Don’t Hand Over the Internet to the U.N.
by Fred Thompson, Candidate for President: I’m no tech head, but I think I know a thing or three about the Internet and how it works. And as far as I can tell, it works pretty well.
More than 1.4 billion people around the world seem to be emailing each other a lot, and those emails get delivered a lot faster and more reliably than “snail mail.” Lots of people are innovating around the Internet – voice calling over the Internet, e-commerce, blogs, education, employment, and healthcare services, music and video streaming and downloads, and such – and lots and lots of people are profiting from those innovations and the websites and companies that operate online.
So if things are going so well, why is it that some folks are seriously thinking about taking management of the Internet away from the United States and handing control to the United Nations? Foreign government officials from around the world meeting at a U.N.-sponsored conference in Brazil actually discussed this notion last week. It didn’t get much attention, but as we all know, that’s how bad ideas get traction.
Despite what Al Gore may think, the Internet was an invention of the U.S. government and a number of universities and other entities a couple decades ago. As the Internet became what it is today, the government created a nonprofit organization, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, to manage what was then a growing network of networks. Today ICANN does things like manage the assignment of Web sites domain names – the .coms, .orgs, .edus – for example.
But countries like China aren’t happy about U.S. control of “the tubes.” They’d rather have the U.N. run it. I wonder how the U.N. would’ve handled the situation in Burma recently when the government cut off all Internet access to all anti-government protesters, or how it would’ve handled the imprisonment in China of dissidents and reporters who emailed news out of the country.
My hunch is that we’d see the same level of management of the Internet from the U.N. that we’ve seen when it came to peacekeeping operations in Africa. Or its management of Saddam Hussein’s “Oil for Food” program. Or its monitoring of Iran’s nuclear program. In fact, I wouldn’t be surprised if when you look up “fool’s errand” in the dictionary, you find: “Role for United Nations’” as the definition. The notion of surrendering management of the Internet – a global, strategic infrastructure for communications and commerce – to the UN is just a plain dumb idea. We shouldn’t be handing over something that works right to an institution that has difficulty doing anything right.
For Background See Also: Talk of Internet limits dominates U.N. forum
Internet control by U.S. promises to be hot topic at U.N. forum
UN Working Group on Internet Governance (WGIG)
Tags: Fred Thompson, internet, presidential candidate, UN To share or post to your site, click on "Post Link". Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service. Thanks!
More than 1.4 billion people around the world seem to be emailing each other a lot, and those emails get delivered a lot faster and more reliably than “snail mail.” Lots of people are innovating around the Internet – voice calling over the Internet, e-commerce, blogs, education, employment, and healthcare services, music and video streaming and downloads, and such – and lots and lots of people are profiting from those innovations and the websites and companies that operate online.
So if things are going so well, why is it that some folks are seriously thinking about taking management of the Internet away from the United States and handing control to the United Nations? Foreign government officials from around the world meeting at a U.N.-sponsored conference in Brazil actually discussed this notion last week. It didn’t get much attention, but as we all know, that’s how bad ideas get traction.
Despite what Al Gore may think, the Internet was an invention of the U.S. government and a number of universities and other entities a couple decades ago. As the Internet became what it is today, the government created a nonprofit organization, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, to manage what was then a growing network of networks. Today ICANN does things like manage the assignment of Web sites domain names – the .coms, .orgs, .edus – for example.
But countries like China aren’t happy about U.S. control of “the tubes.” They’d rather have the U.N. run it. I wonder how the U.N. would’ve handled the situation in Burma recently when the government cut off all Internet access to all anti-government protesters, or how it would’ve handled the imprisonment in China of dissidents and reporters who emailed news out of the country.
My hunch is that we’d see the same level of management of the Internet from the U.N. that we’ve seen when it came to peacekeeping operations in Africa. Or its management of Saddam Hussein’s “Oil for Food” program. Or its monitoring of Iran’s nuclear program. In fact, I wouldn’t be surprised if when you look up “fool’s errand” in the dictionary, you find: “Role for United Nations’” as the definition. The notion of surrendering management of the Internet – a global, strategic infrastructure for communications and commerce – to the UN is just a plain dumb idea. We shouldn’t be handing over something that works right to an institution that has difficulty doing anything right.
For Background See Also: Talk of Internet limits dominates U.N. forum
Internet control by U.S. promises to be hot topic at U.N. forum
UN Working Group on Internet Governance (WGIG)
Tags: Fred Thompson, internet, presidential candidate, UN To share or post to your site, click on "Post Link". Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service. Thanks!
4 Comments:
Well I AM a high tech head and I’ll say that Fred’s right on the money. To allow the UN, which has never managed anything with any degree of success to get control of this important tool of communications and commerce would be to deliberately politicize it then destroy it through stupidity.
Releasing control over the Internet is asinine, but then, someone has suggested it, and this is how the problems start. This needs to be firmly and irrevocably squashed before it picks up any headway.
First the UN wants to disarm US citizens, now they want the Internet?? What in the $%#* are they doing there?
The US Governement invented the internet,n why in the world should they have to turn it over to the morons in the UN??? We have the legal right to it, everyone else can just get over it!!!
Fred, I don’t know what is going to happen if we don’t get you in the White House!!!
I am nowheres near being a "Fred Head," nor am I tach savvy. But I know this one thing, I will agree with Fred on. The UN has no business running a dog catcher operation, let alone something as complex as the internet.
Is it just me, when I put in the word verification and click submit it makes me do the process over again?
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