ICANN Budget Questioned 126
Thing I am writes "The proposed 2004-5 budget for the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) has hit a snag - the rest of the world is refusing to pay its share of the bill. ICANN last week proposed a budget of $15.8m for next year, nearly twice as much as its current annual expenditure."
Due to lack of funding... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Due to lack of funding... (Score:5, Insightful)
There would be no real problem with ICANN if there was a rational process for appointing it. The problem here is that a constitution designed for a benevolent dictator is now in the hands of a group of people with the outlook of a US CEO.
This is the sort of thing that happened at the New York Stock Exchange.
Re:Due to lack of funding... (Score:5, Insightful)
Somebody at ICANN needs to wise up, and stop trying so many power grabs. They should be delegating as much as possible to the regional/country authorities. Instead they seem to be on a crusade to be the ultimate ruling body on all matters relating to the Internet. And yet, they have shown they barely have the strength to stand up to a company like VeriSign.
Re:Due to lack of funding... (Score:4, Insightful)
While I'm never part of the tinfoil hat crowd, it does make me concerned when the most free form of media becomes more and more in control of one country.
Re:Due to lack of funding... (Score:2)
Part of the problem is that we have become used to any countries at all
controlling the infrastructure. CENTR is no more trustworthy than
ICANN or the ITU. The world's governments have recognized that the "internet"
is an actual space, and they are acting in the way that governments always do
- by asserting control.
Frontier is, by definition, ungoverne
Re:Due to lack of funding... (Score:2)
Re:Due to lack of funding... (Score:1)
Re:Due to lack of funding... (Score:3, Insightful)
Personally, I think everyone should refuse to pay ICANNs budget. But I believe that the US govt. has assumed control. In which case, I certainly understand everyone else refusing to pay.
My personal feeling is that the rest of the world should get together and create their own equivalent. Then the US could join as an equ
Re:Due to lack of funding... (Score:4, Insightful)
Noob. The Web (invented by Tim Berners-Lee) != the internet.
The US *did* invent the internet: Google for Arpanet (and of course Al Gore's contribution ;-)
Re:Due to lack of funding... (Score:2)
[The Republican party invented the *lie* that Gore claimed to have invented the Internet and the media were overjoyed to fan the flames. Gore appears to
Re:Due to lack of funding... (Score:5, Interesting)
And we Brits invented electricity, the steam engine, television and radio. So we should have the right to control them.
Your claims are actually way off. The Internet protocols were developed in the US, but if the Web had appeared later than it did it would probably have used the OSI stack which was largely the result of work in the UK.
Sure there are technical differences between TCP/IP and OSI, TCP/IP might even have some advantages. But to claim that there would be no computer networking without the US is simply untrue.
Most coutries grow out of this type of weenie size measurement. We grew out of it, you should try it too. Your type of thinking is the reason you guys are currently up to your ass in the Iraq quagmire, that and the fact that your incompetent "President" got taken by a ride by Iranian intelligence. If you were not such suckers for the weenie size rhetoric you would never have elected him in the first place. But then again of course you never did.
Hah... (Score:4, Funny)
"grew out"? No...got too old... (Score:1)
Besides, it ain't just the protocols...it was the original and still major location of infrastructure.
Re:Due to lack of funding... (Score:5, Insightful)
That's right. Anyone who tells you it existed before that is lying.
Those fish that give you electric shocks only evolved the skill after stealing the idea from the Brits.
Mother Nature, you owe UK plc humungous amounts of money for your unauthorised use of electricity in your 'thunder' and 'lightning' services.
Your type of thinking is the reason you guys are currently up to your ass in the Iraq quagmire
Yeah, I'm glad that there aren't any British troops in Iraq too. *cough*
that and the fact that your incompetent "President" got taken by a ride by Iranian intelligence.
Call me a sceptic, but I see this as more like the WMD thing "not being as good an excuse to invade Iraq as we'd hoped".
And I can't be arsed going into much depth about Tony Blair, save that he either believes the bullshit put out before, during and "after" the war, which makes him an idiot. Or alternatively, that he previously went along with the Iraq thing to preserve Britain's influence with the US; except that it's obvious now that Britain only has influence when they do what the US want them to do- i.e. they *don't* have any influence, and Tony Blair is still behaving like the US's dementedly loyal poodle.
