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The Internet China Network

Internet Governance Body RIPE Opposes China's Internet Protocols Upgrade Plan (zdnet.com) 90

EU-based Internet governance body RIPE is opposing a proposal to remodel core internet protocols, a proposal backed by the Chinese government, Chinese telecoms, and Chinese networking equipment vendor Huawei. From a report: Named "New IP," this proposal consists of a revamped version of the TCP/IP standards to accommodate new technologies, a "shutoff protocol" to cut off misbehaving parts of the internet, and a new "top-to-bottom" governance model that decentralizes the internet and puts it into the hands of a few crucial node operators. The New IP proposal was submitted last year to the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) and brought to the public's attention following a Financial Times report last month. The proposal received immediate criticism from the general public and privacy advocates due to its obvious attempt to hide internet censorship features behind a technical redesign of the TCP/IP protocol stack.

The New IP proposal was described as the Chinese government's attempt to export and impose its autocratic views onto the rest of the internet and its infrastructure. Millions of eyebrows were raised when authoritarian countries like Iran, Russia, and Saudi Arabia expressed support for the proposal. In a blog post this week, RIPE NCC, the regional Internet registry for Europe, West Asia, and the former USSR, formally expressed a public opinion against China New IP proposal. "Do we need New IP? I don't think we do," said Marco Hogewoning, the current acting Manager Public Policy and Internet Governance at the RIPE NCC. "Although certain technical challenges exist with the current Internet model, I do not believe that we need a whole new architecture to address them."

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Internet Governance Body RIPE Opposes China's Internet Protocols Upgrade Plan

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  • by lessSockMorePuppet ( 6778792 ) on Thursday April 23, 2020 @09:07PM (#59982584) Homepage

    See, this is what I mean by wildly inappropriate editing. The original says,

    Named "New IP," this proposal[1, 2, 3] consists of a revamped version of the TCP/IP standards to accommodate new technologies, a "shutoff protocol" to cut off misbehaving parts of the internet, and a new "top-to-bottom" governance model that centralizes the internet and puts it into the hands of a few crucial node operators.

    • by NFN_NLN ( 633283 )

      How hard is it for a slashdot editor to copy an article?

      Maybe they should outsource to the Chinese, I hear they're good at copying.

    • by fred911 ( 83970 )

      Even worse. Why is there a fucking powerpoint presentation packaged as a PDF instead of an RFC? What's this about, testing the waters, where's the meat? How does one ratify smoke and mirrors?

    • You're implying that the editors edit. We have ample evidence that they don't. I wouldn't be surprised to find that this was part of the original submission.

      Now if msmash self submitted the piece then ... well there goes that argument.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      The whole article is innuendo and made up stuff. The original FT article (https://www.ft.com/content/ba94c2bc-6e27-11ea-9bca-bf503995cd6f?shareType=nongift) is only a little better but at least makes it clear that this isn't even a proposal for a standard, it's a statement of the issues and a call for a working group to be set up.

      The top-down control part is probably not government control. The applications they are discussing are things that require extremely high bandwidth a low latency. They mention holo

      • by Junta ( 36770 )

        Well, they do have some specific recommendations.

        Oddly enough, they propose a variable length address, but that does nothing to do better than IPv6 as it still wouldn't be compatible with IPv4 software, and apart from compatibility with IPv4, there's not any justification for supporting smaller than 128-bit address. Unless their suggestion about going beyond 128 bit is what it is really about, but that is totally unnecessary, except potentially in support of other items in their presentation that gives legi

      • Absurd. You can't even get a 100% SLA for a locally-driven car. I'd be delighted to see drunk drivers off the road.
      • by epine ( 68316 )

        Are you absolutely positive that these technical proposals aren't just stalking horses for what could end up evolving into exactly the kind of adverse scenario you depict as having emanating from the "fears of random people"?

        China's "New IP" proposal to replace TCP/IP has a built in "shut up command" for censorship [privateint...access.com] — 3 April 2020

        Oxford Information Labs has prepared a research report for the NATO that does not look kindly on the "New IP" proposal or the breakneck pace at which it is being rushed throug

    • I wish you'd add Q, George Soros and The Globalists to your disinformation stack ;-)
    • mh, i was a bit confused there too on the application of the meaning of de-centralization but, the internet has never been truly de-centralized ... not the top layer and the others still need the connecting nodes connected to the "main"-(frame?) ... i think we might see the rising of the splinternet then, but that was coming, the E.U actually already explored that ... i cant find the exact article but here 2016 [qz.com] and 2018 ... more recently 2019 [theverge.com] ... like the states laws they put it in the freezer several times
  • deCentralize? (Score:2, Redundant)

    by netik ( 141046 )

    Doesn't this proposal centralize vs de-centralize the Internet?

