Originally published: June 11, 2012
Last updated: June 11, 2012 - 4:00pm
This just in from Geneva: The United Nations has no plans to seize control of the Internet.
The Web-snatching black helicopters have not left the hangar. Internet conspiracy theorists will be disappointed. The latest one, fueled by “open Internet” groups, Internet companies like Google and some US lawmakers, was that mouse-clicking bureaucrats at U.N. headquarters in Geneva, supported by governments suspicious of the United States, were scheming to take over the Internet itself. The plot went something like this: At a meeting in December of an obscure UN agency called the International Telecommunication Union, Russia, China and their ilk would try to wrest oversight of the Internet away from the loose collection of public and private organizations that do the job now, handing this responsibility to the ITU. All sorts of bad things, from censorship to the breakup of the Internet, would ensue. Time for a reality check. Documents prepared for the December meeting, which leaked out last week — yes, on the Internet — show that there are no proposals to hand governance of the Net to the ITU. The union insists that it has no desire to play such a role. And even if some governments would like to give the agency increased regulatory powers, the United States and other like-minded countries could easily block them.
Links to Sources
- Login or register to post comments
- Email this page
Related
- Officials: United Nations Internet Regulation is not a Conspiracy
- What's so bad about the Google Street View data flap?
- Integrity of Internet Is Crux of Global Conference
- Big Brother and TiVo are watching you
- Message, if Murky, From U.S. to the World
- Should the U.N. Really Be Starting a War on Spam?
- Vint Cerf: The Internet doesn't need the ITU's help
- United Nations Agency to Discuss Internet Governance Again
- U.S. Refuses to Relinquish Control of Net
- UN group gives nod for greater Internet oversight
- Drafters of Communications Treaty Are Split on Issue of Internet Governance
- Holding company exec to Grassley: Not Google's planes
- The United Nations and the Internet: It's Complicated
- At British Inquiry, Cameron Denies ‘Deals’ With Murdoch
- The UN Threat to Internet Freedom
Location
Ratings
Login to rate this headline.

