The following text is copyright 1998 by
Network World, permission is hearby given for reproduction, as long as
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Standards as weapons
By Scott Bradner
There was something
wrong with the picture. Some reports from the International Forum on the White
Paper (IFWP) meeting in Singapore said that people were plotting to have the
IETF under the control of the "new IANA" organization. This would be
somewhat like a random third party telling Greenpeace that they were now to
operate under the control of the whaling industry association. It could get
very sticky if the people working on defining the new organization actually
thought they had the power to do this.
For those of you who
have not been paying attention, the IFWP (http://www.ifwp.org) has been holding a series of
meetings around the world to try and come up with an organization to implement
the recommendations in the U.S. government's White Paper on the management of
some of the Internet infrastructure functions. (http://www.ntia.doc.gov/ntiahome/domainname/domainhome.htm) At the same time the IANA, the
organization which has been performing these functions since the start of the
Internet itself has been soliciting comments on a series of organizational
plans for the new organization and trying to integrate IFWP comments and
suggestions. (http://www.iana.org). At this time it looks like
these two efforts may come together. But this column is not about the effort to
define a new IANA, it is about a dream of control by some people who fear the
open standards development process as exemplified by the IETF (http://www.ietf.org).
The IETF is an
international, independent, self-defining standards development organization,
which has allied itself with the Internet Society. (http://www.isoc.org) Its relationship with the current IANA is one where the
IANA provides database maintenance and number assignment functions. The IANA is
the keeper of the lists of the protocol numbers and identification strings
which have been defined by IETF standards. The IANA does not tell the IETF what
to do or what not to do other than to request clarity in any procedures the
IETF defines to be used in assigning protocol numbers and strings. The White
Paper proposes that this relationship between the IETF and the new IANA
organization continue.
But it is hardly a
surprise that people outside of the IETF would like to control it. The
standards that have been developed by the IETF, and other organizations such as
the W3C (http://www.w3c.org), have created the Internet as
it is today. IETF standards have caused major disruptions in many areas -
particularly in the traditional telecommunications industry - while at the same
time challenging the ability of governments to control the information that its
citizens see.
For the last few years,
a number of governments, mostly in Europe, have been trying to figure out how
to "govern the technology" as one observer put it. Governments and
individual companies have a significant voice in many "traditional"
standards bodies but have no specific voice in the IETF. Individuals are
welcome to speak their mind but there is no specific governmental or
company-based influence over the management or technology evaluation in the
self-funded IETF.
When governments and
organizations see their plans disrupted it is natural for them to want to push
back and blunt the disruption, and they are trying again, unsuccessfully, I
predict.
disclaimer: After more
than 360 years Harvard is used to the concept of disruptions but the above is
my prediction.