Will the U.N. run the Internet?

By Declan McCullagh
http://news.com.com/Will+the+U.N.+run+the+Internet/2010-1071_3-5780157.html

Story last modified Mon Jul 11 04:00:00 PDT 2005



An international political spat is brewing over whether the United Nations
will seize control of the heart of the Internet.

U.N. bureaucrats and telecommunications ministers from many less-developed
nations claim the U.S. government has undue influence over how things run
online. Now they want to be the ones in charge.

While the formal proposal from a U.N. working group will be released July
18, it's already clear what it will contain. A preliminary summary of
governmental views claims there's a "convergence of views" supporting a new
organization to oversee crucial Internet functions, most likely under the
aegis of the United Nations or the International Telecommunications Union.

At issue is who decides key questions like adding new top-level domains,
assigning chunks of numeric Internet addresses, and operating the root
servers that keep the Net humming. Other suggested responsibilities for this
new organization include Internet surveillance, "consumer protection," and
perhaps even the power to tax domain names to pay for "universal access."

This development represents a grave political challenge to the Internet
Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), which was birthed by the
U.S. government to handle some of those topics.

A recent closed-door meeting in Geneva convened by the U.N.'s Working Group
on Internet Governance offers clues about the plot to dethrone ICANN. As
these excerpts from a transcript show, dissatisfaction and general-purpose
griping is rampant:

€ Syria: "There's more and more spam every day. Who are the victims?
Developing and least-developed countries, too. There is no serious intention
to stop this spam by those who are the transporters of the spam, because
they benefit...The only solution is for us to buy equipment from the
countries which send this spam in order to deal with spam. However, this, we
believe, is not acceptable."

€ Brazil, responding to ICANN's approval of .xxx domains: "For those that
are still wondering what Triple-X means, let's be specific, Mr. Chairman.
They are talking about pornography. These are things that go very deep in
our values in many of our countries. In my country, Brazil, we are very
worried about this kind of decision-making process where they simply decide
upon creating such new top-level generic domain names."

€ China: "We feel that the public policy issue of Internet should be solved
jointly by the sovereign states in the U.N. framework...For instance, spam,
network security and cyberspace--we should look for an appropriate
specialized agency of the United Nations as a competent body."

€ Ghana: "There was unanimity for the need for an additional body...This
body would therefore address all issues relating to the Internet within the
confines of the available expertise which would be anchored at the U.N."

The "nuclear option"
Those proclamations served to flush out the Bush administration, which
recently announced that it will not hand over control of Internet domain
names and addresses to anyone else.

That high-profile snub of the United Nations could presage an international
showdown. The possibility of a political flap over what has long been an
abstruse Net-governance issue casts a shadow over ICANN's meeting this week
in Luxembourg, and will be the topic of a July 28 symposium in Washington,
D.C., called "Regime Change on the Internet."
The nuclear option could create a Balkanized Internet where two computers
find different Web sites at the same address.

Beyond the usual levers of diplomatic pressure and public kvetching, Brazil
and China could choose what amounts to the nuclear option: a fragmented
root. That means a new top-level domain would not be approved by ICANN--but
would be recognized and used by large portions of the rest of the world. The
downside, of course, is that the nuclear option could create a Balkanized
Internet where two computers find different Web sites at the same address.

"It wasn't until now" that a fragmented root was being talked about, says
Milton Mueller, a professor at Syracuse University and participant in the
Internet Governance Project. "China and other countries might be pursuing
responses that lead to fragmentation."

Such an outcome remains remote, but it could happen. That possibility means
an obscure debate about Internet governance has suddenly become surprisingly
important.


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