Karl Auerbach — ICANN the USSR of the Internet 35
gnaremooz writes to tell us that The Register recently sat down with Karl Auerbach, the last publicly elected member of the ICANN board, and discussed some of the more recent developments. "Perhaps my main point of view regarding what I want to do for the net is expressed in my presentation [PPT] "From Barnstorming to Boeing - Transforming the Internet Into a Lifeline Utility" (speakers notes avilable [PDF]). I've long been interested in making the net a solid utility, and I have a great deal of sympathy for the folks who have to go out and fix things at 3am. I'm very interested in building tools for those folks."
Should the US start occupations of domain names? (Score:1, Funny)
Brave! Speakers Notes?!? (Score:2)
Not everyone suspects this, but I am a card-carrying lawyer.
Yup, I'm one of those people.
Being a member of the evil race, it seems natural to me...
This sort of thing takes practice and timing. And of course the option to abort; to skip the joke if the room isn't with you yet...
Anyway, I appreciate the gesture, speakers notes often have the best information.
How about the presentation in PDF or ODF? (Score:3, Insightful)
Hmmm (Score:1, Interesting)
Admirable goals (Score:4, Insightful)
If its just at the backbone section of the Internet, can be done, but creating the library that allows your email application to know that the network is down, and to try sending via a relay server or some other relay method, takes a bit more effort and cooperation. Even if functions like this are only built into the OS networking (cable modem connection vs. wireless connection) redundancy and self healing get complex and expensive at the edge of the Internet cloud, and depend greatly on what the ISP will pass back to end users as to the condition of the network. The ISP part is where this will break down so that end users will still see the same Internet they have always seen. At least this will be true until ISP's are forced to play nicer.
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There will always be tension beetween efficiency and reserve capacity. We don't want to subsidize agriculture, but we don't want to go hungry every time crop yeilds dip below 98% of expectations, either.
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He forgot something.... (Score:1)
Why even make this a Powerpoint presentation? Let the communicators do the communicating, let the engineers focus on the fixing.... then maybe someone will pay attention.
One of the reasons why there isn't much investment in doing IT "correctly" is because of the inability of engineering types to communicate properly to the investor, in my experience.
oblig (Score:2, Funny)
Oh come on now! (Score:1, Funny)
Obvious and blantant pandering!
Okay, Johnny One-Note (Score:2)
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Auerbach's approach has always bucked trends (Score:5, Informative)
Untrue Comparison. (Score:1)
Regardless of the problems of ICANN, comparing it to the US
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and b) The USSR wasn't all bad. You know that for all the bad we say about them, it was the general consensus among Soviets that tales of homelessness in the US was propaganda b
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"yeah yeah, whatever propaganda monkey"
"no seriously"
"yeah yeah, whatever propaganda monkey"
*wall comes down, curtain falls*
"holy crap! it wasn't propaganda... "
*moves to US anyway*
-nB
(please note that I do not resent the influx. Their crime largely stays within their population, and they are some of the hardest workers I know)
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Going offtopic here but... that tends to be true.
Never mind the fact that there is a little selection going on here... a migrant is someone who moved. That right there shows they are more ambitious than the average person in some way. Not to say all ambitous people move, just that slackers tend not to.
All groups have crime. How many ethnic groups don't have a large international organized crime syndicate or two? We Italians made it popular, but its as old as dirt. Ever since there were laws
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This is a silly complaint. He didn't compare ICANN to the USSR. He compared the governance structure of ICANN to that of the USSR, a very different thing. He never even hints that ICANN's activities are comparable in nature to those of the USSR.
It may be offensive to compare every little thing you don't like to the USSR or Nazi Germany, but I find it just as offensive when people get all snitty about any comparison involving the USSR or Nazi Germany. People of any intelligence understand that saying tha
cheap TLDs (Score:2)
we have recently seen several other TLDs drop their prices down into the sub $0.25 per year range"
Hey! Where do I find these ultra-cheap TLDs?
It's worth a try... (Score:1)
Try to Justify your 6th figure. (Score:2)
Leave the internet unregulated and allow web portals to provide limiting "features" when users demand them.
What you do it censor content and control aspects of the internet that we don't need censored or controlled.
It's information, not a hammer As seen by its obvious yet lack of ability to smash you into inaction
poopsmear (Score:1, Funny)
ICANN...Not..... (Score:1)
Back in the '60s and '70s, some guy out near me got tired of all the BS with Ma Bell, so he created his own telephone system. Could the same be done as a way to get around ICANN?
ICANN-OT
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Like the USSR? We could only be so lucky... (Score:1, Interesting)
If ICANN was indeed a totalitarian system, then why do we have so many registrars and so little control over them?
How many registrars are in China, and will respond as if they don't speak English when someone from the US tries to complain to them?
With the exception of the recent problem with registerfly, can anyone name an action that ICANN has taken against anyone?
At best, ICANN resembles Russia as it is now - a poorly regulated market-based system. So