The ICANN Shift: Towards a Less U.S. Internet
BY Nancy Scola | Thursday, October 1 2009
Some big big news from the world of Internet governance. The context is that while we tend to talk about the Internet as if its some sort of organic wonder, the truth is that there is a Dr. Frankenstein in the mix. (Is that a bad reference? I never read the book. Onward.) A group with the underwhelming name of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, better known as ICANN, has fairly quietly guided the Internet's development. But what's more is that, despite our declarations of independence and thoughts of a supra-national global network, ICANN has, for its 11 years of existence, been tied to the United States government.
The big news? Yesterday, the "joint project agreement" that formalized that relationship between ICANN and the Department of Commerce was intentionally allowed to lapse, and a new agreement spells out a far more open relationship -- meaning there's suddenly a bit more space between offline governments and web governance. PC World has the story.