Showing posts with label North Korea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label North Korea. Show all posts

2018-01-02

Sam Zell: The Importance of Lowering the Corporate Tax Rate (video)

Sam Zell on the importance of lowering the corporate tax rate:

Videos above and below originally published on Aug 18, 2017: Billionaire investor Sam Zell on President Trump’s tax reform plan and the importance of lowering the corporate tax rate.

Sam Zell on how he became successful

Billionaire investor Sam Zell on the North Korean crisis and his new book ‘Am I being too subtle?: Straight Talk from a Business Rebel’--
Sam Zell is the chairman of Equity Group Investments (domain: egizell.com), the private investment firm he founded in 1968, and the chairman of five NYSE companies. He is an entrepreneur and investor who is active in a diverse range of industries, such as energy, manufacturing, logistics, healthcare, and communications, and of course real estate. He lives in Chicago with his wife, Helen.

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DISCLAIMER

2017-11-22

North Korea EMP Attack Threat Assessment, Decoding North Korea (video)

Empty Threat or Serious Danger: Assessing North Korea’s Risk to the Homeland

Homeland Security Committee Hearing streamed LIVE Oct 12, 2017: "North Korea’s recent provocations have raised concerns regarding the extent to which the regime has the capability to threaten the homeland. The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has critical responsibilities to protect the homeland from an array of threats including cyber vulnerabilities, nuclear terrorism, and other risks. This hearing examines the risks posed by North Korea to homeland security and recommendations from private experts on how DHS can best prepare and mitigate these risks."

Chairman of the now defunded EMP commission William Graham and its former chief of staff Peter Vincent Pry have said an EMP attack would be devastating. “The result could be to shut down the US electric power grid for an indefinite period, leading to the death within a year of up to 90 per cent of all Americans.” Pry's LIVE testimony begins at 37:00 on the video above.

OPENING STATEMENTS
Rep. Scott Perry (R-PA), Subcommittee Chairman Opening Statement (pdf)

WITNESSES

Mr. Frank J. Cilluffo
Director
Center for Cyber and Homeland Security
The George Washington University
Witness Testimony (pdf)

Mr. Anthony Ruggiero
Senior Fellow
Foundation for Defense of Democracies
Witness Testimony (pdf)

Mr. Patrick R. Terrell
Senior Research Fellow
Center for the Study of Weapons of Mass Destruction
National Defense University
Witness Testimony (pdf)

Mr. Jeff Greene
Senior Director
Global Government Affairs and Policy
Symantec Corporation
Witness Testimony (pdf)

Dr. Peter Vincent Pry
Chief of Staff
Commission to Assess the Threat to the United States From Electromagnetic Pulse Attack
Witness Testimony (pdf) embed below (highlighting added):

Pry has said  that at an altitude of 300 kilometers, the resulting electromagnetic pulse would affect all 48 contiguous states. A warhead fused for an EMP in a satellite or ICBM could work on a timer, via GPS, or using an altimeter. More info: Electromagnetic pulse (EMP) | Wikipedia.org.

The EMP Threat Facing the United States | RiponSociety.org: "America’s 16 Critical Infrastructures range from Water & Wastewater Systems to Food & Agriculture to Nuclear Reactors, Materials & Waste – and all of them depend upon electricity. America’s need for electricity creates the ideal conditions by which an adversary can take advantage of Sun Tzu’s “Supreme art of war,” which is “to subdue your enemy without fighting.” In 1999, with full recognition of this reality and enraged with American policy in the Balkans, Vladimir Lukin (the head of the Russian State Duma’s Foreign Affairs Committee) threatened a U.S. Congressional delegation by stating: “If we really wanted to hurt you with no fear of retaliation, we would launch a Submarine-launched Ballistic Missile (SLBM), [and] we would detonate a nuclear weapon high above your country and shut down your power grid.” See also: Trump warned of 'devastating EMP attack' | washingtonexaminer.com.

