As ICANN Gains Full Oversight Of Domain Name System, Some Wonder If It Means the US Has Given Away The Internet (bbc.com) 215
The U.S. has given up its remaining control over the Internet. The formal handover, which took effect on Saturday, followed a last-ditch attempt by a group of Republicans to block the move. They had argued that the US concession would open the door for authoritarian governments get control of the network of networks, leading to greater censorship. From a BBC report:A judge in Texas has put the kibosh on a last-minute legal attempt to block the controversial decision for the US to give up control of one of the key systems that powers the internet. It's a move being breathlessly described by some as the US "giving up the internet" to the likes of China, Russia and the Middle East. For starters, while they can take the credit for inventing the underlying technology, the US never "had the internet" to begin with. Nobody did. It's a, duh, network. Decentralised. That's what makes it so powerful. But there are bits of internet infrastructure that some people and governments do have control over, and that's what this row is all about. One of them is the DNS - Domain Name System. This is the system for looking after web addresses. Thanks to the DNS, when you type bbc.com, you're taken to the correct servers for the BBC website. It saves you the grief of having to remember a string of numbers. That pairing of names and numbers is kept in one great big master file, the land registry of the web. The only organisation that can make changes is Icann, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers. As of Saturday 1 October 2016, Icann will no longer be under US government oversight.
What's that smell? (Score:5, Funny)
It's the smell of Freedom!
Re: What's that smell? (Score:3, Insightful)
LOL, no. We must have different ideas of freedom. This gives businesses more power over this aspect of the internet. I'd rather have a government with a constitution that protects free speech and free expression running parts of the internet like DNS rather than turn it over to businesses, whose primary interest is their profit. If profit and freedom are in opposition, what do you expect the business to support?
Different ideas, indeed (Score:2, Interesting)
The concern is that in most respects, the US offers one of the wider definitions of freedom of speech. It's not perfect, but it really is better than most. Given US control, you can expect that to be reflected in management of the system.
US control is gone. So we will see what that brings.
Thinking about freedom of speech issues in Europe and the middle east, some countries have applied restrictions that far exceed those imposed by the US. Germany, Iran, etc. come to mind. So the question arises as to how mu
Re:Different ideas, indeed (Score:5, Insightful)
You should read what Reporters Without Borders have to say on the matter: http://12mars.rsf.org/2014-en/ [rsf.org] .
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AFAIK free speech doesn't also guarantee anonymous free speech, at least here in the US.
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Yep, that's your motto, until you need us for things you fuck up. :(
Signed,
The United States of America
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So you're saying if Slashdot disclosed my real identity after this post, I could sue them for violating my constitution rights?
Re: Different ideas, indeed (Score:2, Informative)
No, he's saying the government isn't allowed to limit your free speech whether or not you are anonymous. A private entity might or might not do that, but it also can't enlist the government in finding that anonymous source if no crime or tort has been committed and they are unsuccessful in determining the identity of the anonymous participant.
Re:Different ideas, indeed (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem there is that they are mixing up surveillance issues with speech issues; the one is distinct from the other in some very important ways.
Surveillance is out of control pretty much everywhere, if for no other reason than the bad actors are running completely loose worldwide. Government and corporate. Speech, however, can exist in a country that allows it, regardless if a government is looking at it, or not.
Reporters tend to do their own gnarly things with speech anyway; they have a soapbox, and it is almost impossible not to serve some viewpoint when on it. I do wish the news was, you know, news, and not opinion, but even picking what stories to cover (and so, by extension, what stories not to cover), some issues get attention, and others don't. That happens at the editorial, reporting, and news consumer reading level, often with leverage from advertisers applied quite strongly.
In the context of that kind of mess, I still wave a flag for being as free as possible to say what you want.
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The problem there is that they are mixing up surveillance issues with speech issues; the one is distinct from the other in some very important ways.
While i get your point, the two concepts do go hand in hand. You cannot have free speech if you know you're listened and afraid of what might happen.