    I give this a resounding 'hell no'. Operators everywhere should refuse to route this traffic.

  • Wall China off (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Rick Schumann ( 4662797 ) on Thursday April 23, 2020 @09:18PM (#59982622) Journal
    They're very obviously unhappy with how the internet is as a whole so I say we just cut them off from it and they can have their own little internet all to themselves. That's what they really want anyway except they also want to dictate to everyone else how the internet should be. Well they can shove that up their asses, it ain't happening. Seriously, cut them loose and they can have their own Chinese-only internet.
    • ahhh the whole problem with current protocols is you actually can't cut them off (a good thing). IPv4 has a lot of flaws but trying to bring in censorship technology into is NOT a fix it needs.
      • What would end up happening is hacker groups (state sponsored and otherwise) would end up hacking the system and cutting off entire countries from the rest of the Internet. Nope, nope, nope, not enough nope in the Universe for this, can't happen. Kick China out instead just for suggesting it. Jackasses.
    • Re:Wall China off (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Citizen of Earth ( 569446 ) on Thursday April 23, 2020 @11:31PM (#59982868)
      #FuckChina
    • by dwywit ( 1109409 )

      Maybe IBM could make some money, here.

      Sell their token-ring or even SNA technology IP to the CCP for a chinese-only internet. No-one else is using it.

      Can you imagine a china-wide token-ring network? That little token flying around mainland cn? There'll be some interesting waits on XMIT.....

  • by Darkling-MHCN ( 222524 ) on Thursday April 23, 2020 @09:23PM (#59982636)

    I think the Chinese will push ahead with this regardless and you'll see a split in the internet. .

  • by Indy1 ( 99447 ) on Thursday April 23, 2020 @09:33PM (#59982668)

    How ironic. I've shut off ALL of China from my servers years ago due to non stop network abuse and spam, and a complete lack of "give a fuck" from Chinese networks.

  • by waspleg ( 316038 ) on Thursday April 23, 2020 @09:35PM (#59982672) Journal

    before the rest of the world, especially the West, realizes they're a huge megalomaniacal threat and endangering us all from pollution to human rights (forced organ harvesting/concentration camps) to pandemics.

    They need to go. If the world ever had a singular villain it's the CCP.

    • They need to go.

      Ok. Where will they go, and how do you propose to do this? Keep in mind, China isn't some 95 pound pimply faced youth. Whatever scenario you come up with to make them "go," they can probably do to other countries as well.

      • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

        Ok. Where will they go, and how do you propose to do this?

        The dustbin of history. It remains to be seen if the SAPC will go after them first or Russia, and even in places like Africa where countries and people are getting pissed off. Unless something fundamentally changes and hard, they've likely already written their own execution - and will get charged the bullet for it.

  • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Thursday April 23, 2020 @09:40PM (#59982680) Journal
    AFAICT there are no technical specifications or documents, only business sales documents. This is vaporware.

    However, we can be certain that even from the sales documents that the approach is wrong. This description:

    "The New IP presentation paints a picture of a digital world in 2030 where virtual reality, holographic communication and remote surgery are ubiquitous — and for which our current network is unfit. Traditional IP protocol is described as “unstable” and “vastly insufficient”, with “lots of security, reliability and configuration problems”.

    The documents suggest a new network should instead have a “top-to-bottom design” and promote data-sharing schemes across governments “thereby serving AI, Big Data and all kinds of other applications”."

    The problems they want to address are: instability/reliability, lack of bandwidth (I guess), security, and difficult configuration. I imagine they are talking about ICMP, because at this point DHCP is dead simple.

    At what point have you ever said, "this system is unstable and unreliable, we should make it more reliable by centralizing control?" Another name for "centralized control" is "Single point of failure."

    • "only business sales documents" OK whose documents google? apple?

      Just my 2 cents ;)
    • by short ( 66530 ) on Friday April 24, 2020 @12:40AM (#59982992) Homepage

      The problems they want to address are: instability/reliability, lack of bandwidth (I guess), security, and difficult configuration. I imagine they are talking about ICMP, because at this point DHCP is dead simple.

      I guess you mean BGP [wikipedia.org] as neither ICMP [wikipedia.org] nor DHCP [wikipedia.org] have any meaning for configuration capabilities internet-wide, their configuration capabilities apply only for LANs.

    • Nah, the problem they want to address is that they have to bribe too many people to shut off bad foreign news about themselves and it keeps biting them in the ass whenever they try. They want a central point of failure for everyone (as opposed to their own backwards corner of the world) because their long-term ambitions involve sending Chinese military into all the other nations of the world to control them. That gets a lot harder when everyone is running a communications platform which requires virtually
    • It's not vaporware, it's not any-ware. It's just some things that they want, and some big-picture ideas about how to get those things.

