Create an Account
username: password:
 
  MemeStreams Logo

MemeStreams Discussion

search


This page contains all of the posts and discussion on MemeStreams referencing the following web page: Other Nations Hope to Loosen U.S. Grip on Internet. You can find discussions on MemeStreams as you surf the web, even if you aren't a MemeStreams member, using the Threads Bookmarklet.

Other Nations Hope to Loosen U.S. Grip on Internet
by bucy at 1:38 pm EST, Nov 15, 2005

That kind of power to hinder or foster freedom of the Internet, centralized in a single government, is the crucial issue for many of the 12,000 people expected in Tunis this week for a United Nations summit meeting on the information age.

Four years of high-level talks on Internet governance will conclude with the meeting. On its eve, a figurative ocean separates the American position - that the Internet works fine as it is - from most of the rest of the world. That includes the European Union, which says the Internet is an international resource whose center of gravity must move away from Washington.

This even made Morning Edition on NPR this morning. Is all this fuss just about the root zone or is there more to it? We really need to find a way to throw the Europeans a bone in such a way that will placate them and at the same time not result in much substantive change while we try to figure out a non-disruptive way to get away from a centrally managed root.zone (which, btw, can be gotten from here)


 
RE: Other Nations Hope to Loosen U.S. Grip on Internet
by Decius at 6:09 pm EST, Nov 15, 2005

bucy wrote:
Is all this fuss just about the root zone or is there more to it?

There is a lot more to it, but a ton of people, like that author in Foreign Affairs I linked back on the 4th, seem to be under the impression that you can solve global problems with spam, computer security, inappropriate speech, hunger, and weapons poliferation by controlling the root zone. They basically have no fucking clue what they are talking about.

There are substantive international issues, but almost none of them is controversial. The only meaty ones are:

Whois privacy (something ICANN should never have stuck it's damn nose into in the first place).
Concerns about the nomenclature of the non-cc-tlds.
Concerns about internationalization/language support issues.
Concerns about monopolistic registrar practices and pricing (see Sitefinder).

The international community is involved in all of these discussions and no one who is talking about control of the root zone is concerned about any of these issues.

Thats it. Any sort of policy which outsteps this boundary is likely to be too coercive and will fragment the system. They very nearly did that with their inexplicable whois policy. Verisign very nearly did it with Sitefinder. You can rest assured that if the US pulled Iran's TLD the root servers would get a giant break on their transit bills that month. Any political or power oriented play in this space will break the system if it is successful. DNS can only function if it has nearly unanimous consent.


 
 
Powered By Industrial Memetics