Changing who controls ICANN jeopardizes our presidential election

GURPS

INGSOC
PREMO Member
Changing who controls ICANN jeopardizes our presidential election



Changing who controls the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) so close to our presidential election will jeopardize the results of how you vote on Nov. 8 unless Congress stops this changeover. When the calendar hits Sept. 30, a mere 6 weeks before our election, the United States cannot be assured that if any web site is hacked, the responsible party will be held accountable. We cannot be sure if a web site is a valid. We cannot be sure if one country is being favored over another. These are all the things ICANN is responsible for and has worked perfectly since the Internet was created. Why change it now and so close to the election? Why does that matter to you as a voter?

Take a look at recent cyber activity as it relates to the election. The Democratic National Convention was breached comprising the entire party’s strategy, donor base, and indeed, national convention. Everything the DNC had done to prepare for a moment four years in the making (if not longer) was undermined by a hacker who had been in their system for some time but waited for the optimal moment to spring it on the DNC – opening day of the convention. The FBI and other U.S. agencies, as the headlines blare, suspect Russia is responsible for the hack. Recently, Vladimir Putin went so far as to say, "Does it matter who broke in? Surely what's important is the content of what was released to the public.”

It matters to all of us whether we live in the United States or not, if a hostile country can undermine our democratic process. There is even more alarming evidence this is happening during this election cycle. Russian hackers are suspected of breaching voter registration systems in Illinois and Arizona. Arizona went so far as to shut down the state’s voter registration system for a week. No data was stolen but it was downloaded. As for Illinois, some voter data was stolen!
 

SamSpade

Well-Known Member
PREMO Member
I *am* a little concerned that a body of nations who already block whole sections of the Internet might have any control over ICANN - and could at a stroke, effectively eliminate parts of the Web by dumping Web names.
 

GURPS

INGSOC
PREMO Member
- and could at a stroke, effectively eliminate parts of the Web by dumping Web names.



yes if you remove them from the ROOT Domain Name Servers

*poof* they disappear unless you know the WEB IP Address

most changes are dynamically updated and over time a website would drop out completely
the only counter would be running your own DNS and having people add that to the internet settings - but 99% of the population are clueless or care
 

vraiblonde

Board Mommy
PREMO Member
Patron
I *am* a little concerned that a body of nations who already block whole sections of the Internet might have any control over ICANN - and could at a stroke, effectively eliminate parts of the Web by dumping Web names.

That is a valid concern, alright. Not sure why anyone in America - or any free country - thinks this is a good idea.
 

SamSpade

Well-Known Member
PREMO Member
That is a valid concern, alright. Not sure why anyone in America - or any free country - thinks this is a good idea.

I don't know how it is done in China, but that's one thing we noticed right away over there - NO Facebook and NO YouTube. I gave up looking after a while.
 

GURPS

INGSOC
PREMO Member
I don't know how it is done in China, but that's one thing we noticed right away over there - NO Facebook and NO YouTube. I gave up looking after a while.



I am sure the Great Firewall of China uses its own DNS - but more importantly ALL web traffic goes though a sophisticated web filtering network 1st.
even if you had the IP Address for Facebook - you would not get it




I know this is why Survival blog publishes its Primary and Mirror Site IP Addresses right on the main page ....
 

SamSpade

Well-Known Member
PREMO Member
I am sure the Great Firewall of China uses its own DNS - but more importantly ALL web traffic goes though a sophisticated web filtering network 1st.
even if you had the IP Address for Facebook - you would not get it




I know this is why Survival blog publishes its Primary and Mirror Site IP Addresses right on the main page ....

Our guide in Beijing called it that. He also said they had to update it daily, because people were getting through it every day.

He seemed generally supportive of his government, but I wondered what he thought of a government that he had to outwit to get information the rest of the world gets for free.
 

TruthSayer

New Member
I don't know how it is done in China, but that's one thing we noticed right away over there - NO Facebook and NO YouTube. I gave up looking after a while.

They have their walled garden, we have ours -- how difficult did the government make it to get to wikileaks for a while?
 
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