North Korea ‘Decoders’ Are Sounding Alarms

North Korea boasts about its nuclear weapons program by releasing photos and videos of its missiles. But in them are tiny clues to their true capability. A team of U.S. analysts, working outside the government, shows how they decode these images to determine when North Korea is bluffing – and when it is showing true power. Jeffrey Lewis's research is funded by Middlebury Institute at Monterey's Center for Nonproliferation Studies. The Wall Street Journal (wsj.com) video above published Oct 5, 2017.

Domain: ArmsControlWonk.com  | Twitter: @ArmsControlWonk


2017-10-14

Tech Review | Why Qualcomm $QCOM Seeks China Ban of $AAPL iPhones

Tech Review (TR 2017-10-14)--Domain Mondo's weekly review of tech news with commentary, analysis and opinion: Features • 1) Why Qualcomm $QCOM Seeks Ban in China of Apple $AAPL iPhones, 2) Jamie Dimon Says 'Stupid' Bitcoin Investors Will Pay the Price, 3) Investing: End of the Week--Stocks Close Off Record Highs, How to Minimize Investment Returns, 5) ICYMI Tech News.

1) Why Qualcomm $QCOM Seeks Ban in China of Apple $AAPL iPhones:

Bloomberg.com video above published Oct 13, 2017: Qualcomm Inc. filed lawsuits in China seeking to ban the sale and manufacture of iPhones in the country, the chipmaker’s biggest shot at Apple Inc. so far in a sprawling and bitter legal fight. Bloomberg's Ian King reports on "Bloomberg Markets."

2) Jamie Dimon Says 'Stupid' Bitcoin Investors Will Pay the Price

Bloomberg.com video published Oct 13, 2017: JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon comments on bitcoin during a panel discussion at the annual meeting of the Institute of International Finance in Washington.

3) Investing
End of the Week: Stocks close off record highs as earnings season kicks into full gear | cnbc.com Oct 13, 2017: "The major indexes hit intraday records before closing lower as earnings season kicked into full gear, with JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup reporting results. Wall Street also set its sights on economic data, with the release of unemployment and inflation data sets."

How to Minimize Investment Returns: "Long ago, Sir Isaac Newton gave us three laws of motion, which were the work of genius. But Sir Isaac’s talents didn’t extend to investing: He lost a bundle in the South Sea Bubble, explaining later, “I can calculate the movement of the stars, but not the madness of men.” If he had not been traumatized by this loss, Sir Isaac might well have gone on to discover the fourth law of motion: For investors as a whole, returns decrease as motion increases ... To get very specific, the Dow increased from 65.73 to 11,497.12 in the 20th century, and that amounts to a gain of 5.3 percent compounded annually. (Investors would also have received dividends, of course.) To achieve an equal rate of gain in the 21st century, the Dow will have to rise by Dec. 31, 2099, to — brace yourself — precisely 2,011,011.23. But I’m willing to settle for 2,000,000; six years into this century, the Dow has gained not at all."--Warren Buffett, Berkshire’s Annual Report (p18) February 28, 2006.

4) ICYMI Tech News:

-- John Poole, Editor, Domain Mondo  

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DISCLAIMER

2017-03-07

$SNAP Just Snapped, Global Market Volatility Increases, EU Doomed?

 NYSE: SNAP

Snap Inc. (NYSE: SNAP) stock price fell Monday, March 6, 2017 (see chart above), erasing all of its post-IPO gains and fell back beneath $24.00, the price that it opened at last Thursday.

UPDATE March 7, 2017: $SNAP Closes Down 24% Since Monday's Open:
 NYSE: SNAP

Markets Fall as Volatility Increases Across the Globe | moneymorning.com: "SNAP stock fell more than 12% after an advocacy group representing large institutional investors approached several stock market index providers. The advocacy group asked to bar companies that fail to provide voting rights to shareholders on the open market from their stock benchmarks."

What else is bothering markets?
Geopolitical risks from Washington, D.C. to the EU to China to North Korea. Here are two views of the building crisis in the European Union (EU):

Farage: The EU is dying before our very eyes

Video above published Mar 6, 2017, by FoxBusiness.com: Nigel Farage, former UK Independence Party leader, on what to expect from President Trump's meeting with German Chancellor Angela Merkel and the state of play in the upcoming elections in the Netherlands and France.

