« Home | Christian Today: European Churches Demand EU Stat... » | Forbes.com: EU Parliament backs Europe-wide airlin... » | EUPolitix.com - Flag day for EU's 'golden mullets'... » | The First Post: Balancing the books is impossible » | CNET News.com: Bloggers ready for battle over Net ... » | IOL: Euro view sought on amnesty for fugitive terr... » | ZEENEWS.COM: EU to set up new earth monitoring sy... » | Townhall.com : Germany's new chancellor is more li... » | TIME.com: -- Europe - What the Uprising Generation... » | The Peninsula On-line: More foreigners buying resi... » 

Nov 16, 2005 

NJ.com: NewsFlash - Big Brother will continue to watch over us: US keeps control of Internet

NJ.com: NewsFlash

Big Brother will continue to watch over us - US keeps control of Internet

TUNIS, Tunisia (AP) — A U.N. technology summit opened Wednesday after an 11th-hour agreement that leaves the United States with ultimate oversight of the main computers that direct the Internet's flow of information, commerce and dissent.

A lingering and vocal struggle over the Internet's plumbing and its addressing system has overshadowed the summit's original intent: to address ways to expand communications technologies to poorer parts of the world. Negotiators from more than 100 countries agreed late Tuesday to leave the United States in charge, through a quasi-independent body called the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, or ICANN. That averted a U.S.-EU showdown that threatened to derail the so-called World Summit on the Information Society.

"If the Internet had been developed in Australia, I don't think we would have had so much heat on this discussion," ICANN chief Paul Twomey, an Australian, remarked of the tension surrounding the U.S. control of the Internet. The computers under dispute control Internet traffic by acting as its master directories so Web browsers and e-mail programs can find other computers. Although Pakistan and other countries sought a takeover of that system by an international body such as the United Nations, negotiators ultimately agreed, as time ran out, to a create an open-ended international forum for raising important Internet issues. The forum, however, would have no binding authority.

|

About us

EU-Digest, a free service of Europe House, provides news highlights and links to European related news reports on economic, social and political issues. Europe House reserves the right to deny any comments or articles it finds irrelevant. The information published in EU-Digest does not necessarily reflect the viewpoint or the opinion of Europe House.

Subscribe

To subscribe enter your Email


Powered by FeedBlitz

Tell a friend


Eurobarometer

European Weather - Amsterdam

Click for Amsterdam, Netherlands Forecast

For information on placing your advertising link click here.

Official PayPal Seal

Search

Google



Archives

Powered by Blogger
and Blogger Templates



Subscribe in NewsGator Online
Add to GoogleAdd to My AOL
Subscribe in BloglinesSubscribe in FeedLounge
Add EU-Digest to Newsburst from CNET News.com
BLOGGER


Get Firefox!