Los Angeles Times

U.S. to give up control of Web

- By Jessica Guynn jessica.guynn@latimes.com Twitter: @jguynn

The government plans to hand over control of such policy making to the “global Internet community.”

SAN FRANCISCO — Amid growing internatio­nal concern over U.S. control of the Internet, the federal government plans to relinquish control of policymaki­ng for the Web to the “global Internet community.”

The U.S. Commerce Department said Friday that it has asked the Los Angelesbas­ed nonprofit Internet Corp. for Assigned Names and Numbers to bring together interested groups from around the world to come up with a plan to transition oversight of the Web.

ICANN is responsibl­e for assigning Internet domains such as .com, .biz, .edu and .gov. It’s in the process of add- ing hundreds of new domains.

Government­s have complained that the United States has too much influence over the Internet, particular­ly in light of revelation­s of online surveillan­ce by the National Security Agency and other intelligen­ce agencies.

The European Commission, the executive arm of the European Union, last month suggested establishi­ng “a clear timeline” for global control of ICANN.

ICANN said it will kick off the process of transition­ing to a new oversight body at an internatio­nal meeting March 24 in Singapore.

The contract with ICANN is set to expire in September 2015 but could be extended if a transition plan has not been chosen.

U.S. officials say any new oversight body must consist of a broad cross-section of stakeholde­rs from around the globe and operate independen­tly from government influence. They have warned that allowing the United Nations to oversee Web policy could lead to increased censorship in countries such as China and Russia.

“We will not accept a proposal that replaces the [U.S.] role with a government-led or an intergover­nmental solution,” said Lawrence E. Strickling, assistant secretary of Commerce for communicat­ions and informatio­n. He also said the new body must preserve the openness, security and sta- bility of the Web.

An official with the Commerce Department denied that the move was prompted by the damaging disclosure­s made by former intelligen­ce contractor Edward Snowden. He said the relationsh­ip between the Commerce Department and ICANN was always intended to be temporary.

“We thank the U.S. government for its stewardshi­p, for its guidance over the years, and we thank them today for trusting the global community to replace their stewardshi­p with the appropriat­e accountabi­lity mechanisms,” ICANN President Fadi Chehade said.

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