New News on IANA Globalisation-Apologise for duplication,  if any.

http://blog.icann.org/2014/03/important-corrections-to-general-inaccuracies-and-misconceptions-regarding-u-s-announcement-and-iana-functions/

Important Corrections to General Inaccuracies and Misconceptions Regarding
U.S. Announcement and IANA Functions

by Fadi Chehadé on March 20, 2014

On Friday, March 14 the U.S. Government announced its intention to
transition its stewardship responsibilities of the Internet Assigned
Numbers Authority (IANA) Functions to the global multistakeholder
community--a key component of the Internet ecosystem. The IANA Functions are
the Internet's technical identifiers, specifically, the top-level domain
names of the Domain Name System, IP addresses, and protocol parameter
registries.

The Internet is expanding at an explosive pace. But as it grows, we must
ensure that it continues to promote choice and competition, drive
innovation and infuse development across the globe. The Internet is a
global resource and all stakeholders deserve a voice in its governance.

Unfortunately, some critics of the U.S. Government's announcement have
begun to speculate and report through the media a number of inaccurate
arguments. I would like to correct the record on some important claims.

The announcement is NOT a final decision to surrender control of the
Internet.

On Friday, the U.S. government asked the global community to develop a
proposal for transferring its stewardship of the IANA Functions. The
government was not announcing a new law, rather initiating an inclusive,
global discussion. The government also set clear boundaries for that
discussion, including a very clear statement that it will not release
control of these functions to any government-led or inter-governmental
organization solution.

Instead, ICANN will lead a transparent dialogue among governments, the
private sector, and civil society to determine the transition process and
establish a governing body that is globally accountable. This process
ensures each of the Internet's diverse stakeholders has a voice in its
governance.

In addition, the U.S. government has made it clear that the transition
proposal must address the following four principles:

Support and enhance the multistakeholder model
Maintain the security, stability and resiliency of the Internet DNS
Meet the needs and expectation of the global customers and partners of the
IANA services
Maintain the openness of the Internet
In other words, any proposal that affects the openness of the Internet and
its multistakeholder governance will be rejected.

The announcement is NOT a response to disclosures by Edward Snowden about
the National Security Agency and its policies.

One media report claims ICANN lobbied the U.S.Government to relinquish its
oversight "using the Snowden leaks as a lever." This couldn't be further
from the truth. The government first envisioned this transfer when it began
contracting with ICANN in 1998. For the past 16 years, ICANN has protected
the open Internet with increasing operational excellence - itself
accountable to the global community. The March 14 announcement was the
final step down a path paved years ago.

The announcement will NOT lead to a division of the Internet into smaller,
less technically resilient pieces.

 "A digital Iron Curtain" will not be imposed resulting from this
announcement. An opinion piece in The Wall Street Journal claims that by
stepping back, the United States will divide "425,000 global routes of the
Internet into less technically resilient pieces." In fact, the exact
opposite is true.

The March 14 announcement is an important step toward preserving and
protecting the open Internet. U.S. oversight will not be usurped by
authoritarian governments eager to censor free speech - or by any other
inter-governmental institution. Instead, a globally accountable,
multistakeholder governing body will ensure the Internet continues to
promote the free exchange of ideas, propel innovation and drive economic
development.

The announcement transfers stewardship of an administrative and clerical
function. ICANN does NOT serve a policing function in the Internet
ecosystem.

Let me be clear, ICANN coordinates one technical component of the Internet
ecosystem - the names, numbers and protocol parameters of the Internet.
ICANN does not control content on the Internet. ICANN has no role relating
to Internet content and cannot enact Internet censorship.

These technical components of the Internet have been working well for
nearly two decades underneath a multistakeholder process with the U.S.
government holding a stewardship role. In reality, ICANN has successfully
administered the IANA Functions with increasing autonomy for the past 16
years and this announcement will not alter its commitment to the security
and stability of the Internet's Domain Name System.

The announcement will NOT affect the billions who use the Internet every
day.

Some have speculated through the media that the U.S. announcement will "put
the open Internet at risk" for everyday users. This concern is not rooted
in reality. The transition of stewardship will not affect the functionality
of the Internet.  The coordination of the IANA functions will continue
unchanged. The announcement reinforces the principles that the Internet
belongs to everyone and is responsible to everyone.

