17
April, 2019
In
the wake of the Christchurch mosque attacks, managers of the .nz
internet domain have drawn up a policy that would allow addresses
ending in .nz to be suspended in "emergency or exceptional
circumstances".
InternetNZ,
the manager of the .nz country code top level domain, made an interim
policy change on Tuesday covering the response to events such as a
terrorist or cyber security attack, or force majeure event.
It
applies to cases where the use of the .nz domain space is causing, or
may cause, irreparable harm to any person or the operation of the .nz
domain space.
The
policy change makes it clear domain name commissioner Brent Carey can
temporarily transfer, suspend or lock a domain name registration.
Action taken has to be proportionate to the harm.
Any
action taken by the commissioner under the provision would be made
public as soon as possible, including the nature of the incident
involved, and the timeframe for which a temporary approach was
anticipated to be in force.
The
commissioner works for the Domain Name Commission, which was
appointed by InternetNZ to, among other things, create a fair
environment for the management of .nz domain names.
The
interim policy change gave InternetNZ six months for a broader
discussion and consideration of how to handle unexpected events,
InternetNZ chief executive Jordan Carter said in a blog post.
"What
.nz policy should say in the long term is something we are asking the
.nz policy review panel to address, in the comprehensive review of
.nz policy that is currently kicking off," he said.
"None
of this signals an intent by InternetNZ to get into decisions about
content in a general sense." But the .nz policy review would
consider those issues.
Carey
said any move on his part to suspend a domain name would in all
probability follow a request, and logically those requests would come
from the Department of Internal Affairs, government cyber security
agency Cert NZ. or a court.
Mostly
domain names were suspended or cancelled in such cases as people
providing fake contact details when they registered names.
"The
situation in Christchurch took us into a different territory,"
Carey said. "I think it's important for the health of the .nz
space to have something like this up our sleeve."
Carter
said the key point of the new policy was that it provided emergency
powers to respond quickly. "It's not to cancel the domain name.
So it's not impossible to reverse the situation if circumstances
require it to be undone."
Generally,
InternetNZ would take down a domain name if ordered to by a court,
but it didn't want to be in the position to be making decisions about
such things as copyright infringement, scams or hate speech.
"For
us and a lot of other country code registries, there's been a pretty
strong line to say we're not experts about content, we don't want to
become judge and jury about what's on websites," Carter said.
Despite describing the Christchurch mosque attacks that killed 50 people as "a really terrible event", Facebook isn't keen to introduce delays on its livestream feeds.
A comprehensive review of .nz policy was getting under way, to be run by a panel of up to 12 people, and it would look at all the issues people had raised about the policy framework.
"Some people think the domain name registry should take an interest in copyright enforcement, or hate speech, or scams," Carter said. "Any issue raised by anyone will get considered."
Cert NZ said the new policy would allow it to work more closely and efficiently with the commission in times of emergency, and ensure reports involving objectionable material were prioritised and actioned.
"Cert NZ and the Domain Name Commission primarily work together on taking down phishing websites that are misrepresenting New Zealand.
"In the wake of the Christchurch tragedy, we're also aware that we all have a role to play together in ensuring that the correct agencies are aware of instances of objectionable material being available online, and will work closely with the Domain Name Commission, the Department of Internal Affairs and other agencies to make sure appropriate steps are taken."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.