The European Union is facing a threat to its very existence

Video above published Mar 6, 2017, by The Economist | Economist.com: The Treaty of Rome was signed 60 years ago this month. But can European leaders make the EU appealing to a new generation of more sceptical voters?

In addition, the Fed's FOMC appears set for an interest rate increase at its next meeting March 14-15, and some Wall Street investors are in addict-like withdrawal from 8+ years of ZIRP.

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DISCLAIMER

2016-08-04

US Court of Appeals Decision re: ICANN & Iran, Syria, North Korea ccTLDs

28 U.S.C. § 1610 (g)(3): Exceptions to the immunity from attachment or execution"(3) Third-party joint property holders. - Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to supersede the authority of a court to prevent appropriately the impairment of an interest held by a person who is not liable in the action giving rise to a judgment in property subject to attachment in aid of execution, or execution, upon such judgment."
Embedded below is the full decision of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, August 2, 2016, which affirmed the judgment of the U.S. District Court that the ccTLDs of Iran, Syria, and North Korea are unattachable under District of Columbia (D.C.) law.

The Court of Appeals, while assuming arguendo that the ccTLDs were attachable property, nonetheless relied upon 28 USC §1610(g)(3)--quoted above--in its opinion at pages 28-29:
"We assume without deciding that the ccTLDs the plaintiffs seek constitute “property” under the FSIA and, further, that the defendant sovereigns have some attachable ownership interest in them. Nonetheless, pursuant to the terrorist activity exception, the court has the “authority” to “prevent appropriately the impairment of an interest held by a person who is not liable in the action giving rise to a judgment”—i.e., we are expressly authorized to protect the interests of ICANN and other entities. 28 U.S.C. § 1610(g)(3). Because of the enormous third-party interests at stake—and because there is no way to execute on the plaintiffs’ judgments without impairing those interests—we cannot permit attachment." (emphasis added)
While the Appellants have options to seek review en banc by the Court of Appeals, and even review by the U.S. Supreme Court, our analysis and opinion is that this is a well-reasoned decision that removes the "wild card" referenced in the Domain Mondo News Review and Litigation Report, July 31, 2016.

Embed below is the Court of Appeals decision Weinstein v. Iran et al (highlighting added):


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DISCLAIMER

2016-06-03

ICANN Pending Litigation and IRP Status Report as of 1 June 2016

As of June 1, 2016, all pending litigation and Independent Review Processes (IRPs) involving the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), a California non-profit corporation, deal with ICANN's problematic new gTLDs program, with the exception of a pending U.S. Court of Appeals decision concerning ccTLDs of IRAN (.IR), Syria (.SY), and North Korea (.KP)--see Ben Haim et al below:

Pending ICANN Litigation:
  • DotConnectAfrica Trust v. ICANN and ZA Central Registry (ZACR) - action filed in United States District Court for the Central District of California at Los Angeles (D.C. No. 2:16-cv-00862-RGK-JC) - Interlocutory Appeal filed by ICANN, United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, Case No. 16-55693 - pending Motion to Reconsider and Vacate Preliminary Injunction, District Court hearing June 6, 2016 - Issue: new gTLD .AFRICA.

Independent Review Processes (IRP), ICANN Status Update, 1 June 2016 (pdf):


According to ICANN, the Independent Review Process (IRP) "is a process by which any person materially affected by a decision or action by the Board that he or she asserts is inconsistent with the Articles of Incorporation or Bylaws may submit a request for independent review of that decision or action. (See Bylaws, Art. IV, § 3.) In order to be materially affected, the person must suffer injury or harm that is directly and causally connected to the Board's alleged violation of the Bylaws or the Articles of Incorporation, and not as a result of third parties acting in line with the Board's action." 