Being a sceptic, I went along with the second explanation, and it's only recently dawned on me how incompetent and one-dimensional Tony Blair is.
Oh, and I am a "Brit" too if you want to call me that.
Re:Due to lack of funding... (Score:2)
Historians of the Bush "Presidency" are divided between the incompetent fool theory and the incompetent liar theory.
Re:Due to lack of funding... (Score:1)
Re:Due to lack of funding... (Score:1)
The first steam engine was invented in Greece in the 1st century as a toy. Denis Papin (French) build a very notable one in 1679. James Watts is primary credited and he was born in Scotland.
And electricity... please the ancient Greeks rubbed fur together to get static shock.
The only things the brits invented was boiled food.
Well, really gobs of stuff, but you hardly can have cr
Re:Due to lack of funding... (Score:1)
Re:Due to lack of funding... (Score:1)
Not actually a steam engine. You are correct about Papin, however. The British have invented a number of things, notably the electronic computer. Often people attribute inventions incorrectly and it becomes received wisdom (e.g. Bell and the telephone), though.
With regard to boiling food in Britain, primarily that is England, and was only really the case in the 20th century. If you look at recipes up to and including the 19th cent
Re:Due to lack of funding... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Due to lack of funding... (Score:1)
<homer on> Well my friend, as an American I can tell you that after just looking in my pants I am still awe struck by the size. Bigger is better and I think ICANN should double it's budget. Now if you will excuse me I'm going to go biggy-size my Happymeal for lunch and go surf the big American internet were 90% of it is written in American.
You brits can keep you electricity and television. We h
Electricity??? Wow! (Score:1)
<emotion>
<sarcastic>Li
</emotion>
Re:Due to lack of funding... (Score:1)
And we Brits invented electricity, the steam engine, television and radio. So we should have the right to control them.
Well, your claims here are a bit exagerated.
250BC - Iraq (battery)
1600 William Gilbert - England
1752 Ben Frankilin, US
Faraday - England
Galvani - Italian
Volta - Italian
Ampere - French
Ohm - German
Tesla - AC Generator
Edison - Light bu
Re:Due to lack of funding... (Score:2)
We also invented sarcasm.
The British claim to have 'invented' those ideas is at least as good as the claim that the US invented computer networking.
Re:Due to lack of funding... (Score:1)
We also invented sarcasm.
Unfortunately, this revolutionary new technology was of not feasible for use online until on 1982-09-19 an American invented the emoticon and was restricted to use by the BBC. :-)
The British claim to have 'invented' those ideas is at least as good as the claim that the US invented computer networking.
Claiming to have invented the internet is not the same as claiming to have invented computer networking; however, the US clearly holds the claim to the internet and pro
Re:Grew out of it? (Score:1)
Re:Due to lack of funding... (Score:2)
Re:Due to lack of funding... (Score:2)
Or grammar and spelling skills, apparently.
Re:Dr. Evil (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Dr. Evil (Score:5, Insightful)
In related news... (Score:2)
16$ millions (Score:1)
ICANN.... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:ICANN.... (Score:2, Interesting)
As for IANA... what the f*** do they need with 5.8mil? They really don't do hardly anything. They don't host root name servers or run any part
Question about ICANN's place in the world (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm not getting something. Why would a (I presume) for-profit corporation like ICANN be preferable to a system controlled by governments? Honest question, I'm really curious. What does ICANN offer that this ITU doesn't?
Re:Question about ICANN's place in the world (Score:2)
They fall under US jurisdiction.
Re:Question about ICANN's place in the world (Score:2)
Re:Question about ICANN's place in the world (Score:5, Insightful)
Personally, I don't really want to see the Internet become an issue that gets rolled into trade negotiations. The Europeans don't want to see ICANN folded into under the wings of the ITU. But they are fed up with the ways things are being run at ICANN, and holding up funding is just a temporary tactic designed to try and bring about some change at ICANN.
What if ICANN vanished? (Score:5, Interesting)
Why not the UN? Do you have a major problem with the way that telephone numbers or satelite orbitals are allocated?
The UN already decides whether a 'country' TLD should be created. The RFC deliberately ceedes that decision to the ISO country code committee. That is how Palestine has a country code.
