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The Internet for the
Internet
By Scott Bradner
As well reported
elsewhere the first draft of the US Government's proposal for
internationalizing and institutionalizing the management, some people would say
governance, of some of the things that keep the Internet going was released at
the end of January. The proposal, titled A Proposal to Improve Technical
Management of Internet Names and Addresses (http://www.ntia.doc.gov/ntiahome/domainname/dnsdrft.htm ), is expected to be revised
after a comment period.
The draft proposal is
somewhat sketchy and lacks specifics about a number of aspects that will need
to be detailed in any final plan. This is good. If it were more detailed it
would be hard to get people to focus on the concepts, they would be too busy
finding things to disagree with in the minutia.
The concepts are
important. This proposal would turn much of the management of the technical
aspects of the Internet over to the Internet. The basic structure is based in a
US not-for-profit corporation but the board of the corporation would be heavily
international and heavily biased to include the organizations that have made
the Internet a success along with the organizations that depend on the
Internet. There would be no continuing US Government, or other national
government control of the technical management aspects of the Internet. That is
not to say that governments will not continue to try and be involved in
commerce, security and content policies for the Internet. This is a big step
but one that is vital if the Internet is to escape the technological lethargy
that has personified the traditional telecommunications world.
Half the board would be
filled with representatives of Internet users, specifically including
individual end users and not-for-profit organizations along with commercial
users. The other half would be appointed by groups representing the IP Address
registries, the domain name registries and registrars, and the Internet
standards creation process as exemplified by the Internet Engineering Task
Force (IETF).
The new orginazation
would help define and oversee rules for the creation of new top level domains,
the root nameservers, and the allocation of IP Addresses.
The proposal talks a lot
about domain names and there are some real problems with the proposal in this
area. The proposal seems to support for-profit ownership of top level domains,
the very kind of monopoly that lead to the mess we are now in. It also hints
but does not specifically say that all new domain name registries would be able
to register in all non-country code top level domains, including .com, .net and
.org, this is not a small detail.
This proposal will have
some significant opponents. I expect the traditional telecommunications
industry will try and do through rule setting what they could not do in the
real world which is to play a real role in the Internet. Some libertarians will
question the authority of the US Government to play a role here. People who saw
an opportunity to create a monopoly on some type of domain names see their pot
of gold evaporating.
This proposal is a
watershed and the thrust vector is in the right quadrant.
disclaimer: As part of
the IETF and an IP Address group I may be impacted but the comments are mine,
nor are they Harvard's (which is suspicious of governments two thirds its age).