informative)
I don't think confusion is the right concept, but I think, "respectfully uninformed" is close.
but as I see it this seems perfectly legitmate, as much as I might disagree
You do have a confusing way of contradicting yourself though...
The
Actually, normally and historically, governments don't own or control the country c
Re:I don't see a problem here . . . (Score:3, Insightful)
Barring incompetent duty performance, the ccTLD manager who originally qualified for the delegation under Postel, IETF RFC 1591, and IANA PC-1.
In cases of incompetence, the redelegation should direct control to a stable, competent custodial entity, unladen by periodically shifting political agendas.
Since governments--local, regional & national--are highly likely to act in their self-interest with regard to pol