The
tentacles of fascism spread even further.
Congress
to consider giving more control of Internet to UN
Critics
say plan would make it easier for other countries to silence
dissidents
30
May, 2012
U.S.
lawmakers will delve on Thursday into an international debate on
whether to hand more control of the Internet to the United Nations, a
move many fear would turn it into a political bargaining chip for
censorship and global taxes on Web companies.
U.S.
government officials are gearing up for a December meeting in Dubai
where delegations from 193 countries will discuss whether the U.N.
should have more say over how the Internet is organized and
controlled.
Critics
say that, under such a regime, each nation regardless of size has one
vote, which could give China, Russia, Iran, Saudi Arabia and other
countries greater ability to isolate their populations and silence
political dissidents.
"What
proponents of Internet freedom do or don't do between now and then
will determine the fate of the Net, affect global economic growth and
determine whether political liberty can proliferate," Robert
McDowell, a Republican commissioner on the Federal Communications
Commission, said in testimony prepared for Thursday's hearing.
A
House Energy and Commerce subcommittee is holding the hearing in what
will be one of the highest-profile airings so far in the United
States on the coming debate at the World Conference on International
Telecommunications (WCIT) in December.
The
U.S. government is trying to drum up support, both domestically and
internationally, to preserve a decentralized Internet.
Obama
administration officials held a closed-door meeting a few weeks ago
at the White House with representatives from U.S. companies such as
Comcast and advocacy groups such as the international nonprofit
Internet Society to build solidarity.
(Msnbc.com
is a joint venture of Microsoft and NBCUniversal, a unit of Comcast.)
"This
is one of those circumstances where I think it's fair to say there's
absolute unanimity. I don't believe you'd find any dissent at all to
the view that we would like to keep the Internet free of
inter-governmental controls," said a State Department official,
who was not authorized to speak on-the-record about the discussions.
The
Internet is currently policed loosely, with technical bodies such as
the Internet Engineering Task Force, the Internet Corporation for
Assigned Names and Numbers and the World Wide Web Consortium largely
dictating its infrastructure and management. The United States holds
significant sway with those bodies.
U.N.
treaty last revisited in 1988
When
the delegations gather in Dubai, they will renegotiate a U.N. treaty
last revisited in 1988 and debate whether to consolidate control over
the Internet with the U.N.'s International Telecommunications Union
(ITU).
The
ITU is used to set communications standards, such as deciding when
technologies can be labeled 4G and approving a standard for a
universal telephone charger.
For
many countries, it seems a natural progression for the ITU, formerly
the International Telegraph Union in the 1800s, to morph into the
International Internet Union in the 21st century. But for countries
such as the United States the move is seen as dangerous.
The
United States fears that authoritarian regimes will campaign for
their initiatives by promising to back proposals from developing
countries that would like to see tariffs on content-heavy Internet
companies such as Google and Facebook.
"The
votes of governments would be traded for considerations that have
nothing to do with the Internet. That political horse trading is the
hallmark of inter-governmental bodies," said Steve DelBianco,
executive director of NetChoice, a coalition whose members include
AOL, eBay, Facebook, Oracle, VeriSign and Yahoo.
Seeking diplomatic approach
The
House panel said in a memo released on Tuesday that there is
bipartisan agreement that the United States should stand firm in
opposing any treaty provisions at the WCIT that would give the U.N.
substantial control of the Internet.
"Pending
international proposals to regulate the Internet could jeopardize not
only its vibrancy, but also the economic and social benefits it
brings to the world," the memo said.
The
hearing will include testimony from Ambassador Philip Verveer, the
deputy assistant secretary of state who will negotiate with other
nations at the WCIT and help represent the United States in Dubai.
Vinton
Cerf, regarded as one of the fathers of the Internet and now vice
president and chief Internet evangelist at Google, and David Gross,
the State Department's former ambassador for international telecom
policy and now a partner at Wiley Rein, will also testify.
Gross,
who is appearing on behalf of an industry coalition that includes
Google, Microsoft and News Corp, said in his prepared testimony that
this is not the first attempt to centralize control over the
Internet, pointing to UN talks in 2003 and 2005.
He
said the United States must take a diplomatic approach that does not
unnecessarily attack the UN's telecommunications authority, but
instead concentrates on countries seeking to impose government
mandates on the Internet through the UN.
Gross
called for a strong coalition between the United States and
like-minded countries.
"This
has been done before and it must be done again," he added.
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