In addition, there are pending Cooperative Engagement Processes (CEP):


Further info is available at: 

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DISCLAIMER

2016-01-04

Internet ccTLDs Are Not Property Subject To Attachment Says US Gov

"No government owns or controls the root level of the Internet. Nor does ICANN or any other single entity. The Internet functions because network operators worldwide have voluntarily configured their computer systems to adhere to common and trusted technical protocols, naming conventions, and address systems. These features are developed and vetted collaboratively by public and private stakeholders, adopted by consensus on a global scale, and administered jointly by stakeholders for the good of the entire global Internet community. The United States has long been the leading proponent of this self-regulatory, decentralized, trust-based, multistakeholder model of Internet governance, which ICANN exemplifies."--from the U.S. Amicus Curiae Brief, infra (emphasis added)

Screenshot from Weinstein et al v Iran et al - U.S. Amicus Curiae Brief filed in DC Circuit Court of Appeals

Above: Screenshot from Weinstein et al v Iran et al - U.S. Amicus Curiae Brief filed in DC Circuit Court of Appeals, Filed: Dec 29, 2015 (USCA Case #14-7193)--excerpts below (emphasis added):

QUESTIONS PRESENTED "This brief addresses whether country-code top-level domains [ccTLDs] are the “property of” or “assets of” the defendant foreign states within the meaning of the FSIA and TRIA and whether Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 69 authorizes attachment here."

ARGUMENT 
I. Country-Code Top-Level Domains [ccTLDs] Are Not “Property of” or “Assets of” a Foreign State Under the FSIA or TRIA:
A. Country-Code Top-Level Domains Are Not Naturally Characterized as “Property” or “Assets” Under Federal Law
B. Country-Code Top-Level Domains Are Not Owned by a Foreign State Within the Meaning of the FSIA or TRIA 
II. Rule 69 Does Not Permit Attachment Here

"... Plaintiffs seek to attach alleged property interests [ccTLDs] of Iran, Syria, and North Korea in certain aspects of the Internet’s global name and address system. Plaintiffs have attempted to effectuate that attachment by serving writs of execution on ICANN, a non-profit California corporation that, among other things, facilitates the technical operation of the Internet’s name and address system. This case involves two features of that system: IP addresses and domain names..."

"... If a U.S. court were to order the attachments the plaintiffs seek, it would not merely threaten disruption of the global Internet for millions who bear no fault for plaintiffs’ injuries. It would also derail vital foreign policy efforts of the United States, destabilizing international confidence in ICANN and providing ammunition to foreign states who argue that the keys to the Internet belong in governmental hands. The result would be an Internet that is less stable, secure, and free—to the detriment of users worldwide. Accordingly, the district court’s order quashing the writs of attachment should be affirmed..."

"... At a minimum, there is no reason to believe that Congress intended the terms “property” and “assets” in Section 1610 of the FSIA or TRIA to encompass anything of this kind. In this Court, property ownership under these statutes is governed by federal common law. See Heiser, 735 F.3d at 940-41... A country-code top-level domain is unlike any conventional form of property... none of these sources suggests that country-code top-level domains constitute property. To the contrary, a foundational 1994 Internet governance policy statement, still regarded by the Internet community as authoritative, explicitly rejects efforts to assert property rights in such domains: “Concerns about ‘rights’ * * * are inappropriate. It is appropriate to be concerned about ‘responsibilities’ and ‘service’ to the community.” See RFC 1591, DNS Structure and Delegation 4-5 (Mar. 1994)... such domains are not the property of anyone. A country-code top-level domain is not “granted” to the government of a country; instead, the management of such a top-level domain is “delegat[ed]” to a local manager to “perform[] a public service on behalf of the Internet community” in the relevant region. RFC 1591, at 2 ... country-code top-level domains are distinct from second-level domains, which are commonly acquired and alienated unilaterally by particular entities or individuals under the laws of a particular country and are therefore more naturally characterized as personal property. Indeed, in certain circumstances, federal law treats second-level domain-name registrations as property for some purposes. See, e.g., 15 U.S.C. § 1125(d)(2) (civil in rem action under trademark law) ... Although ICANN is within the reach of U.S. courts, the global Internet exists without regard to U.S. law ... As a technological matter, nothing prevents an entity outside [or inside] the United States from publishing its own root zone file and persuading the operators of the Internet’s name servers to treat that version as authoritative instead ... As we have explained, some foreign states already oppose the multi-stakeholder model of Internet governance generally and ICANN in particular. It is not difficult to imagine that a court-ordered change to the authoritative root zone file at the behest of private plaintiffs would prompt members of the global Internet community to turn their backs on ICANN for good. Such a change would immediately be cited by the countries who advocate full governmental control over the domain name system as evidence that ICANN should not be administering the system ...  Any attempted attachment would thus likely be fruitless in the end, because the putative “property” plaintiffs seek cannot meaningfully be used to offset a judgment. But the result would be devastating for ICANN, for the multi-stakeholder model of Internet governance, and for the freedom and stability of the Internet as a whole ...  "