Very little would change if ICANN disappeared entirely. The IANA function is the sort of thing that could and should have been done using a database with a web interface. There really is not that much to assigning code points. OSI and Web services both have much better schemes (OIDs, URIs).
The country codes would be managed in pretty much the same way as they are today by the same people. There would be no new non country TLDs but none of the new ones have been remotely successful. The holdup on services like the domain name waitlist would end but that will happen anyway.
About all that would change is that the ICANN staff would not get paid and the farce of the ICANN conferences in obscure parts of the world would end.
About the only thing that would change is that as an international treaty organization the ITU could not be sued.
ICANN does actually have a point about the root servers. Only four of them survived the DDoS attack. Of the nine that went under some were pretty respectable. Others are worse than useless. The Internet depends on these servers, there is no excuse not to operate them at telco level reliability.
The ITU is going to absorb ICANN in the end. It is just a matter of time.
Re:What if ICANN vanished? (Score:1, Troll)
Re:What if ICANN vanished? (Score:1)
Re:What if ICANN vanished? (Score:2)
Re:Question about ICANN's place in the world (Score:2)
I'd like to see a list of the biggest financial backers of the UN. I'd be willing to bet that the lion's share of funding comes from North American and Western Europe. The ITU's
Re:Question about ICANN's place in the world (Score:2)
Re:Question about ICANN's place in the world (Score:1)
Re:Question about ICANN's place in the world (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Question about ICANN's place in the world (Score:2)
My view is that (although ICANN has been doing an okay job) infrastructure (like the Internet) is too important to entrust to a (for-profit) company. Of course, any organization can mess up, but if it's for profit, you know for sure you
Re:Question about ICANN's place in the world (Score:2)
In fact, for IP allocation, there *must* be a monopoly party keeping track of the central database, because the net was designed with the assumption that IPs would be organizationally unique. If you have two different parties bo
Re:Question about ICANN's place in the world (Score:1)
In the present case, the work that is to be done is not a product development but mainly administrative tasks. For the administrative tasks you would simply pick a company that could do the be
Re:Question about ICANN's place in the world (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually, ICANN is a non-profit according to their website [icann.org]. I'm guessing they want to jack up their salaries 20 fold and the easiest way is to try and hold everyone at gunpoint.
Re:Question about ICANN's place in the world (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Question about ICANN's place in the world (Score:4, Insightful)
Why would a (I presume) for-profit corporation like ICANN be preferable to a system controlled by governments?
If you don't like what the corporation is doing, you can stop paying. Try that with government.
Re:Question about ICANN's place in the world (Score:4, Informative)
And then you also lose the service.
ICANN is not quite in the same league as, say, newspapers. They provide services that cannot really be provided by more than one organization. You can't just switch. Therefore, competition won't work. I would say that government regulation is better than no control.
Re:Question about ICANN's place in the world (Score:2)
Re:Question about ICANN's place in the world (Score:2)
I'm not trying to promote a political view here, I'm just making a point.
Re:Question about ICANN's place in the world (Score:1)
However you have outlined a good point with ICANN, it's not a "normal" corporate situation where you can simply buy the services of a competitor. The enemy is ICANN's autocracy here, not whether or not it's a government or corporate institution.
Re:Question about ICANN's place in the world (Score:2)
Now it USED to be an independent body. It was getting into trouble because it wasn't obeying it's constitution and holding elections. This changed around 1990 or so, when the US govt. recognized it. Since then nobody's said anything about elections. I believe that the standing board voted to modify their constitution so that election
Re:Question about ICANN's place in the world (Score:2)
$15 million (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:$15 million (Score:3, Interesting)
Makes you wonder whether CENTR is getting kickbacks from Verisign.
Better off (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Better off (Score:1, Insightful)
The only problem with the UN?: The fact that the world's richest country refuses to pay the money it owes and has treaty obligations to hand-over to fund the UN.
The reason? As Iraq as shown: The US doesn't honour it's own Constituion (see the election of El Presidente Dublya) nor international treaties: not even the Geneva convention.
Re:Better off (Score:2)
The fact is, for the past several years, we haven't been playing by the rules.
Re:Better off (Score:1)
Two Words: (Score:1)
Re:Better off (Score:2)
Actually most of the money has already been paid.
