EU and U.S. clash over
control of Net
By Tom Wright International Herald Tribune
(please keep in mind that the IHTis now owned by the New
York Times.JBeditor)
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2005
GENEVA The United States and Europe clashed here Thursday
in one of their sharpest public disagreements in months,
after European Union negotiators proposed stripping the
Americans of their effective control of the Internet.
The European decision to back the rest of the world in
demanding the creation of a new international body to
govern the Internet clearly caught the Americans off
balance and left them largely isolated at talks designed
to come up with a new way of regulating the digital
traffic of the 21st century.
"It's a very shocking and profound change of the
EU's position," said David Gross, the State
Department official in charge of America's international
communications policy. "The EU's proposal seems to
represent an historic shift in the regulatory approach to
the Internet from one that is based on private sector
leadership to a government, top-down control of the
Internet."
Delegates meeting in Geneva for the past two weeks had
been hoping to reach consensus for a draft document by
Friday after two years of debate. The talks on
international digital issues, called the World Summit on
the Information Society and organized by the United
Nations, were scheduled to conclude in November at a
meeting in Tunisia. Instead, the talks have deadlocked,
with the United States fighting a solitary battle against
countries that want to see a global body take
over supervision of the Internet.
The United States lost its only ally late Wednesday when
the EU made a surprise proposal to create an
intergovernmental body that would set principles for
running the Internet. Currently, the U.S. Commerce
Department approves changes to the Internet's "root
zone files," which are administered by the Internet
Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, or Icann, a
nonprofit organization based in Marina del Rey,
California.
Political unease with the U.S. approach, symbolized by
opposition to the war in Iraq, has spilled over into
these technical discussions, delegates said. The EU and
developing nations, they added, wanted to send a signal
to America that it could not run things alone. Opposition
to Washington's continued dominance of the Internet was
illustrated by a statement released last week by the
Brazilian delegation to the talks. "On Internet
governance, three words tend to come to mind: lack of
legitimacy. In our digital world, only one nation decides
for all of us."
In its new proposal, the EU said the new body could set
guidelines on who gets control of what Internet address -
the main mechanism for finding information across the
global network - and could play a role in helping to set
up a system for resolving disputes.
"The role of governments in the new cooperation
model should be mainly focused on principle issues of
public policy, excluding any involvement in the
day-to-day operations," the proposal said. The new
model "should not replace existing mechanisms or
institutions," it added. The proposal was vague but
left open the possibility, fiercely opposed by
Washington, that the United Nations
itself could have some future governing role.
The United States has sharply criticized demands, like
one made last week by Iran, for a UN body to govern the
Internet, Gross said. "No intergovernmental body
should control the Internet," he said, "whether
it's the UN or any other." U.S. officials argue that
a system like the one proposed by the EU would lead to
unwanted bureaucratization of the Internet.
"I think the U.S. is overreacting," said David
Hendon, a spokesman for the EU delegation. "But I
think it's a tactical overreaction for the
negotiations," he added. "We expected this
proposal to move the summit along from the
stalemate," Hendon said. "It is unreasonable to
leave in the hands of the U.S. the power to decide what
happens with the Internet in other countries."
Various groups, including the International
Telecommunication Union, a UN agency based in Geneva,
have suggested that the U.S. government has too much
control over the Internet.
Under the terms of a 1998 memorandum of understanding,
Icann was to gain its independence from the Commerce
Department by September 2006.
But the Bush administration said in July that the United
States would "maintain its historic role in
authorizing changes or modifications to the authoritative
root zone file." In so doing, the government
"intends to preserve the security and
stability" of the technical underpinnings of the
Internet.
Without consensus, some experts say that countries might
move ahead with setting up their own domain name system,
or DNS, as a way of bypassing Icann.
The United States argues that a single addressing system
is what makes the Internet so powerful, and moves to set
up multiple Internets would be in no one's interest.
"It's not just working," said Michael
Gallagher, an assistant secretary at the Commerce
Department who heads communication policy. "It's
working spectacularly." Paul Twomey, chief executive
of Icann, said fears of U.S. government influence on the
Internet were overstated.
Delegates say the conference has made much better
progress on issues like dealing with spam e-mail messages
and identity theft since it began in 2003. But they said
they did not expect to be able to complete a document on
Friday, as had been planned, and that further talks would
be needed before the Tunisia Nov. 16 to 18.
Copyright © 2005 The International Herald Tribune | www.iht.com
http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/09/29/business/net.php
EU Wants Shared
Control of Internet
By Aoife White, AP Business Writer, Sep 30 '05
http://www.breitbart.com/news/2005/09/30/D8CUKA481.html
BRUSSELS, Belgium - The European Union insisted Friday
that governments and the private sector must share the
responsibility of overseeing the Internet, setting the
stage for a showdown with the United States on the future
of Internet governance.
A senior U.S. official reiterated Thursday that the
country wants to remain the Internet's ultimate
authority, rejecting calls in a United Nations meeting in
Geneva for a U.N. body to take over.
EU spokesman Martin Selmayr said a new cooperation model
was important "because the Internet is a global
resource. The EU ... is very firm on this position,"
he added.
The Geneva talks were the last preparatory meeting before
November's World Summit on the Information Society in
Tunisia. A stalemate over who should serve as the
principal traffic cops for Internet routing and
addressing could derail the summit, which aims to ensure
a fair sharing of the Internet for the benefit of the
whole world. At issue is who would have ultimate
authority over the
Internet's master directories, which tell Web browsers
and e-mail programs how to direct traffic. That role has
historically gone to the United States, which created the
Internet as a Pentagon project and funded much of its
early development. The U.S. Commerce Department has
delegated much of that responsibility to a U.S.-based
private organization with international board members,
but Commerce ultimately retains veto power.
Some countries have been frustrated that the United
States and European countries that got on the
Internet first gobbled up most of the available addresses
required for computers to connect, leaving developing
nations with a limited supply to share. They also want
greater assurance that as they come to rely on the
Internet more for governmental and other services, their
plans won't get derailed by some future U.S. policy.
Policy decisions could at a stroke make all Web sites
ending in a specific suffix essentially unreachable.
Other decisions could affect the availability of domain
names in non-English characters or ones dedicated to
special interests such as pornography.
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