ICANN Updates 127
ICANN is meeting in Bucharest next week, which means they're floating all their usual smoky-room schemes just prior to the meeting. leto writes "The three RIR's, ARIN, APNIC and RIPE-NCC have just released a joint statement that basically tells ICANN that their
Evolution and Reform plan is unacceptable, and tells ICANN to go play elsewhere, and leave the address space in the hands of the well working bodies." An interesting mailing list debate has been going on between ICANN's critics and ICANN's extremely well-paid and extremely sleazy attorney: critic, attorney (sleazy!), critic again, another critic, attorney again, critic's response, still other critics. And finally, note that the .org TLD is up for bids - the New York Times has a story, Newsforge has another.
This is getting Ridiculous (Score:1, Funny)
I'm taking my internet and going home.
I'm not sure.. (Score:1)
If a
Re:I'm not sure.. (Score:1)
Re:What needs to happen... (Score:3, Insightful)
ICANN is a failure, yes. But, it doesn't mean that there isn't some central authority needed to take over for ICANN. The internet is too big now to not have some sort of almost hegemonal group in charge. Yes, there should be community input, but it has to be structured. Maybe take a page out of the US Constitutional framers book and set up some sort of internet electoral college, and have each region elect their rep. And then those reps go and make the decisions.
But in no way can there be a true democracy on the internet, it worked for the Greeks because there weren't millions upon millions of people trying to get their voice heard.
Re:What needs to happen... (Score:1, Offtopic)
Have you heard of computers? Of course you have. How about web software? Yep.
So are you one of those folks who:
A. would never trust a website with your credit card information, much less some third party to tally your vote on whether or not to grant a block of 4096 IP address to the fine folks at ilovemonkeysex.com?
B. advocates the perpetuation of the electoral college - which was created in the days when people sent messages on horseback?
C. both of the above?
Vortran out
Re:What needs to happen... (Score:1)
The point that I was trying to make is that there is no real feasible way to allow everyone to get up and debate the points in question. There just isn't enough time for everyone to put in their two cents. The concept behind the electoral college is that you elect people you trust who have time and will get their voices heard, and through them, your voices. Its no different then a legislative assembly of some sort.
And what's wrong with ideas that were made when people sent messages on horseback? As much as we bitch and whine about the laws in the US, I have rarely heard someone moaning about the constitution itself, which was also created when people sent letters by horseback.
Re:What needs to happen... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:What needs to happen... (Score:2)
Isn't that what happened with the last presidential election?
Re:What needs to happen... (Score:2)
No, in the last presidential election (in fact, in the last several), large organizations who don't care about the common citizen, but who want to be left alone by the government, battled large organizations who don't care about the common citizen, but want the government to grant them all kinds of money, monopolies, special rights and privileges. There is no way I can think of that a society can have personal liberty, and a two-party system, without this state of affairs prevailing.
Re:What needs to happen... (Score:2)
That would certainly be preferable to simply letting the corporations win by default.
If you choose not to vote, you have only yourself to blame and should probably quit bitching now and forever.
If your right to vote is taken away from you by [insert favorite hated authority figure here], then you have not only the right, but the moral obligation to take up arms and drive [said authority figure] from power. In the case of ICANN and the Internet such weopons might be more metaphorical than real (one can hope), but I wouldn't count on it.
Re:What needs to happen... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:What needs to happen... (Score:2)
I would say that the rule should be that everyone with at least one domain name gets one vote. We can tell who is who (roughly) by using whois.
Re:What needs to happen... (Score:1)
Re:What needs to happen... (Score:1)
results [www.cira.ca]
Re:What needs to happen... (Score:2)
Need I direct you to the Free democracy project [free-project.org]?
The state-of-the-art in electronic voting is a whole lot more advanced than you might think by looking at government's "send your PIN in a text message" projects!
Re:What needs to happen... (Score:1)
Re:What needs to happen... (Score:1)
Imagine if a vote is called to all Linux to connect to a
Individuals can be very smart, but take a large group of people and the IQ plummets. The masses are fickle and apathetic. Yes electing officials is based on popularity more then qualifications but the officials at least have to know something because of the 1 percent of people that ask intelligent questions.
