U.S. May Face World at Internet Governance Summit
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/10/12/AR2005101202
210_pf.html

By Jonathan Krim
Thursday, October 13, 2005; D05

Next month, world diplomats will travel to Tunisia to tackle a topic so
dense that it normally clears a room in seconds: how the Internet is
governed.

But the United Nations-sponsored World Summit on the Information Society
could be the scene of an international brawl, with some claiming that the
core freedoms and integrity of the global network are at risk.

The battle centers on how much control the United States will continue to
have in overseeing the Internet's plumbing.

This sounds like geeky stuff, but it matters for everyday users. The
technical rules for how networks and computers find and recognize each other
can determine how freely and securely information moves around.

These matters are the province of the nonprofit Internet Corporation for
Assigned Names and Numbers, under a contract with the Commerce Department
that expires next year.

The Commerce Department exercises its contractual oversight lightly,
adopting the position that government should be involved with Internet
governance as little as possible. To date, it has not overruled any ICANN
decisions.

Several other countries, particularly many in the developing world, object
to continuing U.S. supremacy. As the Internet penetrates deeper into
societies around the globe, many nations want the international community to
supplant the United States as primary overseer.

The United States suspects that some of these governments want to try to
control the Internet to stifle free expression and preserve dictatorial
control.

The argument has been simmering for some time, and several proposals have
been put forth by a U.N. working group for more international oversight,
through the United Nations or other entities.

Countries such as Iran, China, Saudi Arabia and Brazil have been especially
vocal, mirroring other splits in the United Nations over a variety of
issues, including the war in Iraq.

But things turned red hot late last month when the European Union infuriated
the United States by endorsing the idea of international authority.

Attempting to strike a pose between the United States and countries that
want a new Internet governing body, the E.U. said an international "forum"
should be created to set policy principles for ICANN and adjudicate
complaints.

Martin Selmayr, spokesman for the E.U. directorate on Information Society
and Media, insisted yesterday that there is no major split with the United
States on the issue.

"We believe in freedom of speech and the freedom of the Internet," he said.
"No new organizations need to be set up. . . . We're not asking for
enhancing government's role" in the operations of the Internet.

But, he said, "the E.U. is proposing moving from unilateralism to
multilateralism in Internet governance. Public policy principles . . .
issued in the future should be discussed internationally."

The United States is having none of it.

"When the E.U.'s proposal was read, it was interesting how quickly it was
endorsed in large part by countries such as Cuba, Iran, Saudi Arabia and
others who have been very clear that they do not believe" in principles of
free expression, said David A. Gross, coordinator of International
Communications and Information Policy for the State Department.

Gross said the United States would not accept any other entity taking on
oversight of ICANN, no matter what may happen at the conference in Tunisia.

"We are firm in our position," he said. "This is not a negotiation."

Gross said that while that might sound jingoistic, the U.S. goal is to keep
all governments and politics out of the Internet's evolution and preserve
free-market development.

Theresa Swinehart, ICANN's general manager for global partnerships, said
she, too, could not envision an entity composed of numerous countries that
would be able to remain hands-off and apolitical.

The United States did not help matters, however, when it announced in June
that it would keep oversight of the Internet's addressing system beyond the
expiration of the current contract with ICANN, citing a need to keep the
Internet secure.

The intent of the Clinton administration when ICANN was formed was to phase
out U.S. oversight.

The United States argues that that ICANN already operates as a largely
international body, with directors from numerous countries and a
governmental advisory committee.

David McGuire, spokesman for the Center for Democracy and Technology, a
digital advocacy group that has often criticized ICANN, said U.S. government
oversight was never ideal.

"But replacing one government with 200 is not something that will make this
process faster or better," he said.
© 2005 The Washington Post Company



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