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Ah, but you can if you're listened to and you're not afraid of what might happen, which is the case for the vast majority of the US population. Pick your reason: ignorance, disinterest, assumption of innocence — but [waves hand at Internet] you can see that there is very little of "I am afraid to speak" going on. And some of the things people say.... oy. :)
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GCHQ and the NSA spy on reporters, which makes it harder for them to do their jobs. In the UK, for example, the police have used data gathered by GCHQ and which ISPs have a legal duty to collect to identify the sources of journalists who were critical of them. "Chilling effect" doesn't really do it justice.
That's why they consider mass surveillance to be a problem, it limits journalistic freedom.
More directly, check this link out (Score:2)
An old statement about ICANN [rsf.org] says that the ideas people were coming up with for international governance would lead to more censorship. I don't see a newer statement directly on the topic.
Re:Different ideas, indeed (Score:5, Insightful)
How much influence? About as much as they currently do.
The nations of the world are already on the advisory board of ICANN, including China, Russia and the various Middle East nations. The US doesn't lose influence, and no other nation gains it. The only change is what court ICANN answers to. You know those people who use the courts to seize domain names and transfer ownership by force? Those are the only ones who stand to lose anything... and their astroturfing is the big reason everyone's so terrified about the USA 'giving up the internet'.
Re:Different ideas, indeed (Score:4, Interesting)
Yes, that's precisely what I was saying. It's a huge change, one that could bring additional restrictions on speech.
Thanks for putting such a fine point on it. :)
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I'd rather have an internet where TLDs don't get disa
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As I said, the US is imperfect. But as the old saw goes, and particularly so WRT freedom of speech, it's the worst -- except for all the others.
I'd rather have an Internet where I can speak about superstition (and religion - but I repeat myself) without being stepped on for "intolerance."
This is an interesting read. [foreignpolicy.com] Once you click the advertising sludge out of the way, sigh.
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Also, again, the United States already have demonstrated a lack of regard for freedom of speech by suppressing the speech of a political enemy. It appears that there is no country or organiz
Re: Different ideas, indeed (Score:4, Informative)
Citation needed please. What politician had their right to free speech shit upon?
The entire population of Iraq when the U.S. unilaterally disabled the .iq gTLD and Wikileaks domain [knowledgecommons.in] in the leadup to the Iraq War.
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The US has issues with copyright, trademarks and parents. Frankly some of its laws are crazy, obviously bought by corporations in a most undemocratic fashion.
Its freedom of speech protections are very weak in some areas, particularly metadata. In parts of Europe metadata sites are protected, not so in the US.
Re: Different ideas, indeed (Score:2)
Everyone blames the parents.
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Depends on Priorities for Freedom (Score:2)
The concern is that in most respects, the US offers one of the wider definitions of freedom of speech. It's not perfect, but it really is better than most.
That depends on what freedoms you prioritize. The US priority is that the government cannot restrict freedom of speech but turns a complete blind eye to corporations restricting that freedom for employees or for others by suing. While this does not carry the threat of jail lifetime financial ruin is just as effective in silencing people and the power is controlled by entities which the people have zero control over.
European countries tend to have a more comprehensive view and put restrictions on what sp
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To sum up what you said: when you restrict government censorship but not corporate censorship, as in the US, the only people with freedom of speech are those who don't fear financial ruin: which is to say the extremely rich and those with nothing to lose.
It's not surprize that both those subsets have large numbers of members who hold bizarre, even crazy, ideas.
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Note that this exact
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"I'd rather have a government with a constitution that protects free speech and free expression running parts of the internet like DNS"
And where do you propose to find such a government?
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So where is it going?
Re:What's that smell? (Score:5, Insightful)
It's fine to ICANN, it says so right in the headline. ICANN is a US corporation, under US law.
It's not really a big deal. Eventually the root DNS system will have to come under international control of some kind, likely distributed so that no one country can make unilateral decisions.
But that's not what this is, this is just removing the last bit of direct control that the US government has, which is a good thing. It needs to be put beyond direct political control.
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We already have so much stuff under ITA, which is UN. So why not ICANN? And it's not the friggin internet, it's just one part of DNS domain.
