How The U.S. Government Undermined the Internet

Blogged under Web by Dr. Byte on Saturday 31 December 2005 at 6:39 pm

The Register has an article about U.S. Government backed policy changes that have led ICANN to redelegate top level domains in such a way as to provide ‘greater state-controlled censorship on the internet, reduce people’s ability to use the internet to communicate freely, and leave expansion of the internet in the hands of the people least capable of doing the job’. At that meeting, consciously and for the first time, ICANN used a US government-provided reason to turn over Kazakhstan’s internet ownership to a government owned and run association without requiring consent from the existing owners. The previous owners, KazNIC, had been created from the country’s Internet community. ICANN then immediately used that ‘precedent’ to hand ownership of Iraq’s internet over to another government-run body, without accounting for any objections that the existing owners might have.

Related Articles
  • Web 3.0
  • 5% of All Web Traffic Unsafe
  • The Future of HTML
  • China Declares War on Internet Pornography
  • Is cloaking the holy grail of SEO?
  • No Comments »

    No comments yet.

    RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

    Leave a comment

    You must be logged in to post a comment.

    Today In Tech todayintech.info © 2005 -