All Your Internet Are Belong To UN [message #163403] |
Fri, 15 July 2005 21:22 |
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glyde51
Messages: 1827 Registered: August 2004 Location: Winnipeg
Karma: 0
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General (1 Star) |
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I don't know if there is a topic on this... I only came into this politics forum because I'm bored. This forum is the worst for arguing about stuff...
http://news.com.com/2010-1071-5780157.html?tag=yt
I disagree, the UN fucks stuff up... I'm angry at them still for Rwanda... they fail.
They want to own the Internet because some hicks can't use Thunderbird or the likes. Whee.
No. Seriously. No.
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Re: All Your Internet Are Belong To UN [message #163416 is a reply to message #163403] |
Fri, 15 July 2005 22:58 |
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YSLMuffins
Messages: 1144 Registered: February 2003 Location: Moved a long time ago (it...
Karma: 0
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General (1 Star) Moderator - Mod Forum |
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Why fix something that isn't broken? The internet seems to be working fine the way it is. I don't see how the UN could improve things--only give a say to countries like China and North Korea to limit what can and cannot be put online.
-YSLMuffins
The goddess of all (bread products)
See me online as yslcheeze
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Re: All Your Internet Are Belong To UN [message #163460 is a reply to message #163403] |
Sat, 16 July 2005 12:05 |
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glyde51
Messages: 1827 Registered: August 2004 Location: Winnipeg
Karma: 0
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General (1 Star) |
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THE STORY:
Some countries want the UN to control the Internet because they think the UN can get rid of spam somehow. Let's face it, if the US can't police the Internet,
who can? They think the US has been running the show for too long (ICANN was birthed by the US) and now they want change. The four countries mentioned in it
were Syria, Brazil, China, and Ghana (in the article I read). They want a new UN organization (or the Internation Telecommunications Union) to control the
critical parts of the Internet, and control who makes new TLDs, assigning numeric Internet addresses, and operating the root servers. They also want it to
handle Internet surveilance, consumer protection, and even taxing domain names for international access. Those proclamations served to flush out the Bush
administration, which recently announced that it will not hand over control of Internet domain names and addresses to anyone else. There is also a second
option, which means Brazil and China would make their own Internet, and two computers could find different websites at the same address.
No. Seriously. No.
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