Bush wants control of the internets!



Bush wants control of the internets!
by think2004
Fri Jul 1st, 2005 at 08:32:13 PDT
CNN is running a story this morning is entitled U.S. keeps control of
Internet computers.

No big deal, right? After all, the U.S. has had control of the ICANN
computers, in a manner of speaking. CNN gives us a bit of background:


The computers in question serve as the Internet's master directories and
tell Web browsers and e-mail programs how to direct traffic. Internet users
around the world interact with them every day, likely without knowing it.
Policy decisions could at a stroke make all Web sites ending in a specific
suffix essentially unreachable. [...]

Thursday's declaration means Commerce would keep that control [of ICANN],
regardless of whether and when those conditions [previously specified for
ICANN] are met.


That's when the alarm bells started ringing.


a.. think2004's diary :: ::
b..
If you've ever read the Project for the New American Century's (PNAC's)
white paper entitled "Rebuilding America's Defenses", maybe the sirens
started ringing in your head as well. Here's a portion of pages 11-12, where
PNAC begins to lay out the groundwork necessary to achieve their pax
americana:


ESTABLISH FOUR CORE MISSIONS for U.S. military forces:


a.. defend the American homeland;

b.. fight and decisively win multiple, simultaneous major theater wars;

c.. perform the "constabulary" duties associated with shaping the security
environment in critical regions;

d.. transform U.S. forces to exploit the "revolution in military affairs;"


To carry out these core missions, we need to provide sufficient force and
budgetary allocations. In particular, the United States must: [...]

CONTROL THE NEW "INTERNATIONAL COMMONS" OF SPACE AND "CYBERSPACE," and pave
the way for the creation of a new military service - U.S. Space Forces -
with the mission of space control.


My first thought, upon reading the CNN article, was to wonder who the
Secretary of Commerce was. Was he in good company as a PNAC signatory, with
Cheney, Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz, Bolton, Khalilzhad, Pearle et al? Well, a
cursory google told me that the Commerce Secretary is Carlos Gutierrez, and
other than hanging with a bad crowd, he doesn't have any obvious PNAC
affiliations, and hasn't autographed any of their propaganda/policies.

I decided to hit Google News, and see what others might be saying about this
story. Oh my!

The Register, a British Tech publication, had this to say:


Bush administration annexes control of the Internet

An extraordinary statement by the US government has sent shockwaves around
the Internet world and thrown the future of the network into doubt.

In a worrying U-turn, the US Department of Commerce (DoC) has made it clear
it intends to retain control of the Internet's root servers indefinitely. It
was due to relinquish that control in September 2006, when its contract with
overseeing body ICANN ended.

The decision - something that people have long feared may happen - will not
only make large parts of the world furious but also puts ICANN in a very
difficult position. The organisation has slowly been expanding out of its
California base in an effort to become an international body with overall
responsibility for the Internet.

The US government is professing its full backing for ICANN (which it
created) at the same time that it awards itself control of the Net's
foundations, which will have the inevitable effect of pulling the
organisation back into the US.


That's disturbing enough. The U.S. had planned to relinquish total control
of ICANN to the international community, possibly the International
Telecommunications Union (ITU) body of the United Nations. Oh my, not those
pesky folks at the UN. Where's Bolton when we need him?

Well, for now, we've got the Commerce Department. They introduced the Bush
administration's intentions with a nice little powerpoint presentation that
seems to have been put together for the Wireless Communications Association
International 2005 Annual Conference. And look who's on page 2!

It's our fearless leader, about to discuss the Internets! Here's what The
Register had to say about that:


But what is most disturbing about Gallagher's presentation, is how it
endlessly refers to the president. The first slide has a picture of George
Bush. The second begins "Thanks to the president's policies, America's
economy is strong". The next slide is "The president's broadband vision".
The next slide leads with a quote from Bush and two pictures of him. And on
and on it goes. There is barely a single slide that doesn't quote from the
president.

Clearly the Internet has entered the Bush administration's vision and the
resulting DoC statement - which boldly tells the rest of the world that the
US will continue to run the Internet and everyone will just have to lump
it - is very in keeping with how the US government is currently run.

The big question now is whether the rest of the world will be cowed. ICANN
has yet to release a statement on the DoC's surprise declaration but it
knows which side its bread is buttered on and so will probably make a
careful and broadly supportive statement.


This move clearly has the Bush administration's fingerprints all over it, as
evidenced by the Commerce Department's presentation. Likewise, as PNAC is
all over the White House, PNAC is leaving skid marks as well.

I'm alarmed, and I think we need to keep our eyes on this story. The
implications of strict U.S. control over what web sites could potentially be
delivered to users is significant. Think about it. If the rest of the world
is blocked from input into ICANN, ICANN (and our Commerce Department) could
ultimately decide which websites can be viewed by the world's users. Another
path this leads me to is the PATRIOT Act. Can anyone who's more familiar
with the act than I am fill me in on what references it may have regarding
internet usage or implementation? I could be totally off base on that one,
but it's crossed my mind, and I don't have time to research it at the
moment.

Is this the first step towards U.S. government control of the internets?


Display: ThreadedMinimalNestedFlatFlat UnthreadedDynamic ThreadedDynamic
Minimal



.