Michael Gurstein on Tue, 5 Mar 2002 00:21:45 +0100 (CET) |
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FW: <nettime> ICANN's proposed 'reform' |
There is a debate now beginning to rage concerning the future of ICANN, the "private" group which manages the global system of Domain Naming. While this is in some sense obscure, at another level it is really concerned with the essence and architecture of the Internet. As anyone who has followed this list will know, I've had concerns about this for years now and particularly that there has been no avenue for developing a Canadian public interest perspective and intervention within Canada or ICANN around this issue. The Feds appear to have chosen not to discuss this matter in public since the rather notorious Green Paper in 1997 (?) which only dealt with technical matters. Canadian ISPs have had an active role and interest in this representing their own (national?) interests but overall Canada which is arguably the second country of the Net (after the US) has had none of the public interest policy infrastructure development that has taken place in the US or in Europe largely I would argue because, where previously these issues had been discussed within a framework of organizations with public support, for whatever reason no public support has been available for discussions in this most crucial area. The Chretien government's conflation of Canadian corporate interests in this sector with the national/public interest has been allowed to proceed without serious scrutiny. These matters again become acute in this current context since there seems to be no articulation of a middle way between the two essentially US-centric positions currently presented. On the one side there is the "Federalist" position of the current ICANN CEO and staff which is to reduce (or eliminate) the role of the at large membership in favor of an increased role for individual governments, while on the other hand there is the "Populist" position being articulated by Ted Byfield and others in the US from a public interest perspective, which is extremely suspicious of this approach and of any government involvement in Internet governance and which wishes to carry on with the "experiment" of a substantial role for the Internet's at large "membership(?)". However, as the most recent document from Dr. Lynn, the ICANN CEO points out, the Internet is now too important for national and international commerce, security and general well-being for it to be left to extremely fragile and essentially ad hoc processes for its long-term structural stability. No government in their right mind is going to leave the future of a fundamental building block of its internal commercial structures to the ghost of Jon Postel. So surely the issue should not be if, but how to restructure Internet governance so as to ensure the broadest public interest in the face of extreme and self-interested pressures and attempts at intervention from the most globally powerful national and corporate interests. The development and presentation of a possible third position, such as for example the use of the UN, UN related or some other global governance structure to represent a global "public interest" has been generally disregarded in these discussions because of the usual US suspicion and misunderstanding of the role and functioning of the UN and broadly based institutions for global governance. But there is no reason against and very significant reasons for public interest groups and national governments outside of the US to opt for a multi-lateral strategy and the pressures from public interest advocates within the US and elsewhere should to my mind be directed toward ensuring that the global governance structure which does emerge is one which takes sufficient account of public as well as private goods. Mike Gurstein -----Original Message----- From: nettime-l-request@bbs.thing.net [mailto:nettime-l-request@bbs.thing.net]On Behalf Of t byfield Sent: February 25, 2002 2:34 AM To: nettime-l@bbs.thing.net Subject: <nettime> ICANN's proposed 'reform' /cut here, nettime-mod/ # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net