US resists control of internet passing to UN agency

Timey

Jedi Master
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-19106420
The US has confirmed it would resist efforts to put the internet under the control of the United Nations.

At present several non-profit US bodies oversee the net's technical specifications and domain name system.

They operate at arms-length from the US government but officially under the remit of its Department of Commerce.

There has been speculation that other nations will push for a change later this year, but they cannot force the US to comply.

The US has set out its position in documents filed with the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) - the UN agency responsible for encouraging the development of communications technologies.

The ITU is hosting a conference in December in Dubai to which representatives from 178 nations have been invited to review the International Telecommunications Regulations (ITR).

The ITR is a 1988 treaty which set out rules for how traffic should flow between different telecom networks, and how to calculate charges for traffic exchanged between carriers in different countries.

The rise of the internet and mobile devices has led to calls for it to be revised, but countries are expected to disagree over the changes needed.

The US's ambassador to the conference, Terry Kramer, outlined his worries in a statement published by the country's Department of State.

"The US is concerned that proposals by some other governments could lead to greater regulatory burdens being placed on the international telecom sector, or perhaps even extended to the internet sector," he wrote.


Russia's President supports the idea of giving the ITU greater "control" over the internet
"The United States also believes that existing multi-stakeholder institutions, incorporating industry and civil society, have functioned effectively and will continue to ensure the health and growth of the internet and all its benefits."

Leaked documents
The ITU does not publish submissions by each country - leaving it up to the individual states to decide which material to release. But a site called Wcitleaks.org has posted proposals leaked to it.

They include a submission from Russia suggesting the ITU could become responsible for allocating at least some of the internet's addresses as well as the "determination of the necessary requirements".

At present US-based Icann (Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers) co-ordinates the codes and numbering systems, deciding which new internet address endings should be allowed as an alternative to .com. It then leaves it to ISPs (internet service providers) to assign individual addresses.

President Vladimir Putin has signalled Russia's final submission could go further. In 2011 he said he was keen to discuss "establishing international control over the internet using the monitoring and supervisory capabilities of the International Telecommunication Union".

The Russia Today news service has since reported that China and India had backed this stance.

No votes
But the ITU has made it clear that any changes to the treaty must have unanimous support, and it would block members trying to put any matter to a vote.

"We never vote because voting means winners and losers and you can't afford that," Dr Hamadoun Toure, the ITU's secretary-general told the BBC.


The ITU conference will take place in Dubai from 3 to 12 December
"Whatever one single country does not accept will not pass."

He acknowledged that some countries were unhappy with the way Icann had looked after the internet address system.

"Some people are saying the governments are not consulted enough," he said.

But he played down the idea that there would be a serious effort to seize control of its functions and pass them to the ITU.

"Has anybody suggested to take responsibility from Icann? No, it's never been done. I truly believe there is a complementarity involved between our work - we can work together."
 
Timey said:
The US has confirmed it would resist efforts to put the internet under the control of the United Nations.

My prediction is that it will happen, just as when the US joined the UN in spite of existing resistance. When will it happen? This I don't know. One more step towards one-world centralized government and media/communications control. :(
 
The US doesn't want to give up control over ICANN any more than it wants to give up it's nuclear weapons or overseas oil fields. When you read about the history of US control over the Internet, which began as a US military communications network, you will see that the US is heavily invested in the control over it. ICANN manages all of the functions of the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA), another American org., including the assignments of all current and future country code top level domains (e.g. .UK, .CA, .US, etc.), general top level domains (e.g. .com, .org, .edu) as well as the root zone for the the Domain Name System (DNS).

This affords the US incredible power and leverage over other countries. What megalomaniac pathocracy in their right mind would give up that. Such powers also offers the US the best chance at controlling the Internet, including shutting it down, if need be. I know a lawyer who was representing Canadian interests in these discussions a few years ago as well as someone who worked at the Canadian ccTLD registry. I was told that, no matter what legitimate reasons Canada and other countries have advanced for an international body to run the functions of IANA, the US has steadfastly refused to relinquish control. It is interesting to note that several countries have banded together, including developing and developed nations, to act as a singular block against the US, but, at several multilateral negotiations, including through all ccTLD registries, at the UN and other venues, the US continued to refuse.

As much as I would love to see this control wrestled from the US, I can't see how it will ever happen, unless it goes to a non-international org, in the back pocket of the US.

Gonzo
 
Gonzo said:
As much as I would love to see this control wrestled from the US, I can't see how it will ever happen, unless it goes to a non-international org, in the back pocket of the US.

Exactly. The real controllers of the internet are the hidden psychopaths who run the world. Presently they do it through the US, later on through who knows who. This fight between the US and the UN is just the visible part of the fight between the aforementioned psychopaths themselves.
 

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