"... If country-code top-level domains were property at all, these domains would be most analogous to the corpus of a public trust administered by ICANN for the benefit of the global Internet community. In effect, ICANN serves as a trustee of the Internet’s unique names and numbers in service to all Internet users. Each local manager of a country-code top-level domain, in turn, effectively functions as the local agent of ICANN in the relevant regional Internet community. It makes no difference for these purposes that, according to plaintiffs (Br. 12-15), the local managers of the .ir, .sy, and .kp domains include government instrumentalities. In their capacity as managers of country-code top-level domains, they exercise responsibility delegated from ICANN on behalf of the Internet community as a whole. ICANN’s policies reflect this understanding. ICANN expressly treats the manager of each country-code top-level domain as a “trustee for the domain on behalf of the national and global Internet communities.”13 The manager of such a domain is “performing a public service on behalf of the Internet community.” RFC 1591, at 2. Other statements of Internet governance principles likewise describe the roles of ICANN and country-code top-level domain managers in terms of a trust relationship: “The designated manager is the trustee of the top-level domain...

"... The Syrian government requested in 2010 that ICANN redelegate the .sy domain to a new local manager. ICANN did not treat that request as dispositive merely because it came from the Syrian government. Instead, ICANN analyzed various “public-interest criteria for eligibility,” including the views of “all ten of the private [Internet Service Providers] that operate in the country,” and stressed that the request would be considered in light of “ICANN’s core mission of ensuring the stable and secure operation of the Internet’s unique identifier systems.” Ibid.19 When the roles of ICANN and the managers of country-code top-level domains are understood by analogy to trust principles, it is clear that the defendant foreign states have no beneficial ownership interest subject to attachment under the FSIA or TRIA.20. Under well-settled principles, the corpus of a trust is not subject to attachment to satisfy the debts of the trustee or a trustee’s agent. “If property is held in trust, the trustee has a nonbeneficial interest... the Executive Branch and Congress have repeatedly expressed the commitment of the United States to the multi-stakeholder model of Internet governance and have emphasized the importance of this model to maintaining a stable, open, and decentralized Internet that is free from governmental control. Sovereign beneficial ownership of countrycode top-level domains is anathema to this model and these goals ....”

source: Weinstein et al v Iran and ICANN - U.S. Amicus Curiae Brief (pdf)

Oral Argument is scheduled for January 21, 2016

See also: Ben Haim v. Islamic Republic of Iran; Calderon-Cardona v. Democratic People's Republic of Korea; Rubin v. Islamic Republic of Iran; Stern v. Islamic Republic of Iran; Weinstein v. Islamic Republic of Iran; Wyatt v. Syrian Arab Republic (ICANN page with links to documents filed)




DISCLAIMER

2015-08-29

Are ccTLDs, Country Code Top-level Domains, Subject to Attachment?

