Five Webloggers Jailed In Iran 21
Free Speech Geek writes "Reporters Without Borders recently published an article titled 'Five Webloggers Jailed' on their Web site. In this article, they list the names of 5 Iranians who have recently been jailed for no other reason than the fact that they published Web logs that were critical of the government. This story is timely because the UN has recently convened a 'UN Working Group on Internet Governance' and one of their key agenda items seems to be to take over the Domain Name System from ICAAN.
One can't help but noting that the Iranian delegate to the UN is on the UN Working Group and conclude that control of the DNS is going to be the next big battleground for freedom of speech." (These arrests follow those reported in mid-October.)
UN controll over DNS... (Score:1, Troll)
No fucking way.
ICANN sucks but the UN is a corrupt and filled with pompous idiots. Next thing you know, the Secretary General's son will own your domain name, and you'll have to pay his Swiss lords a monthly fee to use it.
I'll take the regular idiots at ICANN, thank you.
Re:UN controll over DNS... (Score:2, Insightful)
Can you give any examples of similer things happening in the past?
Re:UN controll over DNS... (Score:2)
Yes.
The Secertary General's son worked for a Swiss company that was monitoring the Iraq oil-for-food program. The old-for-food program was corrupt, and could be better descriped as an oil-for-palaces program.
more info [nysun.com]
The UN's constituents are governments not people (Score:4, Insightful)
ICANN sucks but the UN is a corrupt and filled with pompous idiots. Next thing you know, the Secretary General's son will own your domain name, and you'll have to pay his Swiss lords a monthly fee to use it.
I'll take the regular idiots at ICANN, thank you.
I concurr.
The UN as a mechanism to facilitate inter-government communication and consensus is invaluable. But it it a profound mistake for anyone to look to the UN for anything more than occasional, unreliable, passing help on any humanitarian issue, be it prevention of disease (by far their best effort of any), prevention of genocide (Dafur, Ruanda, Kosovo, etc.), or freedom.
People forget that the UN's constituency is governments, not people, and that the majority of those governments are corrupt, repressive, and kill scores of said people. Even if the US were a perfect democracy (it is anything but), its constituents are by and large repressive, corrupt, and often murderous regimes.
Bush's anti-UN stance is terrible -- the UN is the best mechanism for diplomacy and international consensus there is. But as a world government the UN would be far worse than the Bush regime
Freudian typo? (Score:2)
Gurr! That should of course read:
Even if the UN were a perfect democracy (it is anything but), its constituents are by and large repressive, corrupt, and often murderous regimes.
Re:UN controll over DNS... (Score:2)
ICANN sucks but the UN is a corrupt and filled with pompous idiots. Next thing you know, the Secretary General's son will own your domain name, and you'll have to pay his Swiss lords a monthly fee to use it.
I'll take the regular idiots at ICANN, thank you.
The Diff? (Score:1)
Two words (Score:2, Informative)
Re:mod parent UP (Score:2)
Looks like a lot, eh? Lots of people have been improperly persecuted for speeking freely in the United States, but we the people generally reform the system in their favor. THAT'S the difference.
Re:Two words (Score:2)
Interesting conclusions... (Score:2, Insightful)
One way or another, I don't see a connection between jailing bloggers in Iran and the question of DNS governance. I guess, every opportunity is good to sell your agenda.
Robert
PS Is this perhaps something related to "Chewbacca defence"?
PPS Ceterum censeo Karthaginem esse delendam
Re:Interesting conclusions... (Score:2)
In the US, the FCC does that.
Re: (Score:2)
ya wot??? (Score:1)