A United Nations panel has failed to reach a consensus on which authority
should run the internet, but has concluded that no single country should control
traffic.
The
report
flies in the face of statements from the US government
that it intends to keep control of internet domain name servers to the
Internet Corporation for
Assigned Names and Numbers (Icann) or any other international body.
The UN Working Group on
Internet Governance was asked in 2003 to prepare the report by government
heads at the World Summit on
the Information Society. Members of the group were drawn from the public and
private sectors.
It highlighted US control of domain name servers as the primary public policy
issue with the internet.
The UN report outlines four strategies for future control of the internet,
based on three basic principles:
The models include setting up a Global Internet Council to handle control,
and expanding and internationalising the existing
Icann Government
Advisory Committee, creating a new International Internet Council to
replace the committee or the creation of three new UN bodies.
The US can currently shut down more than 250 top-level domains using Icann,
and holds 10 of the world's 13 domain name servers.
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