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United States cedes control of the internet - but what now?
The Register ^ | 27 July 2006 | Kieren McCarthy

Posted on 07/27/2006 7:36:40 AM PDT by atomic_dog

In a meeting that will go down in internet history, the United States government last night conceded that it can no longer expect to maintain its position as the ultimate authority over the internet.

Having been the internet's instigator and, since 1998, its voluntary taskmaster, the US government finally agreed to transition its control over not-for-profit internet overseeing organisation ICANN, making the organisation a more international body.

However, assistant commerce secretary John Kneuer, the US official in charge of such matters, also made clear that the US was still determined to keep control of the net's root zone file - at least in the medium-term.

"The historic role that we announced that we were going to preserve is fairly clearly articulated: the technical verification and authorisation of changes to the authoritative root," Kneuer explained following an afternoon of explicit statements from US-friendly organisations and individuals that it was no longer viable for one government to retain such power over the future of a global resource.

Despite the sentiments, however, it was apparent from the carefully selected panel and audience members that the internet - despite its global reach - remains an English-speaking possession. Not one of the 11 panel members, nor any of the 22 people that spoke during the meeting, had anything but English as their first language.

While talk centered on the future of the internet and its tremendous global influence, the people that sat there discussing it represented only a tiny minority of those that now use the internet every day. Reflections on the difficulty of expanding the current internet governance mechanisms to encompass the global audience inadvertently highlighted the very parochialism of those that currently form the ICANN in-crowd.

When historians come to review events in Washington on 26 July 2006, they will no doubt be reminded of discussions in previous centuries over why individual citizens should be given a vote. Or, perhaps, why landowners or the educated classes shouldn't be given more votes than the masses.

There was talk of voting rights, or what the point was of including more people in ICANN processes, and even how people could be educated sufficiently before they were allowed to interact with the existing processes.

Ironically, it was ICANN CEO Paul Twomey who most accurately put his finger on what had to be done. One of the most valuable realisations that ICANN has ever come to, he noted, was that when it revamped itself last time, it recognised it hadn't got it right. Even more importantly, Twomey noted, was the fact the organisation recognised that "it would never get it right. And so ICANN put a review mechanism into its bylaws".

The reason Twomey's observations are particularly noteworthy is that it is Paul Twomey himself who has consistently - and deliberately - failed to open ICANN up, keeping meetings secret, and refusing to release information about discussions either before a meeting and, in some cases, after the meeting.

A stark warning came from the Canadian government - the only government except for the US government invited to speak. Recent arrival, but highly knowledgeable representative, Bill Graham was extraordinarily clear. "It is time for ICANN to recognise that it is in many ways a quasi-judicial body and it must begin to behave that way," he said.

"The ICANN board needs to provide adequate minutes of all its meetings. There needs to be a notice of what issues will be considered, and the timeframe when a decision is made. A written document needs to be posted setting out the background and context of the issues. There needs to be an acknowledgment and a summary of the positions put forward by various interested parties; there needs to be an analysis of the issues; there needs to be an explanation of the decisions and the reasons for it; and ultimately there needs to be a mechanism for the board to be held accountable by its community."

Everyone recognised the meeting as an historic turning point in the future of the internet, causing a strange amount of one-upmanship among those taking part, most of it covering how long they had been involved with ICANN. Paul Twomey referred to the Berlin meeting (1999); an irregular ICANN contributor (on the panel thanks to US governmental influence) spoke of "being there before ICANN was even created". The swagger got so bad that several well-informed contributors were forced to apologise because they had only been to three ICANN meetings.

Ultimately, what came out of a gathering of the (English-speaking) great and the good regarding the internet was two things:

1. That the US government recognises it has to transition its role if it wants to keep the internet in one piece (and it then has to sell that decision to a mindlessly patriotic electorate)

2. That ICANN has to open up and allow more people to decide its course if it is going to be allowed to become the internet's main overseeing organisation

If you ignore the fact that the conversation only happened within a tiny subset of the people that actually use the internet, everyone can feel quite content in walking away feeling that at least people now understand their point of view.

As a rare non-US contributor, Emily Taylor, Nominet's lawyer, UK citizen, and a member of the IGF Advisory Group told us she felt that "the fact that the meeting took place was as valuable as anything that was discussed".

That much is certainly true. The US has recognised that it can no longer hope to control the internet. The next step is for everyone invited into the party this time to recognise that they too play only a small role in the global revolution that is this jumble of interconnected computer networks.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: icann; internet
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To: maine-iac7

What I ultimately worry about is if a lot of pro-Microsoft/anti-Linux numbnuts get high-ranking spots in the governments of the world and decide that only computers with Windows XP or Windows Vista are allowed to access the internet.

Trust me. There will be a time where EVERY SINGLE ASPECT of your life will be controlled by the globalists. They will control what you put in your mouth (mandatory veganism or hell, even that CODEX Alimentarius that will virtually ban all vitamin and mineral supplements). They will control what you watch. (Any DVD movies the globalists deem subservient will be seized and destroyed.) They will even control the content of your computer. There will be ONE operating system for all computers...this operating system will be the only LEGAL operating system. All computers will be registered by a government agency. You will pay an annual tax on your computer. All subservient software will be seized and destroyed. You will have to scan either a thumbprint or an implantable microchip to even log on to your computer. All computers which do not have thumbprint/Verichip scanners will be prohibited from accessing the internet.


