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Web Politics: After .Com, the Fight Over .Gay, .Nazi?

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John James Posted: Tue, Mar 8 2011 12:26 AM

ICANN vs. the World

By Jerry Brito on March 5, 2011

A rose by any other name may smell just as sweet, but if that name is an Internet top-level domain name, world governments may beg to differ.

The “.com” at the end of TIME.com is known as a top-level domain—or TLD—and you may be aware of others, including .net, .org, .edu, and even .ly for Libya. While there are over a hundred other country code TLDs like .uk and .jp, there are only 21 generic TLDs like .com, including the lesser known .travel and .museum. That's about to change radically.

What TLDs exist is decided by the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), a small non-profit corporation that runs the Internet's namespace under contract with the U.S. Government. After much deliberation, ICANN decided in 2008 to expand the number of generic TLDs, and later this month will begin the process of accepting applications for new domains.

While there is no technical limit to the number of TLDs that can be created, there may be a political one. Governments around the world are increasingly seeking a say over what new TLDs will and will not be allowed.

Governments Find Some Names Objectionable

If you wanted to register the web address gay.com, there's no law to stop you. In fact, it exists. Free expression reigns under the current regime for registering web addresses. But what if you sought to establish a new .gay TLD?

“It is clear from conversations with government officials in a couple of conservative Arab countries that they object to .gay,” says Syracuse University professor and ICANN expert Milton Mueller.

That's potentially bad news for dotGAY and the Dot Gay Alliance, two groups that plan to apply to run the .gay TLD. If governments have a veto over new TLDs, free expression could go out the window. Not only might Arab countries object to .gay, but one can imagine China interfering with .falungong or .tibet, and France and Germany blocking .nazi. (Falundafa.org, tibet.net, and nazi.org all exist.)

UN Pushes for Control of Internet Governance

Before 1998, the U.S. government completely controlled the Internet's domain name system. As the Internet grew and became more commercial and international, total U.S. control was increasingly untenable. The U.S. could have turned over its Internet authority to an international body, like the UN's International Telecommunication's Union (ITU). Instead, the Clinton Administration privatized domain name governance. It did so precisely because it wanted to keep the Web's critical naming system away from the stifling bureaucratic control of world governments.

ICANN was created as a private U.S. non-profit with an international board, and the U.S. Government's naming authority was transferred to it. Although there have been some bumps along the way—notably ICANN's rejection of a proposed .xxx domain—the private governance scheme has largely succeeded in preserving free expression online, allowing sites like gay.com and tibet.net to exist unmolested.

Government representatives from around the world sit on ICANN's Governmental Advisory Committee, but as the name implies, their role is only advisory and policy decisions are ultimately made by the ICANN board. Recently, however, governments around the world have been demanding control over ICANN's actions. There are increasing calls for domain name authority to be transferred to the ITU and the world governments that run it.

U.S. Resisting UN by Leaning on ICANN

Although it has contracted with ICANN to govern the domain name system, the U.S. Government still ultimately controls it. Talking about Internet freedom, Assistant Secretary of State Michael Posner has said the U.S. is not too impressed with the prospect of UN control.

“We have a range of anxieties about throwing this issue into the United Nations,” said Posner. “We have great trepidation that if this became a UN-sponsored initiative, all the governments that have the greatest interest in regulating and controlling content and protecting against dissident speech in their own countries would be very loud voices.”

You might think, then, that the U.S. would stand up to foreign government and ITU encroachment on ICANN's authority, but you would be wrong.

Last month the U.S. circulated a proposal that would have essentially given world governments a veto over any new proposed TLD “for any reason.” That proposal was ultimately softened under public pressure, but the Obama Administration continues to place pressure on ICANN to give governments more say over its policy decisions. If it's too principled about free expression, the logic goes, ICANN and the U.S. may face overwhelming pressure to cede authority to the UN.

Uncertain Future

Internet freedom advocates have vowed to fight to preserve the Internet's independent, non-governmental governance structure. Writing in Google's public policy blog, Internet pioneer, former ICANN Chairman, and now Google “Chief Internet Evangelist” Vint Cerf blasted a UN committee's decision to exclude non-governmental groups from a new working group on Internet governance.

“The current bottoms-up, open approach works—protecting users from vested interests and enabling rapid innovation,” he wrote. “Let's fight to keep it that way.”

Time will tell how this saga turns out, but time may be running out for ICANN. The non-profit's contract with the U.S. Government is up for renewal in September, and that will likely serve as another pressure point to demand more government control over what names are allowed.

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AJ replied on Tue, Mar 8 2011 3:33 AM

Is there a way around this? Anyone know?

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Theoretically the ISPs of the world could switch to a private TLD system but my guess is that if governments can pressure ICANN then they shouldn't have any trouble pressuring enough ISPs to make it so the rest have to follow suite or suffer from serving their customers with a fragmented internet.

Individual users could opt to utilize private DNS servers rather than the ones assigned by their ISP but since most users won't do this it wouldn't be much use.

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Giant_Joe replied on Tue, Mar 8 2011 10:32 PM

Is there a way around this? Anyone know?

Moving away from a centralized DNS system to a decentralized one.

DNS turns the names into IP addresses. If you type http://174.132.65.90/ into your browser, it'll take you to mises.org!

Remembering IPs is a pain in the butt. This is why people use domain names. With no central authority on this, how do we keep track of this sort of thing in such a way that anyone can access any website using just the doman name?

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With no central authority on this, how do we keep track of this sort of thing in such a way that anyone can access any website using just the doman name?

Peer-to-peer software is nothing new, so technology is not the issue. The issue is adoption. I guess one way to do the trick might be to include a P2P DNS in Linux distros.

The Voluntaryist Reader - read, comment, post your own.
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