Welcome to Guske.US Alibris - Books You Thought Youd Never Find 
User PW   Create account
   
 

Recommended
PHPNuke SEO Search engine optimization, professional tools

Modules
· Home
· Downloads
· Encyclopedia
· Feeds
· Photos
· Reviews
· Search
· Stock_Quote
· Store
· Submit News
· Surveys
· Topics
· Web Links
· Your Account

Site Info
Welcome, Anonymous
Nickname
Password
Security Code: Security Code
Type Security Code Here:

· Register
· Lost Password
Membership:
Latest: Check the profile of Zorsbreenna Zorsbreenna
New Today: 0
New Yesterday: 0
Waiting: 137
Overall: 89

People Online:
Visitors: 13
Members: 0
Hidden: 0
Total: 13

We received
1044094
page views since
7/28/2003

Hits New Today: 205
Hits New Yesterday: 764

Politics and the Internet
Posted on Thursday, April 28, 2005 @ 09:31:15 EDT by kguske
The Internet was developed on important principals of free speech and democracy. Several socialist governments are trying to change that by taking advantage of the prevailing anti-US sentiment at the UN.

U.N. Must Earn Net Role

From eweek (article not yet available on website), by Stephen M. Ryan:

Keep the Internet Free

In November, a conference will be held in Tunis, Tunisia, under the auspices of the World Summit on the Information Society. At this conference, participants including U.N.-related bureaucrats and representatives from countries such as Cuba, China and Brazil will make a bid to create a new international regime to control the route servers, Domain Name System, IP number registries and other portions of the Internet. This bid for control must itself be controlled if the interests of U.S. citizens and the cause of freedom are not to be put at risk.

Democratically elected governments that favor the currnet technology-centered Internet governancne model and the private-sector businesses that may find themselves taxed to support a new blue-beret Internet authority must step forward with an answer.

Countries such as Cuba and China have a view of Internet governance strongly colored by their power to throttle their citizen's right to free expression on the Net. They distrust the current tehno-democratic control of the Internet and the powerful and transforming technology it represents. Other countries that cannot supply running water and basic healt services don't need to decide how the Internet will be run. Yet such Third World nations may hold the balance of power in Tunis.

In February, I attended the first two days of the Working Group on Internet Governance meeting in Geneva, to which some 75 countries sendt delegations. Anti-U.S. sentiments were typically expressed in references to a "single country..which has a larger and more powerful role than all the others...and which believes private corporations should control the Internet."

The ITU, a U.N. agency that coordinates telegraph and telephone postal and telegraphic monopolies, seeks a new role in world Internet governance. The ITU claims the Internet is just like, well, the telephone was when it was introduced.

Before any changes are made, we must remember several facts. The Internet has been developed through consensus from the engineereing, not the political, community for the past 30 years, and it continues to run in a manner that is effective, efficient and responsive to its users. In addition, the policy processes, while inefficient, have been remarkably open, transparent and inclusive, ensuring that both the public and private sectors can contribute. The result: Today, the Internet functions effectively and brings tremendous value to civil society.

To the degree that concerns exist, they are being addressed in an open, transparent, inclusive manner without the help of a bunch of international bureaucrats who are most adept at eating delicious entrecôte and drinking fine wine in Geneva or elsewhere.

PHP-Nuke
Posted on Thursday, April 28, 2005 @ 09:31:15 EDT by kguske

 
Related Links
· More about PHP-Nuke
· News by kguske


Most read story about PHP-Nuke:
Politics and the Internet


Article Rating
Average Score: 0
Votes: 0

Don't have an account yet? You can create one. As a registered user you have some advantages like theme manager, comments configuration and post comments with your name.

Options

 Printer Friendly Page  Printer Friendly Page

 Send to a Friend  Send to a Friend


Threshold
The comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.


No Comments Allowed for Anonymous, please register

News ©

Web solution by Sassafras SystemsLegal Comments are property of their posters, all the rest © 2004 by Kevin B. Guske
Web site engine's code is Copyright © 2003 by PHP-Nuke. All Rights Reserved. PHP-Nuke is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL license.
Page Generation: 0.141 Seconds. - 4 pages served in past 5 minutes.