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    America's Internet Surrender
    By unilaterally retreating from online oversight, the White House pleased regimes that want to control the Web.

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    By L. GORDON CROVITZ
    March 18, 2014 6:56 p.m. ET
    The Internet is often described as a miracle of self-regulation, which is almost true. The exception is that the United States government has had ultimate control from the beginning. Washington has used this oversight only to ensure that the Internet runs efficiently and openly, without political pressure from any country.

    This was the happy state of affairs until last Friday, when the Obama administration made the surprise announcement it will relinquish its oversight of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, or Icann, which assigns and maintains domain names and Web addresses for the Internet. Russia, China and other authoritarian governments have already been working to redesign the Internet more to their liking, and now they will no doubt leap to fill the power vacuum caused by America's unilateral retreat.

    Why would the U.S. put the open Internet at risk by ceding control over Icann? Administration officials deny that the move is a sop to critics of the National Security Agency's global surveillance. But many foreign leaders have invoked the Edward Snowden leaks as reason to remove U.S. control—even though surveillance is an entirely separate topic from Internet governance.


    Getty Images

    According to the administration's announcement, the Commerce Department will not renew its agreement with Icann, which dates to 1998. This means, effective next year, the U.S. will no longer oversee the "root zone file," which contains all names and addresses for websites world-wide. If authoritarian regimes in Russia, China and elsewhere get their way, domains could be banned and new ones not approved for meddlesome groups such as Ukrainian-independence organizations or Tibetan human-rights activists.

    Until late last week, other countries knew that Washington would use its control over Icann to block any such censorship. The U.S. has protected engineers and other nongovernment stakeholders so that they can operate an open Internet. Authoritarian regimes from Moscow to Damascus have cut off their own citizens' Internet access, but the regimes have been unable to undermine general access to the Internet, where no one needs any government's permission to launch a website. The Obama administration has now endangered that hallmark of Internet freedom.

    The U.S. role in protecting the open Internet is similar to its role enforcing freedom of the seas. The U.S. has used its power over the Internet exclusively to protect the interconnected networks from being closed off, just as the U.S. Navy protects sea lanes. Imagine the alarm if America suddenly announced that it would no longer patrol the world's oceans.

    The Obama administration's move could become a political issue in the U.S. as people realize the risks to the Internet. And Congress may have the ability to force the White House to drop its plan: The general counsel of the Commerce Department opined in 2000 that because there were no imminent plans to transfer the Icann contract, "we have not devoted the possibly substantial staff resources that would be necessary to develop a legal opinion as to whether legislation would be necessary to do so."

    Until recently, Icann's biggest controversy was its business practice of creating many new domains beyond the familiar .com and .org to boost its revenues. Internet guru Esther Dyson, the founding chairwoman of Icann (1998-2000), has objected to the imposition of these unnecessary costs on businesses and individuals. That concern pales beside the new worries raised by the prospect of Icann leaving Washington's capable hands. "In the end," Ms. Dyson told me in an interview this week, "I'd rather pay a spurious tax to people who want my money than see [Icann] controlled by entities who want my silence."

    Icann has politicized itself in the past yearby lobbying to end U.S. oversight, using the Snowden leaks as a lever. The Icann chief executive, Fadi Chehadé, last fall called for a global Internet conference in April to be hosted by Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff. Around that time, Ms. Rousseff, who garnered headlines by canceling a White House state dinner with President Obama, reportedly to protest NSA surveillance of her and her countrymen, also denounced U.S. spying in a speech at the United Nations. Mr. Chehadé said of the speech: "She spoke for all of us that day."

    The Obama administration has played into the hands of authoritarian regimes. In 2011, Vladimir Putin —who, as Russia took over Crimea in recent days, shut down many online critics and independent media—set a goal of "international control over the Internet."

    In the past few years, Russia and China have used a U.N. agency called the International Telecommunication Union to challenge the open Internet. They have lobbied for the ITU to replace Washington as the Icann overseer. They want the ITU to outlaw anonymity on the Web (to make identifying dissidents easier) and to add a fee charged to providers when people gain access to the Web "internationally"—in effect, a tax on U.S.-based sites such as Google GOOG -0.99% and Facebook. FB -1.37% The unspoken aim is to discourage global Internet companies from giving everyone equal access.

    The Obama administration was caught flat-footed at an ITU conference in 2012 stage-managed by authoritarian governments. Google organized an online campaign against the ITU, getting three million people to sign a petition saying that "a free and open world depends on a free and open web." Former Obama aide Andrew McLaughlin proposed abolishing the ITU, calling it "the chosen vehicle for regimes for whom the free and open Internet is seen as an existential threat." Congress unanimously opposed any U.N. control over the Internet.