      The problems with this are not about censorship, I don't know why anyone would think China needs more tools for that, the problems here are about network neutrality.
  • Those who know better can continue to run the internet properly and those who want this "new scam" can scream impotently in a corner if they wish.

    What's the problem?

  • by kenwd0elq ( 985465 ) <kenwd0elq@engineer.com> on Thursday April 23, 2020 @10:31PM (#59982756)

    To quote a Hong Konger. Right now, I think China ought to be cut off from the internet completely, a complete electronic shunning. I also want a total ban on sales to or purchases from China, although that would take a couple of years to implement.

    PRC Delenda Est.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I also want a total ban on sales to or purchases from China, although that would take a couple of years to implement.

      That would take more than just a couple of years. Much more, so long as your goals also include not destroying world economies far more than covid 19 has done.

      Keep in mind China is the supplier for the majority of components found in most everything we take for granted.
      Covid has had a really bad effect, yes, but we do still have functioning hospitals and medical equipment, grocery stores and pharmacies can still accept payments and maintain inventory, delivery services still have a functioning fleet of ve

  • Lol, don't worry (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Dutch Gun ( 899105 ) on Thursday April 23, 2020 @10:53PM (#59982806)

    We can't even get traction on protocol changes that make good sense, and have largely been agreed on by everyone, like switching to IPv6. That transition has been happening for... what, twenty years now? Internet infrastructure changes at a glacial pace. On occasion, that turns out to be a good thing.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    The US government was conspicuously _not_ amount the descenters. It seems quite clear, that for the same reasons the Chinese want this, the US wants this as well.

    Leave it to Europe, again, to fight for freedom.

    • I am amused to see this post down-voted by the obedient slaves of Trumps propaganda. Supposedly intelligent technically sophisticated people all drawn into the lie that China is somehow more evil than their own superpower administration. And the actual truth is buried down here at the end of the comments. Ironically I have to use the same slogan that the troll peddlars of misinformation use when they gang up to reinforce their alt-right hate filled vomit in comment forums - WAKE UP SHEEPLE! you are being ma

  • by GESUS ( 557517 ) on Friday April 24, 2020 @02:20AM (#59983174)

    RIPE is responsible for the region of Europe. It is not controlled by or was created by the EU.

    • just the same way US law applies to The American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN) since they are based in the USA...

        Réseaux IP Européens Network Coordination Centre (RIPE NCC) serves Europe, Central Asia, Russia, and West Asia and is subject to Dutch/EU law
       

  • by evanism ( 600676 ) on Friday April 24, 2020 @02:31AM (#59983200) Journal

    So, CCP proposes new TCP/IP...

    TCCP/IP

  • and a new "top-to-bottom" governance model that decentralizes the internet and puts it into the hands of a few crucial node operators.

    IdoNotThinkThatWordMeansWhatYouThinkItMeans.jpg

  • If China is promoting it you know it's fucking bullshit
  • "I make the New-IP"
    This guy stays busy!

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • TCP/IP is great when you need to guarantee small quantities of data reach their destination (e.g. a back-and-forth conversation between a client and server or two clients). TCP/IP, however, fails hard when large quantities of data and high-latency are important components of the back-and-forth conversation. "Hi, I need to send 1GB of data and I need it to arrive intact. Oh, and I live 3,000 miles and 25 hops away, so network latency is total garbage." What TCP needs is in-band mode switching where both
  • I haven't looked into this lately, but why aren't we being forced to use IPv6 yet? Last I heard it was always "too expensive to upgrade" but that was like 2 decades ago. Haven't all the parts we've been buying, to expand the internet and increase it's speeds, been IPv6 compliant? If not, why not? Is certification expensive? Or is the protocol that much harder to do, so the hardware must be much more capable?

    If we're not trying to fix the decentralization "problem", then what is New IP solving that IPv6

  • [A] "shutoff protocol" to cut off misbehaving parts of the internet

    Like those of Hong Kong, perhaps? Or anything that Comrade Winnie-the-Pooh Xi decides to block?

  • Opening episode... all battlestars shut down by a mysterious signal from an adversary, leaving everyone essentially defenseless.

    But, let me put it this way...

    Politicians should be SCREAMING against this (I mean, sure, they'll gladly take the money from lobbying). Because if it ever happens, heaven help us all if a nation full of TV/Streaming addicts suddenly has their tv shows and internet cut off.

    It makes the Zombie apocalypse seem like a game of toy soldiers in comparison.

    And then when food orders can't

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