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Who the hell cares, the DNS system is a IP address pointer on your computer, that you control, the references the nick names in a data base to the matched IP address. That match up can be done anywhere, on your computer, at the ISP or at mandated government DNS servers, which you can ignore just by typing the IP address in the address bar. The IP address is the address the powers the internet, the DNS is just a database of nicknames associated with those IP addresses.
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If you read the damn article (I know I know) you would know the whole REASON why this was done was because, if it wasn't done, eventually it WOULD end up under the UN run ITU. The US did not want the UN controlling the root DNS tables, but they also knew they could not keep it to themselves forever either - the rest of the world do NOT look kindly on claims that the US is the only country who can be trusted with it - especially since they clearly cannot as the only country who has EVER use the TLD system fo
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blasé Seriously, how hard is it to use é?
Backwards (Score:3, Informative)
They had argued that the US concession would open the door for authoritarian governments get control of the network
Rather it has been liberated from the control of an authoritarian government.
Re:Backwards (Score:5, Insightful)
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It can be argued that yes, they were. The US has a long history of censorship and attempted censorship of the internet: CDA, COPA, DMCA, COPPA, CIPA, DOPA, COICA, SOPA, PIPA, CISPA, the USITC requesting site blockings... i wish i were making those acronyms up.
Re:Backwards (Score:4, Informative)
OK, so let's take a look at these ominous-sounding acronyms, one by one.
CDA is the Communications Decency Act [wikipedia.org]. It makes sense to start off with this one because it not only has the most Orwellian name, but it also represents one of the earliest assaults against online freedom of expression by American politicians. In the US, our legislators face no penalties when they pass overtly unconstitutional laws, but the laws themselves still have to survive court challenges. This happened more or less immediately with the CDA, and the result was genuinely ironic. The only significant part of the CDA that survived was Section 230 [wikipedia.org], which is what releases server operators from responsibility for information posted by their users. So the CDA is actually one of the most important pieces of legislation protecting free expression on the Internet.
COPA Like the problematic parts of the CDA, the Child Online Protection Act was almost immediately struck down, this time in its entirety.
DMCA Another two-edged sword. Some believe that freedom of expression and copyright laws are mutually exclusive. I'm sympathetic to this point of view myself, but the fact is that our Constitution explicitly authorizes Congress to regulate "intellectual property." Unsurprisingly this is also true of essentially every civilized country on Earth. All of them, in the US's place, would have ended up with a DMCA-like law of their own. The differences is that similar legislation in those countries wouldn't have had to conform to the First Amendment. Much like the CDA, one of the parts of the DMCA that survived court challenges is the "safe harbor" provision that has proven to be vitally important to the growth and maintenance of a more-or-less free Internet. Look what's happening in the EU, for instance, where you're no longer allowed [eff.org] to run an open WiFi access point. The DMCA and CDA are what keep this kind of bullshit from happening in the US.
COPPA is the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act. It doesn't address free speech, unless your idea of free speech is the freedom to collect personal information from children under 13 without their parents' supervision. If that's your idea of free speech, we're done here.
CIPA, the Children's Internet Protection Act, is problematic from a free-expression standpoint. But it is also strictly limited in scope to schools and libraries that receive government funding. It has no effect on the rights of any private citizens or organizations.
DOPA ("Deleting Online Predators Act") is one I hadn't heard of. It was introduced in Congress but appears to have made no progress toward passage since 2007. It's not the law, so it's not relevant.
COICA, "Combating Online Infringement and Counterfeits Act," and its successor PIPA, "Protect IP Act" also were shelved after widespread protests.
SOPA, the Stop Online Piracy Act, was basically an attempt by the content industries to buy a legislative end run around the DMCA's safe harbor provision. Like the DMCA it comes into play only in the context of copyright law. Like PIPA, it failed to pass in the wake of widespread protests.
CISPA, the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act, doesn't appear to have anything to do with freedom of speech. It "allows for the sharing of Internet traffic information between the US government and technology and manufacturing companies." It wouldn't be affected one way or the other by the ICANN transfer and isn't germane here.
