Tag: control
Internet Caretaker ICANN To Escape U.S. Control

Internet Caretaker ICANN To Escape U.S. Control

San Francisco (AFP) — The head of the private agency entrusted with running the Internet has said that the group is on course to break free of U.S. oversight late next year.

Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) chief Fadi Chehade expressed his confidence in the move during a press briefing at the opening of the nonprofit organization’s meeting this week in Los Angeles.

“ICANN is in a very solid, confident place today,” Chehade said of its readiness for a ‘post U.S.-government role’ in charge of the Internet addressing system.

The timeline for the shift is months rather than years, according to Chehade.

While cautioning that there was no strict deadline, he said that substantial progress has been made toward ICANN being answerable to a diverse, global group of “stakeholders” and not the just the U.S. government, as has long been the case.

The U.S. government in March of this year announced that it is open to not renewing a contract with ICANN that expires in about 11 months, provided a new oversight system is in place that represents the spectrum of interests and can be counted on to keep the Internet addressing structure reliable.

ICANN plans to hand a proposal fitting the bill to the U.S. Department of Commerce next year.

“If the U.S. government is satisfied, they would not renew the contract,” Chehade said.

“There are many people in the community who would like to see we not renew the contract past 2015.”

If U.S. officials are unhappy with the proposal, the contract could be renewed for a short period to allow time for it to be revised.

– Grabs for control –

As the U.S. steps back from overseeing ICANN, states and corporations are grabbing for the reins.

ICANN has gone from being behind the scenes tending to the task of managing website addresses to being center stage in a play for power on the Internet.

“Governments want to exert control over the sweeping transnational power of the Internet that is effecting their policies, politics, social fabric, and/or their economic conditions,” Chehade told AFP just days before the group gathered in Los Angeles to tackle an array of hot issues.

“The other groups are large corporations concerned about security issues,” he continued while discussing forces striving for influence over the organization.

“Therefore, they are stepping in with force to figure out how to reduce potential harm to customers and to their businesses.”

Governance of the Internet will be a high-profile topic at the ICANN 51 meeting that will continue through October 16 in Los Angeles.

U.S. Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker addressed the gathering on Monday, affirming support for ICANN being accountable to the “global multistakeholder community” and not to any single organization.

“Let me be clear about this,” Pritzker said.

“The United States will not allow the global Internet to be co-opted by any person, entity or nation seeking to substitute their parochial world view for the collective wisdom of this community.”

The ICANN 51 agenda includes tackling whether identities of those running websites should be public or whether privacy should be safeguarded and operators true names revealed only with proper court orders.

Another hot topic is the historic roll-out of a vast array of new domain names that has seen controversy over website address endings such as .wine or .gay.

“There is quite a bit of thematic focus on the top-level domain space,” Chehade said, referring to online neighborhoods making debuts.

“ICANN is not in the content policing business; this is not what we do,” he added when asked about potential for some domain operators to allow inappropriate material.

“We just want to make sure the company that gets the domain can deliver on what they say and do it with reliability.”

AFP Photo/Roslan Rahman

Want more political news and analysis? Sign up for our daily email newsletter!

Women Hold Democrats’ Keys To Control Of Senate

Women Hold Democrats’ Keys To Control Of Senate

By David Lightman, McClatchy Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — Women might be the Democrats’ 2014 firewall, the force that holds back a Republican wave that appears to be building toward seizing control of the Senate.

Kentucky Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes and Georgia’s Michelle Nunn won primaries Tuesday and are their states’ Democratic U.S. Senate nominees, joining Sen. Kay Hagan, D-N.C., and other prominent Democratic women as competitive Senate candidates in pivotal battlegrounds.

If Grimes or Nunn could seize Senate seats now held by Republicans, it would greatly help the Democrats offset expected losses elsewhere and perhaps stop the GOP from gaining the net six seats it needs to win majority control.

And if Hagan can fight off a GOP challenge to hold her seat in one of the nation’s most hotly contested races, it would further boost Democratic prospects in what otherwise still looks like a challenging year for the party.

