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Let the Headlines Speak
Nov 24th, 2012
Daily News
From the Internet
Categories: Today's Headlines;Contemporary Issues

Italy soccer attack stokes fears of anti-Semitism
A brutal attack on fans of English football club Tottenham Hotspur in Rome on Thursday stoked fears in Italy of rising right-wing and anti-Semitic violence. Italy's capital has been rattled by increasing militancy by the extreme right since October, with weekly demonstrations by the neo-fascist youth group Blocco Studentesco often ending in clashes with police.

Second coronavirus death reported
A second person has died from a new respiratory illness similar to the Sars virus, according to the World Health Organization. The WHO said three fresh cases had also been reported bringing the total to six. All are linked to either Saudi Arabia or Qatar. However, one man has been transferred to the UK for treatment.

Thai police fire tear gas at Bangkok anti-government rally
Police have used tear gas against thousands of protesters calling for the overthrow of the prime minister in the Thai capital, Bangkok. At least 10,000 protesters gathered, demonstrating against the government of Yingluck Shinawatra, the sister of the deposed former prime minister.

India counters China map claims in a tit-for-tat move
India is stamping its map on visas given to Chinese visitors, an Indian official said Saturday, after China began issuing passports showing disputed territories as its own. “We have started issuing visas with India’s map as we know it,” said a foreign ministry official, who did not wish to be named, declining to comment further.

Bomb kills 7, targets Shiite religious procession in Pakistan
Seven people died, including three children, in a blast targeting a Shiite religious procession in Pakistan Saturday, police spokesman Khalid Sohail said.

Report: Egyptian 'officers' back anti-Morsi protests
The Egyptian army is beginning to intervene in the public protest against the far-reaching powers President Mohammed Morsi has granted himself, the London-based Arabic newspaper Al-Quds Al-Arabi reported.

Syria says Turkey's bid for NATO missiles "provocative"
Syria on Friday condemned Turkey's request for NATO to deploy Patriot defense missiles near their common border, calling it "provocative", after a spate of clashes there that has raised fear of the Syrian civil war embroiling the wider region.

Susan Rice battles critics as abrasive style takes toll
Susan Rice has had a series of diplomatic triumphs as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. President Barack Obama, an old friend, showed he has her back when last week he publicly challenged her Republican critics over the Benghazi controversy to "go after me" rather than her. She knew former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright from the age of 4.

Forthcoming UN Summit 'Threatens Free and Open Internet': Google's Warning Over Meeting to Update Gl
Nov 24th, 2012
Daily News
Mailonline - Damien Gayle
Categories: Today's Headlines;Contemporary Issues

  • Nations meet next month to decide first update to telecom rules since 1988
  • Google warns it comes amid 'growing backlash on Internet freedom'
  • Warning comes after Russia calls for bigger internet role for UN institutions
  • Internet infrastructure is currently managed by U.S.-based bodies
A forthcoming United Nations-organised conference on communications poses a grave threat to the freedom of the internet, Google has warned.

The Silicon Valley search giant said the December gathering of the UN's International Telecommunications Union comes amid 'a growing backlash on Internet freedom'.

The World Conference on International Communications in Dubai will update global telecom rules for the first time since 1988, and some countries see this as an opportunity to set up new rules for the Internet.

There are fears proposals made by China, Russia and other nations could threaten the open model of Internet governance by giving the UN a greater role.

Oversight of the net's domain name system and technical specifications is currently undertaken by U.S.-based bodies, but some countries want an international organisation to take responsibility.

Google's statement said 'the ITU is the wrong place to make decisions about the future of the Internet' because 'only governments have a voice at the ITU,' including some 'that do not support a free and open Internet.'

'The ITU is also secretive,' Google said. 'The treaty conference and proposals are confidential.'

Google said some proposed treaty changes 'permit governments to censor legitimate speech — or even allow them to cut off Internet access'.

Others, the company warned, 'would require services like YouTube, Facebook, and Skype to pay new tolls in order to reach people across borders.

'This could limit access to information - particularly in emerging markets.'

Google's comments backed the U.S. position, which is that the non-government 'multi-stakeholder' system of the Internet should remain in place.

'Governments alone should not determine the future of the Internet,' the Google blog said. 'The billions of people around the globe that use the Internet, and the experts that build and maintain it, should be included.'

 

The ITU has however said that countries attending the meeting could invite whoever they wise to be part of their delegations at the meeting, the BBC reported.

The Google response comes a week after Russia submitted its proposal to the ITU suggesting the U.S. should have less control over the net, provoking strong reactions from some online activists.

The Russian proposal said: 'Member states shall have equal rights to manage the internet, including in regard to the allotment, assignment and reclamation of internet numbering, naming, addressing and identification resources and to support for the operation and development of basic internet infrastructure.'

Currently, these internet infrastructure matters are dealt with by non-profit bodies ultimately answerable to the U.S. Department of Commerce, but which in effect are suppoed to operate at arm's length from the U.S. government.

Larry Downes, an analyst with the Bell Mason Group consultancy who follows technology issues, said the Russian proposal 'makes explicit' Moscow's desire to bring the Internet under greater control of the UN agency and diminish the role of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, which manages the Internet address system.

'The Russian federation's proposal... would in specific substantially if not completely change the role of ICANN in overseeing domain names and IP addresses,' Downes said in a blog post.

'Of course the Russian Federation, along with other repressive governments, uses every opportunity to gain control over the free flow of information, and sees the Internet as its most formidable enemy.'

U.S. ambassador to the ITU Terry Kramer has already signalled he would not support the proposals from Russia.

He has said the existing institutions have 'functioned effectively and will continue to ensure the health and growth of the internet'.







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