--Beware bias, I live in the USA
Re:What needs to happen... (Score:1)
I'm sorry to have to inform you that GB is not a republic, nor is the UK of which it is part... We are a monarchy, a dictatorship in which supreme executive power derives from a fluke of birthright rather than from a mandate from the masses!
In practice, admittedly, the monarch is a decent sort, and she allows herself to be told what to do by people who _do_ have a mandate from the masses, and several laws, charters, and at least one major war have institutionalised this arrangement... but the principle still stands!
Re:What needs to happen... (Score:5, Insightful)
How about
To access a web site, type its IP address. If you don't like typing IP addresses, build a database. If you don't have the time/inclination to build your own database, subscribe to one.It's not a technical problem. It's not even an implementation problem. All popular operating systems allow you to specify the IP address of your DNS server, and there are already alternate DNS servers out there. If you don't like ICANN's, find another.
Go for anarchy and ICANN becomes a non-issue.
Re:What needs to happen... (Score:1)
I thought the premise was that IP numbers were scarce.
Re:What needs to happen... (Score:2)
Re:What needs to happen... (Score:2)
So what do you use for links on your web pages? IP addresses, which will go bad as soon as the destination site reorganizes; or DNS names, which won't work for any users who subscribe to a different database?
Re:What needs to happen... (Score:1)
Well, for internal links you do what you should be doing now. Dont include the domain at all, and dont begin the url with a HTTP://
bad : href="http://www.example.com/path/to/my/document.
good: href="/path/to/my/document.html"
For external links, the idea is stability in IP addresses (Which isnt easy in IPv4, not because its not doable, but because ICANN would like us to believe its not doable.)
Re:What needs to happen... (Score:2, Insightful)
While I personally think that you have a cool idea, I also think this would merely end up confusing the majority of internet users (of course this depends on how all of the database subscription options are implemented). Sadly, most internet users can barely make their way through hotmail and yahoo, let alone remember IP address, or understand what it means to subscribe to a database of domain names. This would require an incredibly well thought out user interface with language that is perfectly understandable to people who have never touched a computer before in their life.
Gov't (Score:1)
Answer me this... (Score:1)
Re:Answer me this... (Score:1, Insightful)
The new TLDs probably can't be added to a list of good things. In fact, I don't think a list of good things exists, as there is not yet any need for one. The horrible method by which they choose to add TLDs is a disservice to the Internet community. I don't think ICANN had anything to do with opening up the domain registrar system. That was Congress, IIRC.
politics (Score:5, Insightful)
involvement of governments from around the world, will not be able to carry
out thes mission assigned to ICANN (if you believe that mission requires
the agreed participation of all the relevant infrastructure
providers). ICANN has no guns, and no soldiers; it has no coercive
power.
Something tell me before too long we can expect to hear dark rumors of ICANN building a droid army to deploy against the shining republic of the IETF.
Seriously, though, it is shocking how poitical they can try to make a system whose entire job is to associate names and numbers. For something that is essentially a hack (put the fate of the internet on the backs of a handfule of individual servers, yeah, good idea), they sure seem intent on turning it into the basis for a UN-scale political swamp.
Re:politics (Score:1)
Re:politics (Score:1)
That was the lawyer's comment. Have to read the back-and-forth messages to get the context.
Re:politics (Score:2)
He's just saying that ICANN ultimately depends on the support of the community (at the least, we have to point our nameservers at ICANN's root.) He goes on to argue that this implies that we should support them even though they're actively abusing that support, of course, but he's not saying he needs a "defense" budget.
My God Newsforge is Polite! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:English, please (Score:3, Informative)
All except the first can be found at www.----.net. An IP is attacking you, and you want to find out who it is registered to? Look it up at the various RIRs.
Re:English, please (Score:1)
American Registry for Internet Number (ARIN)
Asia Pacific Information Centre (APNIC)
Reseaux IP Europeens Network Coordination Centre (RIPE-NCC)
for more info on these go to
www.apnic.net/db/RIRs.html
www.ripe.net/ripen
www.aso.icann.org/rirs
www.rip
"Sleazy Attorney" (Score:2, Insightful)
Next, we'll spear some bulls and wave red flags in front of them.
Feel free to delete this comment when you fix the story, to keep Slashdot out of court.
