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U.S. business and government officials were united Thursday in their opposition to recent proposals to create an international Internet governing body, saying it could slow innovation and limit online choices.
Proposals to establish an international governing body and take away the administration of the Internet's top-level domain name system from the nonprofit Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) would open the Internet up to the political whims of many governments, said Rick Lane, vice president of government affairs at News Corp., a huge media company based in New York.
"That is one of our concerns: that all of the sudden, politics that have nothing to do with ICANN start trickling into ... how the Internet is being run," said Lane, speaking at a forum about the upcoming World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS). "If the Internet gets bogged down too much in the politics of what's going on in the world, our businesses will suffer definitely, but I believe who will suffer the most are the folks who access ... the great information that is out there on the Internet."
In September, the European Union split with the U.S. and called for an international governing body for the Internet and a reduced role for ICANN, created in 1998 by the U.S. Department of Commerce. The EU proposal would create a new model for allocating IP number blocks, and the EU also called for a new forum to address Internet policy issues. The argument over Internet governance will be part of the second phase of the U.N.-sponsored WSIS in Tunis, Tunisia, starting Nov. 16.
Critics of U.S. control of ICANN say it's time for Internet governance to take on a more international flavor. ICANN, which manages crucial Internet infrastructure such as domain names, root servers and IP addresses, has faced criticism in the past from international groups that say the organization has too much control over the Internet. Some critics have also complained in the past that ICANN has been closed off from outside participation.
But officials from U.S. companies including Microsoft, IBM and Google called for WSIS to shift its focus to ways that the Internet can improve the economies of developing nations, instead of debating Internet governance. The focus on Internet governance is a substitute for some governments' concerns about the "radical changes" the Internet is bringing to culture, politics and religion, said Fred Tipton, director of international organizations and development at Microsoft.
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