Source:
The Guardian - UK
http://www.guardian.co.uk/
Breaking America's grip on the net
http://technology.guardian.co.uk/weekly/story/0,16376,1585288,00.html
After troubled negotiations in Geneva, the US may be forced to
relinquish control of the internet to a coalition of governments
Kieren McCarthy
Thursday October 6, 2005
You would expect an announcement that would forever change the
face of the internet to be a grand affair - a big stage,
spotlights, media scrums and a charismatic frontman working the
crowd.
But unless you knew where he was sitting, all you got was David
Hendon's slightly apprehensive voice through a beige plastic
earbox. The words were calm, measured and unexciting, but their
implications will be felt for generations to come.
Hendon is the Department for Trade and Industry's director of
business relations and was in Geneva representing the UK
government and European Union at the third
and final preparatory meeting for next month's World Summit on
the Information Society. He had just announced a political coup
over the running of the internet.
Old allies in world politics, representatives from the UK and US
sat just feet away from each other, but all looked straight
ahead as Hendon explained the EU
had decided to end the US government's unilateral control of the
internet and put in place a new body that would now run this
revolutionary communications medium.
The issue of who should control the net had proved an extremely
divisive issue, and for 11 days the world's governments traded
blows. For the vast majority of
people who use the internet, the only real concern is getting on
it. But with the internet now essential to countries' basic
infrastructure - Brazil relies on
it for 90% of its tax collection - the question of who has
control has become critical.
And the unwelcome answer for many is that it is the US
government. In the early days, an enlightened Department of
Commerce (DoC) pushed and funded expansion of
the internet. And when it became global, it created a private
company, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers
(Icann) to run it.
But the DoC retained overall control, and in June stated what
many had always feared: that it would retain indefinite control
of the internet's foundation -
its "root servers", which act as the basic directory for the
whole internet.
A number of countries represented in Geneva, including Brazil,
China, Cuba, Iran and several African states, insisted the US
give up control, but it refused. The
meeting "was going nowhere", Hendon says, and so the EU took a
bold step and proposed two stark changes: a new forum that would
decide public policy, and a
"cooperation model" comprising governments that would be in
overall charge.
Much to the distress of the US, the idea proved popular. Its
representative hit back, stating that it "can't in any way allow
any changes" that went against the
"historic role" of the US in controlling the top level of the
internet.
But the refusal to budge only strengthened opposition, and now
the world's governments are expected to agree a deal to award
themselves ultimate control.
It will be officially raised at a UN summit of world leaders
next month and, faced with international consensus, there is
little the US government can do but acquiesce.
But will this move mean, as the US ambassador David Gross
argued, that "even on technical details, the industry will have
to follow government-set policies, UN-set policies"?
No, according to Nitin Desai, the UN's special adviser on
internet governance. "There is clearly an acceptance here that
governments are not concerned with the
technical and operational management of the internet. Standards
are set by the users."
Hendon is also adamant: "The really important point is that the
EU doesn't want to see this change as bringing new government
control over the internet.
Governments will only be involved where they need to be and only
on issues setting the top-level framework."
Human rights
But expert and author of Ruling the Root, Milton Mueller, is not
so sure. An overseeing council "could interfere with standards.
What would stop it saying
'when you're making this standard for data transfer you have to
include some kind of surveillance for law enforcement'?"
Then there is human rights. China has attracted criticism for
filtering content from the net within its borders. Tunisia -
host of the World Summit - has also
come under attack for silencing online voices. Mueller doesn't
see a governmental overseeing council having any impact: "What
human rights groups want is for someone to be able to bring some
kind of enforceable claim to stop
them violating people's rights. But how's that going to happen?
I can't see that a council is going to be able to improve the
human rights situation."
And what about business? Will a governmental body running the
internet add unnecessary bureaucracy or will it bring clarity
and a coherent system? Mueller is unsure: "The idea of the
council is so vague. It's not clear to me that
governments know what to do about anything at this stage apart
from get in the way of things that other people do."
There are still dozens of unanswered questions but all the
answers are pointing the same way: international governments
deciding the internet's future.
The internet will never be the same again.