Re:"Sleazy Attorney" (Score:1)
Re:"Sleazy Attorney" (Score:1)
Just because the system is broken doesn't mean you ought to ignore it.
Re:"Sleazy Attorney" (Score:2)
Now you kids play nice or I swear to god I'm going to turn this car around and there will be no DisneyWorld for anybody!
Re:"Sleazy Attorney" (Score:2)
Re:"Sleazy Attorney" (Score:3, Funny)
You can't prove to a judge that he's sleazy.
Sure I can.
"Your honor, he's an attorney. I rest my case."
ChicagoFan
Re:"Sleazy Attorney" (Score:2)
[IANAL...]
Re:"Sleazy Attorney" (Score:1, Informative)
"Sleazy" is not libelous, it's an opinion. Slashdot's OK here. You have to state a deliberately known false assertion of fact to be libelous.
Tempest in a teapot (Score:4, Insightful)
<garfield>Big, fat, hairy deal.</garfield>
Really, who cares? As long as people can register domain names, and have them appear in the DNS servers, the rest is just three-year-olds arguing over a toy.
NAMES ARE NOT THE THINGS THEY NAME!
Fundamentally, it makes no difference what domain name a site has. With the advent of the search engine, it's all moot anyway.
Really, folks...there are a lot of good people putting in lots of time and effort on something that's basically a triviality. Why not work on something that means something?
It is going to cost us money (Score:1, Insightful)
It might not make a difference what name something has, but it still needs a name
So we need domain names, and the bigger ICANN grows the more expensive it will get for us in the end.
Re:Tempest in a teapot (Score:1)
"NAMES ARE NOT THE THINGS THEY NAME!"
Well, that's not exactly true... sometimes domains are for exactly what they name, and are used to make a point. Take for instance a group of extremely bitter RPI students. Such people might register rpiscrews.us (no, there's no content there... I have yet to set up vhosts) to make a point.
And as for the triviality of a domain name... good, common words domain names can generate hits on their own. I remember that bomb.com (which has no real content) generated a couple thousand hits per month. That's all based on people thinking "hey, maybe there's something good at bomb.com".
This is exactly the problem (Score:1)
This is why we're in the mess we're in. Hostnames and URL's were meant for a time when the Internet was in the hands of the techies. When business and legal interests completely overwhelmed the purpose of the Internet, nothing better stepped in to supplement the current naming system.
We basically need a new directory service: one that maps legal entity names to DNS domains. Legislate this with all of the intellectual property crap you want, but leave DNS itself out of it. There's no reason users need to really see DNS domain names, and little reason they'd even need to see URL's for that matter. What percentage of the general public understands http:// and ftp://?
I should be able to tell my Internet browser to go to "IBM", and it should be able to consult a directory of entities, find a list of legal entities that have the name "IBM", obtain a DNS domain name from that directory (ibm.com), do an SRV lookup for the HTTP service at ibm.com, make the request for / at this server, and boom, you're at the "IBM" organization's home page. A TLS/SSL certificate at this point could validate the organization's identity (it should match the original directory entry), for those looking at security. Nowhere in this process do I have to guess that www.ibm.com is IBM's home page. The hostname in this case ceases to be such a valued commodity, outside of vanity uses.
We no longer see companies registering a hundred 2nd-level domains for every service mark and product they sell. For that type of thing, RealNames or similar services would (and do) work fine.
Re:This is exactly the problem (Score:1)
Domain names (Score:1, Insightful)
To make things worse, they sell the names at an absurd premium on some extentions (such as $10,000 USD to purchace me.tv, or whatever they want for it by now)
I for one would like them to release the market so i can score www.www.www
Re:Domain names (Score:1)
Oh, Joy. (Score:4, Interesting)
I credit the Slashdot editors for aggregating most of the topics that I find interesting -- however, I don't think that I'm going to be accusing them of jounalistic integrity any time soon.
Re:Oh, Joy. (Score:3, Insightful)
Slashdot doesn't pretend to be unbiased. IMO, that's better than most of the rest of the journalistic world, which does pretend.
Okay, OKAY (Score:4, Funny)
Oh, alright. I'll do it. I guess.
I mean, if someone has to, and no one else wants it, i'm not really doing much else this month and i've got some free time. I swear though, you people.. seems sometimes like if you wanna get something done around here, you have to do it yourself.