It's not clear what you mean by "the USITC requesting site blockings." Presumably another case where the right to infringe copyrights collides with the right to free sp
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Hate speech in Canada is defined in sections 318, 319, and 320 of the criminal code.
The US has very similar exceptions to their first amendment, except they exist in legal precedent instead of formal law:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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That's the difference between conduct and expression. Unless you figure out a way to burn a cross on someone's lawn via the Internet, Virginia v. Black is not applicable.
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Is that unfettered everywhere, or only more than 200 miles from an international border or airport?
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The US constitution-free zone is 100 miles from all borders. (For those who don't know what the above is talking about)
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Thanks for the correction. I'm not as good as I should be with 18th century measurement systems.
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You are totally right. I need to modernize. It's roughly 314 kibimeters.
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Thanks for the correction. I'm not as good as I should be with 18th century measurement systems.
100 metric miles then. :p
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Well, I'm not sure that the Canadians and Mexicans would completely agree! The US Constitution stops at those borders. The 100 mile thing refers to open sea borders.
Re:Backwards (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Backwards (Score:5, Insightful)
You're right. In this context, the US first amendment is a lot weaker than what most western countries have. The entire US "bill of rights" has that awkward phrase "Congress shall make no law...." Congress doesn't have to make a law to get a private company to yank your entry in the DNS database, and restrictions on the actions of the US congress don't mean anything for any non-US government, and only apply to other US governments, mostly, via a supreme court decision.
The UN itself has this:
which is pretty apropos.
The US supreme court has maybe been a bit more zealous in many cases about shooting down interpretations of the exceptions than in other places (they have upheld exceptions, of course). But that can change with new justices, it's not at the level of actual constitutional law.
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True, some countries are even better at free speech.
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>The FACT is, no other major world power has anything like the First Amendment.in the US constitution.
And you base this on the list of countries you can actually find on a map ? WTF ?
Free speech, as is found in the first ammendment, has been enshrined in laws and constitutions since before the US even existed. And, in fact, MOST other countries have something like that. Yes, nearly all of it.
By the way - the US has only ever actually USED this oversight over ICANN twice - and both times it was used to do
Re: Backwards (Score:2, Interesting)
Is that the same government that wanted to make it legal to seize and take down domains without any form of due process (SOPA)? Even foreign domains?
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Yeah, you're right.
I am shocked how Saturday's handover went BACK IN TIME and caused massive DDOS attacks against journalists saying unpopular things, like Krebs or the NY Times.
Nothing is going to change from this. Locked down countries will remain locked down, open countries will remain open.
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"2.0 can start off as a project to supply secure connectivity to the military, government and critical infrastructure; internal non-public facing usage. Basically take the important hacking targets off today's internet."
As with Gandhi on Western Civilization, that would be a good idea. I think however there might be some implementation problems due to our complete inability to design and write the software to "supply secure connectivity" to anyone or anything connected to any public network.
53000000 (Score:2, Offtopic)
53000000 GET
Don't mistake this for the typical anti-US rant... (Score:2)
...but this is bad how, exactly?
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In the sense that the organization in control of root name servers will no longer be under government authority. Would you feel the same way if it was Russia instead of the US?
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Within US control there is no guarantee it won't be used for political purposes!
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Once out of US control, there's no guarantee it won't be used for political purposes. The US is generally agnostic on political opinions due to our speech laws. Other countries not so much. Once someone is deemed a political liability or in violation of some countries speech laws, this international body will take them offline or push them to the dark web.
The US of Obama and Clinton is not the same in terms of being agnostic of political opinions, free speech laws be damned. This is a government that tried to put the makers of the movie 'Innocence of Muslims' in jail, during the Benghazi consulate riot. The US is as willing to censor anti-Islamic speech just like that of Saudi Arabia, Iran or anyone else. There is nothing redeeming about the US commerce department having oversight.
I'm fine w/ ICANN becoming independent: only caveat I'd put is that I'd l
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Duh, no one owns it, it's a network (Score:2, Informative)
"Nobody did. It's a, duh, network."
