The U.S. role in global internet governance D. L. Cogbrun; M. Mueller; L. McKnight; H. Klein and J. Mathiason [electronic resource] /
2005
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Title
The U.S. role in global internet governance D. L. Cogbrun; M. Mueller; L. McKnight; H. Klein and J. Mathiason [electronic resource] /
Language
English
Author
Imprint
2005
Summary
Who should control the Internet? A dozen years after the Internet became a mass medium, this issue has continued to grow in urgency, becoming white hot in fall 2005. At the September 2005 preparatory meeting for the UN World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS), a coalition of countries criticized the United States' unilateral control of the Internet's domain name system (DNS) and proposed the establishment of a multinational Council to supervise it. This proposal emerged from the Final Report of the UN Working Group on Internet Governance. Researchers from the Internet Governance Project, a university-based consortium for policy analysis, have concluded that the United States should internationalize governance of the Internet, but in a way that avoids intrusive, centralized control.
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Access restricted to onsite users [ITU]
In
IEEE Communications Magazine Vol. 43, no. 12(2005) : p. 12 - 14
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