Uhh.. do I have to set up BIND now, or something? Hm. Could anyone point me to a HOWTO..? I'm running slackware, so i can't do an RPM install..
--super ugly ultraman
ICANN: Why is there no seperation of powers? (Score:1, Interesting)
ICANN's Mission lies in the nexus between ICANN's technical coordination role, its operational role, and its policy role [icann.org]
Why isn't ICANN structured this way? How can they be a group that decides policy AND a group that implements policy? Doesn't this create an room for conflict of interest that ultimately leads to abuse of the system?
The ICANN attorney speaks (Score:4, Insightful)
Did it ever cross anyone's mind over there in East Timbuktu, or whatever remote jungle ICANN is meeting at this month, that if ICANN were more transparent, people wouldn't have so many questions about what it does and how it does it?
Hmmmm?
Repeating myself (Score:5, Informative)
Nobody's yet explained why it takes a raft of lawyers, eighty million dollars, and meetings all over the world to accomplish what Jon Postel did in his spare time on his office workstation.
The Internet has gotten bigger, but damitall, IP addresses are still IP addresses and DNS is supposed to be a hierarchical, delegated system. What's the big problem? Jon just ran a root server and kept backups like it was the most obvious and natural thing in the world. What else is there to do?
Re:Repeating myself (Score:1)
IP attribution is technically far more complex, still it's operated smoothly because there's no big cash involved.
Another example, SSL certificates. A wildcard one is sold at least 5 times the price of a single name, and it's the very same thing at the end (1 certificate). Just because you can do more things with it, technically speaking.
TLDs should be dealt with like usenet groups. Users want them, users have them.
Re:Repeating myself (Score:3, Insightful)
What we need is to return DNS to serving its original role: to provide an easier-to-use addressing mechanism for Internet hosts. The role of associating legal entity names to Internet domains needs its own service (e.g. X.500 or LDAP). A "keyword" lookup service for product names or other service marks would need a third service a la RealNames.
We need to desperately curb the use of www.what-i-am-looking-for.com and to start enforcing DNS delegation like it was originally designed.
My two cents.
Given enough eyes, all bugs are shallow... (Score:3, Insightful)
How about just find the individual - and I'm sure there is one - who can just say "What? this? just do 1, 2, 3, 4.... there - done." - and give them ICANN's job? Given enough DNS experts, ICANN's job MUST be shallow.
Look at em go.. (Score:2, Insightful)
ARIN and the other RIRs is an organization that wants to control the internet.
Both charge outrageous fees to dole out ones and zeros in the form of IP numbers and DNS entries.
I particularly like ARINs approach to IPv6, which still costs thousands for a block of numbers even though there's essentially limitless identifiers.
I also like ICANNs policy of "give us 50k and maaayybeee you can run a tld, but probably not, and, oh yeah, its nonrefundable."
Lets face it, without these internet inhibitors there would be no artificial scarcity of either IP numbers or domain addressess. These scams only drive up the costs for internet users. IPv4 blocks are not reclaimed, IPv6 blocks are virtually limitless. New TLDs don't require any sort of voodoo magic, and can be handled the same way, and with the same hardware as the old TLDs.
It sounds like these organizations, built on greed, are getting carried away with each other.
Re:Look at em go.. (Score:1)
Are you high? $2500/year is a real steal huh? What does that buy me, some numbers. Well I've got something for you. You can have 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9. There, pay me $2500 please.
The fact that my ISP has to pay at all persuades them to charge me $5 per IP number, not 30c. Why should I pay 30c anways?, so someone can jet-set off to conferences, work in a brand new lavish office building, have bullshit brunches figuring out what companies are "playing ball", etc? No sir, customers are not willing to pay one cent more than is necessary, especially if we don't even get a static IP number, which is supposedly what the fees are all about.
The most touching part of the lawyer's comments (Score:1)
Some of us were there in the beginning. Some of us even predate CERN's role in popularizing the World Wide Web (that nasty www thingy).
In fact, some of us grew strong in the UseNet Flame Wars
It all makes me wonder why bureaucracy has so much troubles with democracy and true representation.
It's just a technical problem, after all
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ICANNs attorneys letters are no better... (Score:1)
Or have I just described all attorneys?