INTERNET GLOBAL OUTREACH COMES TO NZ
The first Pacific Region Internet global outreach is being held at UNITEC in Auckland from November 7-9 hosted by the Internet Society of New Zealand (ISOCNZ). Representatives of Pacific Basin countries will join with New Zealander's to learn more about the functions of the Internet Corporation of Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN),
Don't waste your time attending. It can all be summed up in one easy (though lengthy) sentence: Pretend to be a "bottom-up" organisation, while installing directors chosen by IBM/MCI - who make huge policy decisions even though they were only supposed to be on the board until properly elected members took their place - installing a UDRP incredibly slanted towards corporates, so they can regain control over a global phenomenon that they had earlier missed the boat on, all the while pretending to be a "technical co-ordination body".
the Asia Pacific Top Level Domain Company and the Asia Pacific Network Information Centre.
The meeting is supported by UNITEC's NZ Centre for Innovation and Entrepreneurship (NZCIE)
Huh? ICANN's got the complete opposite agenda.
and the Internet Users Society of Niue,
A branch of ISOC ?
and has the backing of the United Nations Development Programme,
Buddies of SWIPO, who now can take domain names away from people, and award the to their pals, ignoring important things like free speech and constitutional rights in the process.
the South Pacific Commission, and regional telecommunications enterprises.
The meetings are open to the public and are part of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) global outreach process
Ha ha ha ha ha.
to educate
Educate: "This is what we've decided to do, ignoring everything that everyone has pleaded with us to consider".
and involve the world's citizens in the new organiation's work.
There is no realistic involvement available to Joe Blow Internet User. Don't give us that crap about "world citizens". We know who pulls the strings at ICANN and they don't give a rat's arse about world citizens, apart from making sure they can extract a pound or two of flesh from them.
ICANN is the central coordinating body on global Internet governance.
That's what they've successfully turned themselves into, to the glee of corporations who want to be above sovereign controls. They are SUPPOSED to just be a "technical co-ordination body". That's what it says on their website.
Two of ICANN's constituent organizations will be at the November 7- 9 meeting: the Asia Pacific Top Level Domain Company (APTLD) and the Asia Pacific Network Information Center (APNIC).
APTLD is the regional grouping of County Code Top Level Domains (ccTLD's), for example, dot Korea, dot Japan, dot China, and is a subset of the global ccTLD constituency of all country codes at ICANN. The Asia Pacific Network Information Center (APNIC) is one of three regional NIC's in the world and is responsible for allocating Internet Protocol (IP) addresses to Registries.
Some of the issues that will be discussed:
· The structure of ICANN and its policy development process
· Multilingual Domain Names - non-Latin character sets may be used for Domain Names so that, for example, Chinese ideograms or Japanese Kanji can be used instead of the Latinised versions.
Let me guess... there will be a buffoon or two present? And speaking with apparent knowledge and authority?
· "Best Practice Models" for harmonising practices across the 240 national ccTLD managers.
Jesus. This is crap. We don't need to harmonise practices across ccTLD's. ccTLD practices should reflect the wishes of the citizens of the respective countries. This is all buffoon-speak for letting ICANN get total control of ccTLD operations. You can take your "best practice models" and stick 'em where the sun don't shine. Next thing we'll know, the "best practice model" finally decided upon will a cross between the incredibly anal Australian and Singaporean models, with a few extra buffoonerisms tossed in for good measure, along with the requirement to submit to the severely broken WIPO designed UDRP.
· "At Large" Membership for ICANN
Seemingly useful, to elect some independent voices to the ICANN Board, but as we saw in Yokohama, the board has already changed the rules - reducing the number of At Large directors, and making it possible for the other Directors to remove them if things don't go the way the ICANN controllers want them to.
· What is a NIC and what does it do?
It does what it's supposed to do just fine right now, and doesn't need ICANN or any of it's cronies sticking their noses in and changing things.
Sue Leader - Executive Director ISOCNZ (Internet Society of New Zealand Inc)
Who seems very keen to fly the ICANN flag. Must have caught something off Jimmy and Patrick. I wonder if ISOCNZ members realise just what the ICANN future holds for the Internet? -- Andrew P. Gardner barcelona.com stolen, stmoritz.com stays. What's uniform about the UDRP? We could ask ICANN to send WIPO a clue, but do they have any to spare? Get active: http://www.domain-owners.org http://www.tldlobby.com --------- To unsubscribe from nznog, send email to majordomo(a)list.waikato.ac.nz where the body of your message reads: unsubscribe nznog
participants (2)
-
Andy Gardner
-
Donald Neal