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Internet Governance

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No Joke. Kenneth Neil CukierKenneth Neil Cukier covers technology and regulatory issues for The Economist Sometimes events in international relations are funny when they do not mean to be--and such moments usually underscore something serious.

No Joke

In December, authorities in Kazakhstan pulled down the website of British comedian Sacha Baron Cohen, best known to audiences as Ali G. Who Will Control the Internet? As historic documents go, the statement issued by the U.S.

Who Will Control the Internet?

Department of Commerce on June 30 was low-key even by American standards of informality. No flowery language, no fountain-penned signatures, no Great Seal of the United States -- only 331 words on a single page. But the simplicity of the presentation belied the importance of the content, which was Washington's attempt to settle a crucial problem of twenty-first-century global governance: Who controls the Internet? Any network requires some centralized control in order to function.

The global phone system, for example, is administered by the world's oldest international treaty organization, the International Telecommunication Union, founded in 1865 and now a part of the UN family. Internet Governance for Dummies.