ICANN Warns of Threats to Open Internet in a Polarized World

ICANN Warns of Threats to Open Internet in a Polarized World

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The​ Internet ⁣Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), the nonprofit group that​ minds the internet’s infrastructure, is worried about chatter ‍at the​ United Nations ⁢about giving more control of the world wide web to individual⁤ governments.

After 25 years of keeping the internet strong and stable, the​ nonprofit ICANN — responsible for ⁤its technical infrastructure — is warning‍ that increasingly polarized geopolitics could start cracking⁤ the foundations ⁢of the online world.

“It’s super ‌important to⁣ differentiate between what⁣ countries decide to do with controlling content, as opposed to ⁤the technical infrastructure,” the⁤ Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers’⁤ interim chief executive Sally ​Costerton told AFP in a recent interview.

“The risk of fragmentation ⁢at the ‍technical level is enormous. The foundation crumbles and⁣ game over.”

ICANN has managed the technical underpinnings ⁤of the internet⁣ since the ⁣group was established in Los Angeles in 1998,⁢ and for the past seven years it has operated under an international model that has all “stakeholders” work ‍collaboratively.

“That has worked really well,” Costerton said of the approach.

ICANN is best known for‍ its work maintaining and expanding the internet address ⁤system to new “domains” and languages from its ​early “.com” days only employing the Roman alphabet.

But as online abuses — from misinformation to hateful content — have‍ grown more ‌insidious, interest has heightened in giving governments more control of the internet, including aspects that have previously been covered by ICANN.

Shifting control⁣ of the internet’s infrastructure to governments and trade groups, and shutting out the⁢ technical community, could crack its foundation, Costerton warned.

But​ proposals have been circulating in the United Nations to give governments and trade groups such clout, ‍and such​ discussions are expected to come to a head in 2025, according to ‌ICANN.

“You start to damage the foundation by changing the way that internet governance‌ model⁤ works,” Costerton said.

“It looks ⁤like a ​magic trick, but it’s the product of hundreds of ⁤thousands of people ⁣building trust in the technologies and ⁣each other.”

While ICANN keeps the infrastructure on which the internet operates sound, ⁣it has nothing to do with any digital content it supports, the executive ‌noted.

“I ‍can’t ​actually remove something from the internet,” the ICANN chief said.

“The other thing‍ is that ICANN is politically neutral, we can’t take sides.”

Costerton worries ‌that mindset would shift⁤ if governments had more control⁢ of the​ internet⁢ infrastructure.

She also sees a threat from the unintended ⁣consequences of regulation in countries intending ⁢to safeguard citizens from what is deemed undesirable online content there.

“The internet was not designed on national borders,⁤ it’s a global resource,” Costerton said.

“The minute you start to ⁣decentralize it, you’re going ​to start to create digital islands.”

Essentially, the internet could be‍ splintered as ‌countries control what people see online.

“We are living in an increasingly nationalistic, polarized world,” Costerton said.

“If you want all that⁤ wonderful⁢ content, and you⁢ want the magic trick to carry⁣ on, you must maintain the current trust-based model.”

2023-11-22 06:41:03
Link⁢ from www.ibtimes.com

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