Instead of politicizing the debate over the U.S. Government's decision to
transition stewardship of the Internet's technical functions, let's move
forward with the discussion we need to have - how to engage in the
necessary discussion to develop an effective transition process, one that
continues to ensure an open Internet that belongs to everyone.





Regards & best wishes

Naresh Ajwani
On 15 Mar 2014 05:20, "Tony Smith" <[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi everyone
>
> There's been some significant news today with the US Government stating
> that it is ready to transfer its stewardship of important Internet
> technical functions to the global Internet community.
>
> The US Government's current responsibilities to be transitioned include
> its role as the historic steward of the unique identifiers registries for
> Domain names, IP addresses, and protocol parameters.
> http://www.ntia.doc.gov/press-release/2014/ntia-announces-intent-transition
> -key-internet-domain-name-functions
>
> The leaders of the Internet technical community have welcomed this
> announcement - the statement is below.
>
> The first public discussions to develop the process for this transition
> will take place in Singapore at ICANN 49 (March 23-27).   We strongly
> encourage the Asia Pacific community to get involved in these very
> important discussions and to have your say.
>
> More information on the Singapore meeting is available here:
> http://singapore49.icann.org/en/
>
> Best wishes
> Tony
>
> ----
>
> Internet Technical Leaders Welcome IANA Globalization Progress
>
> The leaders of the Internet technical organizations responsible for
> coordination of the Internet infrastructure (IETF, IAB, RIRs, ccTLD ROs,
> ICANN, ISOC, and W3C), welcome the US Government's announcement of the
> suggested changes related to the IANA functions contract.
>
> The roles on policy development processes of the Internet technical
> organizations and ICANN's role as administrator of the IANA functions,
> remain unchanged.
>
> The transition of the US Government stewardship has been envisaged since
> the early days of IANA functions contract. This transition is now
> feasible due to the maturity of the Internet technical organizations
> involved in performing their respective roles related to the IANA
> functions, and ICANN will facilitate a global, multi-stakeholder process
> to plan for the transition.
>
> The strength and stability of the IANA functions within the above
> organizations (which make up the Internet technical community) are
> critical to the operation of the Internet. The processes around the IANA
> functions have always been carefully specified in the communities that
> our organizations represent. The IANA functions are faithfully
> administered by ICANN. We are committed to continuing our proven,
> community-driven processes as we engage in this transition. Our
> communities are already considering proposals to progress the
> transition.
>
> Our organizations are committed to open and transparent
> multi-stakeholder processes. We are also committed to further
> strengthening our processes and agreements related to the IANA
> functions, and to building on the existing organizations and their
> roles. The Internet technical community is strong enough to continue its
> role, while assuming the stewardship function as it transitions from the
> US Government.
>
> Participating Leaders
>
> * Adiel A. Akplogan, CEO African Network Information Center (AFRINIC)
>
> * Barrack Otieno, Manager, The African Top Level Domains Organization
> (AFTLD)
>
> * Paul Wilson, Director General Asia-Pacific Network Information Centre
> (APNIC)
>
> * Don Hollander, General Manager Asia Pacific Top Level Domain
> Association (APTLD)
>
> * John Curran, CEO American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN)
>
> * Peter Van Roste, General Manager, Council for European National Top
> Level Domain Registries (CENTR)
>
> * Russ Housley, Chair Internet Architecture Board (IAB)
>
> * Fadi Chehadé, President and CEO Internet Corporation for Assigned
> Names and Numbers (ICANN)
>
> * Jari Arkko, Chair Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)
>
> * Kathy Brown, President and CEO Internet Society (ISOC)
>
> * Raúl Echeberría, CEO Latin America and Caribbean Internet Addresses
> Registry (LACNIC)
>
> * Carolina Aguerre, General Manager, Latin American and Caribbean TLD
> Association (LACTLD)
>
> * Axel Pawlik, Managing Director Réseaux IP Européens Network
> Coordination Centre (RIPE NCC)
>
> * Jeff Jaffe, CEO World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)
>
> _______________________________________________
> apnic-talk mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://mailman.apnic.net/mailman/listinfo/apnic-talk
>
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