Although folk are moderating this point as flamebait, it is very relevant. There is a lot of complaining in the US about the UN from people who resent any check on US power. The most extreeme version of this being the black helicopter crowd who believe the UN is bent on world domination.
In prac
Re:Better off (Score:2, Interesting)
Everyone has flaws (Score:2)
Re:Everyone has flaws (Score:1)
Re:Everyone has flaws (Score:1)
What I was replying to:
The only problem with the UN?: The fact that the world's richest country refuses to pay the money it owes and has treaty obligations to hand-over to fund the UN.
My point was that the UN doesn't just have "one problem." No group that is made up of people has only _one_ problem. (unless the problem is "that it's made up of flawed _people_.")
The UN isn't made up of magical perfect beings who are right all the time and would be perfect to take over for ICANN, and the US not paying t
Re:Better off (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:Better off (Score:1)
Good (Score:5, Insightful)
The internet will be fine.. (Score:3, Funny)
Open source? (Score:3, Interesting)
Peace
Re:Open source? (Score:1)
As for a community-based DNS system, its just a bit expensive to run a server that takes that much traffic. Sure, you can cache and mirror stuff all over the place, but the information has to start somewhere, and you can't have the delay between the root and the millions of community DNS nodes get incred
Re:Open source? (Score:2)
ICANN doesn't run DNS servers (Score:5, Informative)
I would guess that the costs go to pay for engineers who know what they're talking about.
Of course, the ICANN meeting locations [icann.org] look like the typical VP-wants-to-tour-the-world-on-the-company-dollar deal.
However, in general, while ICANN isn't perfect, I'd have to say that they're a lot more The Good Guys than, say, certain other folks...and their entire yearly budget is probably less than what certain other folks (*cough* Verisign) pick up through misleading or netabuse-encouraging sales in a week.
Hmm, what about slashdotting.... (Score:1)
Re:ICANN doesn't run DNS servers (Score:2)
In other news (Score:2, Funny)
Hey (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hey (Score:2)
Wow (Score:3, Insightful)
Could ICANN be committing suicide the way XFree86 did?
ICANN spend money (Score:2)
Mexican stand-off??? (Score:4, Funny)
Two points here. 1. It appears given this letter/slapdown that ICANN now stands for ICANT-because-of-no-money
2. "The Register" has forgotten its political correctness by referring to this problem as a "Mexican stand-off". Wow, the Mexican ambassador is going to be flaming them something fierce :P
Re:Mexican stand-off??? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Mexican stand-off??? (Score:1, Troll)
The Register is a UK web site. In the UK we're not quite as obsessviely politically correct as the US: I suspect it's because we lack the whole history etc around domestic slavery, the civil rights movement etc etc.
ICANN Budget (Score:2, Informative)
Main Points:
monetary contributions from organizations (Score:2)
it is quite confusing for me (so someone can clarify here) that there are overlapp
ICANN, the destination resort (Score:5, Informative)
Be a part of the meeting and enjoy the beauty and hospitality of Kuala Lumpur where the Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC), will be your host. The meeting will take place in the award winning Shangri-La Hotel, Kuala Lumpur. Centrally located in KL's Golden Triangle the meeting venue is centrally located to allow guests easy access to the best of Kuala Lumpur's sights and sounds.
Set against the vibrant backdrop of KL, ICANN Kuala Lumpur will also be an opportunity for you to meet, network and interact with the Malaysian communications and multimedia community and industry.
So book your berth to ICANN Kuala Lumpur by registering early. ...
There's always lots to see and do in Kuala Lumpur. KL really is the city that never sleeps. From late night latte to night clubs, from some of the world's best scuba diving spots to tropical jungle getaways and some of Asia's best golf courses, you'll find yourself spoilt for choice.
They're all like that. The last four were in Rio, Montreal, Carthage, and Rome.
Talk about inefficiency.... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Talk about inefficiency.... (Score:1)
Name change (Score:2, Funny)
-dodges the incoming flames-
It's early..
How ICANN works (Score:2)
I have the solution (Score:4, Funny)
Give the job back to Jon Postel.
Improve efficiency immeasurably.
Internet meetings... (Score:1)
New source of funding? (Score:1)
Re:Michael! Michael! (Score:2)
OTOH, since ICANN is recognized by the US govt., and the US has delegated certain of it's powers to it, calling it a private company is a bit