As many as 11 seats now held by Democrats are in play. The primary wins Tuesday by Nunn and Grimes at least allow Democrats to play offense, since both women seek Republican-held seats. They also make it easier for the party and sympathetic interest groups to promote a national, women-oriented message that fires up that important base of support.

The battle for women is emerging on several fronts. Hagan has already made mobilizing women the centerpiece of her re-election strategy, and she’s getting lots of help.

Planned Parenthood Votes plans to focus on North Carolina with a $3.3 million budget of TV ads, canvassing and other outreach. “We’ve run the numbers, and we know how to reach the voters who will help ensure that women’s health champions remain in office,” the group said in a fact sheet on its plans.

In Kentucky, Grimes is expected to wage a strong challenge to Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell as he seeks a sixth term.

Part of the dynamic there might be driven by contrasts in resume and style. McConnell, 72, is a dour tactician, not known for his warmth. Grimes, 35, come across as more energetic.

In Georgia, Nunn will face the winner of a Republican runoff July 22 between businessman David Perdue and Rep. Jack Kingston.

Nunn, 48, has a long resume as a volunteer organization executive. Perdue was the chief executive officer of Reebok and later Dollar General. Kingston, 59, is an 11-term congressional veteran comfortable among chamber of commerce types.

As a backdrop, Democrats are making a dogged push to turn out votes from women. Unmarried women were one-fourth of the 2012 electorate, and they voted 2 to 1 for President Barack Obama. Eleven women won Senate seats, 10 of them Democrats.

Turnout is expected to be lower this year, and Democratic strategists worry that they’ll lose a lot of loyal voters in November.

A memo from Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research, a Democratic firm, and Page Gardner, the president of the Voter Participation Center, an advocacy group, warned last month that women “are unlikely to vote, and less likely to give Democrats big margins, if Democrats are not laser focused on the issues that matter most to them.”

Senate Democrats got the message, pushing for votes on the Paycheck Fairness Act, which would give employees new tools to fight wage discrimination, and a higher minimum wage, which Democrats argue that women disproportionately need.

In an introductory video, Grimes appears with her grandmothers at a dining room table and calls them “two of the strongest women I’ve ever known.” She criticizes McConnell for opposing a minimum wage increase “over and over again, while you became a multimillionaire in public office.”

McConnell counters by having his wife, former Labor Secretary Elaine Chao, as an important campaign surrogate. Last year, she cut a 30-second ad in which she looks directly into the camera with a slight smile.

“Mitch works his heart out to protect Kentucky from Washington’s bad ideas because Mitch loves Kentucky — we love Kentucky,” she says.

In Georgia, Nunn, the daughter of former Sen. Sam Nunn, says in a video that while “I’ve had a lot of people to look up to in my life, at the very top of my list is my grandmother.”

The Kentucky and Georgia races will turn on a long list of factors: loyalty to Obama, disdain for anyone with ties to Washington, views of the Affordable Care Act. But creating a bandwagon for Democratic women might make a big difference — and make it harder for Republicans to win Senate control.

“They just have to get that base excited,” said Kyle Kondik, analyst at Sabato’s Crystal Ball at the University of Virginia.

Democrats are not alone in nominating women.

Four Republicans are regarded as strong candidates for Senate seats: Terri Lynn Land in Michigan, Rep. Shelley Moore Capito in West Virginia, Monica Wehby in Oregon and incumbent Sen. Susan Collins in Maine.

“The fact is that these men don’t understand this struggle and have no idea what a war on women really is,” Land says of Obama and her Democratic rival, Rep. Gary Peters. “I’m a woman. Of course I support equal pay for equal work.”

Photo: Third Way via Flickr

New Jersey Governor’s Plan Would Give Control of Failing Schools to Private Companies

Five failing New Jersey schools may come under control of private companies if a proposal by Governor Chris Christie is approved by the state legislature. The proposal would invite non-profit and for-profit companies to either fix a failing school or launch a new one completely during a five year pilot program. [NJ.com]