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:It's the reporting (Score:5, Interesting)
I had to explain the same thing to my mom, who was concerned about how we were "handing over control of the internet". I told her that this was sort of like handing control over the entity that assigns unique telephone numbers to people, but it doesn't control the phone lines themselves.
Besides which, the internet is somewhat resistant to change of *any* sort, as evidenced by the extremely slow adoption of things like IPv6 and DNSSEC, both of which would be very useful, but simple mass inertial keeps adoption rates down. So, any radical changes by these bodies would likely just be ignored not only for ideological reasons, but for practical ones as well.
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Because there's an election coming up. Frighten the citizens, collect votes, profit.
Not a big deal. (Score:3)
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So it militarizes it. Then what? There's so extremely little power there.
Absurd.... (Score:2)
The DNS system is not the internet. The Internet works just fine without it- except for those pesky IP4 and IP6 numbers. This is such a smokescreen.
Everything the internet could be transitioned to a separate US controlled DNS system in the event of emergency. Would it be a shock to the system because everyone uses DNS? Of course. But new root servers could be deployed in short order.
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The DNS system is not the internet. The Internet works just fine without it- except for those pesky IP4 and IP6 numbers.
Virtually every user of the internet only knows how to use the internet through DNS. These users will not know how to use the internet with DNS. A huge amount of software has hard programmed DNS values rather than IP addresses. This software will fail without DNS. It is true that DNS is not the internet, but without DNS, you have no internet.
The US never "owned" the Internet. (Score:4, Interesting)
The only thing critical contributed by the US was TCP/IP. Sure, for a time the US was custodian of the top-level part of the DNS system, but if they had misbehaved too badly, it would just have been taken away from them forcefully. That would have been rather easy, as the majority of the top-level DNS servers are not located in the US anyways. One level below, the US was never relevant except for some domains. Country-specific domains were always under control of that country. Even .com and the like would have been removed from US control if abused too badly.
So, no, nothing was really given away, because the US never had real power over the Internet.
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Didn't the US contribute ethernet, the WWW, and other TCP/IP technologies?
Re:The US never "owned" the Internet. (Score:4, Informative)
Yes, as you imply, clearly the WWW is the most important foundational piece of the Internet. Not the invention or popularization of markup languages or Arpanet or Telenet or any of the other early American computer networks.
Authoritarian Governments (Score:2)
"they had argued that the US concession would open the door for authoritarian governments get control of the network of networks"
Someone needs to explain to the US that they already have an authoritarian government.
Entrenched class system with little social mobility, pervasive surveillance of the entire country, secret prisons, gerrymandered political system...
When the US orders other nations SWAT teams to raid the homes of people who have never been to the US and have them extradited because of alleged the
Is Slashdot still for nerds? (Score:2)
Reading all the comments and seeing that the vast majority of people posting have absolutely no clue how the DNS works makes me wonder if there are still nerds here.
Re:Make The Internet Great Again! (Score:5, Insightful)
If only they'd built a wall around it before September hit.
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And each year that passes brings us deeper into September: advertising, SEO (which actually ruins search engines), buzzfeed, facebook......it only gets worse and worse.
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Everybody's going to love it, believe me, believe me!
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Hell, should have been done decades ago, before the rest of the world was allowed to use TCP/IP, DNS, etc., which the US invented.
Then you could enjoy your own ISO internet to your heart's content. As soon as you get around to making one, any year, now.
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I mean, presumably if I have a server somewhere, on Google cloud, AWS, at home, whatever, and it it has a public IP address, then I can have it serve up IP addresses of all my other machines when I give it some name. With whatever naming scheme I might like to use. I can make my own IP address lookup system.
Yes, absolutely. This is how I block advertising and malware sites, I set up a DNS server that resolves 20,000+ domains to 0.0.0.0 and pointed all my devices at it. Nothing is preventing you or anyone else from setting up a DNS server, the only challenge would be convincing others to use it, if that was your goal.
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Yes, absolutely. This is how I block advertising and malware sites, I set up a DNS server that resolves 20,000+ domains to 0.0.0.0 and pointed all my devices at it. Nothing is preventing you or anyone else from setting up a DNS server, the only challenge would be convincing others to use it, if that was your goal.