61 posted on 07/27/2006 10:02:03 AM PDT by bigdcaldavis (Xandros : In a world without fences, who needs Gates?)
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"1. That the US government recognises it has to transition its role if it wants to keep the internet in one piece (and it then has to sell that decision to a mindlessly patriotic electorate)"

Up yours beeatch!
62 posted on 07/27/2006 10:13:06 AM PDT by Texas_Jarhead (Doing the jobs Americans won't do? Guess you haven't seen "Dirty Jobs")
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To: bigdcaldavis
Sounds like someone's been watching Overdrawn at the Memory Bank again. Also I don't think subservient means quite what you think it means. Oh, and your tinfoil hat is slipping. You may want to take a few minutes to recrimp and reposition.
63 posted on 07/27/2006 10:13:18 AM PDT by mjwise
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To: bigdcaldavis
I think you're thinking subversive but typing subservient.
64 posted on 07/27/2006 10:30:20 AM PDT by kaylar
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To: mjwise

I meant subversive, but you know what? If believing in freedom is now "tin foil hat wearing", then call me the Tin Man from the Wizard Of Oz.


65 posted on 07/27/2006 11:03:30 AM PDT by bigdcaldavis (Xandros : In a world without fences, who needs Gates?)
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To: BeHoldAPaleHorse
So the US government owns the Free Republic server? If you're connected to your ISP, the US government owns your computer for the duration?

ROOT DOMAINS...
66 posted on 07/27/2006 11:24:35 AM PDT by lost_sovereignty
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To: atomic_dog

I think this report is somewhat exaggerated; nevertheless, if others want to control an Internet, then let them build their own. We don't need an EU or a UN of the Internet, with out lives controlled by a gang of overfed bureaucrats in Brussels, and/or a Babel of inputs from a mob of international imbeciles all stroking their bloated egos as they (once again) destroy one of the great inventions of Americans.


67 posted on 07/27/2006 1:34:15 PM PDT by Jack Hammer
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To: atomic_dog

Well, I see it's time for the US inventors to get busy and come up with another creation...even better than the internet!

Wonder what new idea is next?


68 posted on 07/27/2006 9:38:09 PM PDT by Cedar
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To: Paperdoll
The Illuminati crowd must be gleefully slapping backs as the American people doze on.

Don't forget the Buildacheesburgers, Trilateral Commission, Masons, NWO, CFR, Club of Rome.. did I miss anything?

69 posted on 07/28/2006 10:05:26 AM PDT by mnehring (Texas is no Joke! Perry 06)
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To: mnehrling

No, that just about covers it. :o)


70 posted on 07/28/2006 10:51:57 AM PDT by Paperdoll
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To: Paperdoll

BTW, you do realize that the Illuminiti hasn't existed since the late 1700s and was only short lived in Bavaria?



http://www.cjnetworks.com/~cubsfan/conspiracy.html


71 posted on 07/28/2006 11:10:31 AM PDT by mnehring (Texas is no Joke! Perry 06)
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To: atomic_dog
When historians come to review events in Washington on 26 July 2006, they will no doubt be reminded of discussions in previous centuries over why individual citizens should be given a vote. Or, perhaps, why landowners or the educated classes shouldn't be given more votes than the masses.

Who wrote this infantile twaddle? The situation has nothing to do with voting, it has to do with control of private property. The underlying assumption on the part of the author is that once a piece of private property benefits enough people they have a right to expropriate it. It's the old socialist argument that theft ought to be legal if enough people do it.

Someone has to control and coordinate root DNS. Unfortunately, if it turns out to be someone with a political agenda that also becomes a tool of power, and there is an entire internationalist political class that salivates over that sort of thing. If this turns into another UN there will certainly be another Internet in private hands that will remain so. I'll be first in line as a customer, and if Khofi and his boys treat the assignment of domains as a means of international taxation or remediation of the inequities of capitalism and colonialism they're welcome to crap in their own stolen box.

72 posted on 07/28/2006 11:25:10 AM PDT by Billthedrill
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To: Cedar

I have an idea! Let's go back to the dial-up BBSes and get back on Fidonet before the globalist swine decide to shut down all landline phone lines.


73 posted on 08/14/2006 10:14:09 PM PDT by bigdcaldavis (Xandros : In a world without fences, who needs Gates?)
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To: Paperdoll

You forgot about "Bohemian Grove" and "Skull & Bones". :)


74 posted on 08/14/2006 10:15:11 PM PDT by bigdcaldavis (Xandros : In a world without fences, who needs Gates?)
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To: mysterio
Great. Now the rest of the world will get their chance to censor and tax us. Why don't they build their own internet to ruin?

Europe tried with a different set of protocols many years ago. It proved to be so complicated, that very few ever wrote software for it. It was an intellectual's pipe dream.

Of course, the socialists only know one thing: envy some else's property (acquired with great care, talent, and money) and appropriate it for yourself to make up for your own lack of talent and initiative.

75 posted on 08/14/2006 10:28:34 PM PDT by stripes1776
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To: taxed2death

Yes you did and isn't it great that a DOD created entity crushed and gelded the MSM that so hates U.S.

Sweet..

W


76 posted on 08/14/2006 10:32:32 PM PDT by WLR ("fugit impius nemine persequente iustus autem quasi leo confidens absque terrore erit")
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To: taxed2death

Yes you did and isn't it great that a DOD created entity crushed and gelded the MSM that so hates U.S.

Sweet..

W


77 posted on 08/14/2006 10:32:41 PM PDT by WLR ("fugit impius nemine persequente iustus autem quasi leo confidens absque terrore erit")
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To: bigdcaldavis

So long pajamahadeen.


78 posted on 08/14/2006 10:46:33 PM PDT by abigailsmybaby
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To: bigdcaldavis


I don't know "Bohemian Grove", but Skull and Bones is the American branch of the Illuminati.


79 posted on 08/15/2006 9:34:14 AM PDT by Paperdoll (........Washington Staters, Vote for McGavick!)
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