    But it was too late: By a vote of 89-55, countries in the ITU approved a new treaty granting authority to governments to close off their citizens' access to the global Internet. This treaty, which goes into effect next year, legitimizes censorship of the Web and the blocking of social media. In effect, a digital Iron Curtain will be imposed, dividing the 425,000 global routes of the Internet into less technically resilient pieces.

    The ITU is now a lead candidate to replace the U.S. in overseeing Icann. The Commerce Department says it doesn't want to transfer responsibility to the ITU or other governments, but has suggested no alternative. Icann's CEO, Mr. Chehadé, told reporters after the Obama administration's announcement that U.S. officials are "not saying that they'd exclude governments—governments are welcome, all governments are welcome."

    Ms. Dyson calls U.N. oversight a "fate worse than death" for the Internet.

    The alternative to control over the Internet by the U.S. is not the elimination of any government involvement. It is, rather, the involvement of many other governments, some authoritarian, at the expense of the U.S. Unless the White House plan is reversed, Washington will hand the future of the Web to the majority of countries in the world already on record hoping to close the open Internet.

    Mr. Crovitz, a former publisher of The Wall Street Journal, writes the weekly Information Age column.
    I say hogwash on the ICANN stuff. It's not really important to oversee, certainly not important that the US alone oversees it. There's about a billion places to post whatever you want, and the only way for ICANN to stop it is to close down all those places. That would last all of 5 minutes before people start using direct IP addresses to access their favorite sites, and ICANN is no more. A new ICANN rises up to take it's place and we're back to where we started, only without whoever was stupid enough to try to destroy their business model.

    And that's never going to happen. Even if they did try there's plenty of ways to get around domain name restrictions already in place. I can go get a .com.au or any other restricted extension I want. It's not legal, but it's easy and most of the time they'll never catch you. If they do, you just do it again. It's like playing whack-a-mole, only with 250 million shape-shifting moles and a nearly infinite number of holes. The only really exposed targets are the static, huge ones who rely on name brand and type-in traffic. Not the little activist groups. Trying to censor them would only be counterproductive, because it would cause an uproar (on all teh behemoth sites) giving the activist group way more reach than they ever could expect otherwise.

  • #2
    I don't know, man. Bakrama is, in a time when we needed Winston Churchill, Neville Chamberlain instead.

    Why leave this to chance? Typical.
    AC2- the most active SMAC(X) community on the web.
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    No pasarán

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    • #3
      As usual the raving right wing nutjobs are full of ****.
      Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

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      • #4
        What Diner? Carter gave away the Panama canal, Obama this...thing, whatever it is. There is a reason some folks vote republican and I don't think it has to do with the wonderful politicians on the right. It has to do with the guys on the right not giving important stuff away for nothing in return but yummy tummy feelings of applied goofball authority.
        Long time member @ Apolyton
        Civilization player since the dawn of time

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        • #5
          Typical OBAMA trying to take control of EVERYTHING
          To us, it is the BEAST.

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          • #6
            Originally posted by Lancer View Post
            What Diner? Carter gave away the Panama canal, Obama this...thing, whatever it is. There is a reason some folks vote republican and I don't think it has to do with the wonderful politicians on the right. It has to do with the guys on the right not giving important stuff away for nothing in return but yummy tummy feelings of applied goofball authority.
            The Panama Canal? People are still upset about that?
            [Pets] can't be reasoned with when their instincts kick in and they remember that they're animals. Especially dogs which are genetically 100% wolves. - Al B. Sure!

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            • #7
              If Putin were POTUS we'd annex Panama right up the canal...

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              • #8
                To us, it is the BEAST.

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                • #9
                  Normal person mode:

                  I don't really think this is a partisan issue. I don't, however, understand the administrations logic if the article is giving the full picture.

                  Right wind nutjob mode:

                  This President is once again trying to undermine the position of the U.S. as the world's guarantor of freedom!

                  Left wing nutjob mode:

                  It was stupid for the U.S. to ever have sole control of this. Obama is just righting a wrong. Obama


                  Hmmm....today I believe I will go with normal person mode.
                  "I am sick and tired of people who say that if you debate and you disagree with this administration somehow you're not patriotic. We should stand up and say we are Americans and we have a right to debate and disagree with any administration." - Hillary Clinton, 2003

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