Or not use DNS but something like TOR's onion sites, search Google (that you'd have to find the IP for) to find everything else or whatnot. Email would die a brutal death as the world switched to Facebook because all the domains failed to resolve. I'm pretty sure we'd find workarounds even if the DNS protocol dropped off the face of the earth. For the countries with Great Firewall they can shit list any domain anyway, so really there's not much new there.
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Email would die a brutal death as the world switched to Facebook
Please, dear God, no.
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Nothing is preventing you or anyone else from setting up a DNS server, the only challenge would be convincing others to use it, if that was your goal.
And what does it take to convince a large number of people to use the DNS system? Usually it requires a trustworthy institution that has the backing of many stakeholders. An organization like ICANN. The idea people can setup large DNS system to actually compete with ICANN's DNS without some type of government backing is unrealistic.
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I can make my own IP address lookup system.
With blackjack.com! And hookers.org!
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They'd need permission from the SEC to do that.
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I predict this thread will be full of alt-right jackoffs who don't understand how the internet works and who for some reason hate the idea of privatizing ICANN, but have been hollering for the US Postal Service to be privatized for decades.
What's next, confused alt-righters? You gonna argue for nationalizing the energy industry, phone companies and ISPs too? Make up your goddamn minds.
I lean pretty hard to the left (Score:2)
and am very much against this. Not everyone thinks alike despite generalizations for convenience/blame.
I already got modded down for saying what someone else got modded up for saying - this is another move towards corporate control under "globalization"; a stateless evil entity is much harder to contain and bring to heel than one based in an actual country with (physical) assets to be seized.
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Re: Lovely (Score:5, Informative)
I think, countries with the most prison inmates hate freedom.
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The reason other countries distrust us is because of experience.
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Eurotrash shitbags put people in jail for expressing unpopular thoughts.
So does the U.S. "Are you, or have you ever been a member of the communist party? . . ."
No way, man. Communist parties suck hairy donkey balls. Everyone brings the exact same thing, and the only alcohol is vodka.
(best imagined in Tommy Chong's voice of course)
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Just stating the obvious, but having control of the DNS servers is really helpful for surveillance.
DNSSEC is very helpful to combat this.
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international internet orgs (Score:2)
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I have a vision of the future where this is actually going to bring us together as "a people"... And who will defend against abuses of power now that they're equally divided? The netizens. The people of the Internet. The hackers. I'm honestly looking forward to seeing how this pans out.
I wish your utopian view of reality will win out, but given that it hasn't for all of human history, I'm pretty skeptical.
More likely, existing large powers (China, Russia, and others) will see this as an opportunity to grab more influence, and devote far more resources than any netizens are capable of spending to bend ICANN and the DNS system to their will.
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Some Wonder If It Means the US Has Given Away The Internet
There is a lot of hyperbole here, the U.S. is clearly not giving up the internet, but they are giving up some power, and we can expect others will want to fill that vacuum, which is a legitimate concern. Cruz's rhetoric is unfortunate, because it masks a real issue in political garbage.
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It seems the new owners have decided that a race to the bottom with Soylent to see who can first become the 'Tech Breitbart' was a good idea.
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"When the rest of the lot on this rock wants to kill 13 year girls for getting raped?"
I'm Australian. By "the rest of the lot on this rock" (ie non-Americans) you are classifying me among those that want to kill these 13 year old victims.
You are telling me that everybody outside of the USA is automatically a criminal and deserve every bit of hell that you can give them.
And you wonder why non-Americans are suspicious of Americans.
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Redneck, I dunno, but you are certainly very a nationalistic person. We had a critical mass of those such people here in Germany a while back and that sure wasn't pretty.
Nonsense. If you (collective) were nationalistic back then, no Austrian would have been able to take over Germany and demand, successfully, that everyone hail him instead of saying the equivalents of hello and goodbye.
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As long as that coalition doesn't use Black Helicopters. I'm willing to fall in line for Starfleet.