"ICANN controls the operation of these top level domains and maintains substantial rights over them through its operation of the DNS, control of the Root Zone Database, and authority to redelegate Iran’s top level domains. ICANN claims that it has never entered into any type of agreement with Iran relating to its country code top level domains, and has never obtained funds or contributions relating to these country-code top level domains. (24.4-24.5). But that is impossible. Either ICANN or one of its predecessors in interest necessarily conveyed those top level domains to Iran for an indefinite period and for Iran’s indefinite use and enjoyment while retaining control over the Root Zone Database and maintaining authority to redelegate the domains. Absent such a conveyance by ICANN to Iran, there is no rational explanation (ICANN offers none) for the present state of affairs."--Excerpt from Plaintiffs' brief, infra, emphasis added)
Plaintiffs, on August 26, 2015, filed their brief in the ICANN litigation concerning whether ccTLDs (Country Code Top-Level Domains), and specifically those of Iran (.IR), Syria and North Korea, are subject to legal attachment in order to satisfy a civil judgment (ICANN is Third Party Garnishee-Appellee): 

Re: Ben Haim v. Islamic Republic of Iran; Calderon-Cardona v. Democratic People's Republic of Korea; Rubin v. Islamic Republic of Iran; Stern v. Islamic Republic of Iran; Weinstein v. Islamic Republic of Iran; Wyatt v. Syrian Arab Republic
(in United States District Court for the District of Columbia) Appeal No. 14-7193
Screenshot of Appellants Brief cover
Screenshot of Appellants Brief cover

ISSUES PRESENTED:
  1. Whether country-code top level domain names and IP addresses assigned to the judgment debtors are property or might be property subject to attachment under District of Columbia law, including D.C. CODE § 16-544? 
  2. Whether the district court abused its discretion in failing to allow discovery so that it could better determine whether country-code top level domain names and IP addresses assigned to the judgment debtors are property or might be property subject to attachment under District of Columbia law, including D.C. CODE § 16-544?
  3. Whether this Court should certify the fundamental questions in this appeal, which are important questions of first impression turning solely on the proper interpretation of District of Columbia statute, to the District of Columbia Court of Appeals for its resolution?
The legal argument of Plaintiffs-Appellants is summarized in the index below:

Screenshot of Appellants Argument Index
Screenshot of Appellants Argument Index
The outcome of this appeal could have ramifications upon the IANA stewardship transition and ICANN's U.S. jurisdiction. Oral arguments have not yet been scheduled.

More information: Litigation Documents arranged by initial filing date in descending order.




DISCLAIMER

2014-12-19

North Korea, Sony Cyber Attack, Sanctions?

What is to be done about North Korea?

FBI — Update on Sony Investigation: "... the FBI now has enough information to conclude that the North Korean government is responsible for these actions. While the need to protect sensitive sources and methods precludes us from sharing all of this information, our conclusion is based, in part, on the following:
"Technical analysis of the data deletion malware used in this attack revealed links to other malware that the FBI knows North Korean actors previously developed. For example, there were similarities in specific lines of code, encryption algorithms, data deletion methods, and compromised networks. The FBI also observed significant overlap between the infrastructure used in this attack and other malicious cyber activity the U.S. government has previously linked directly to North Korea. For example, the FBI discovered that several Internet protocol (IP) addresses associated with known North Korean infrastructure communicated with IP addresses that were hardcoded into the data deletion malware used in this attack. Separately, the tools used in the SPE attack have similarities to a cyber attack in March of last year against South Korean banks and media outlets, which was carried out by North Korea...."
So far North Korea is the winner. Sony Pictures Entertainment has been bullied into pulling its "offending" movie--completely caving to state sponsored cyber terrorism--so much for free speech and internet freedom.

One thing we know about a bad actor, a bully, a rogue state, is that they are only encouraged by this type of response. Next victim? Another company, an electric utility grid, a nation state that happens to displease the Great Leader, or the internet or DNS itself? ICANN itself was reportedly the subject of a recent cyber attack. So far, the response of the global internet governance community has been less than satisfactory.

-- John Poole, Editor, Domain Mondo



2014-03-25

ICANN, Internet Governance, The Most Important Domainer Question

Mike Berkens @thedomains has asked the right, and most important, question for most domain name owners and investors going forward --

ICANN: Important Corrections To Inaccuracies and Misconceptions Regarding U.S. Announcement | TheDomains.com: "My issue is the .com/.net contract that is up in 2018. What happens with that? As we know under the the last Verisign contract it was the US Department of Commerce that stepped up at the last moment to stop the 4 out of 6 year rate increases of 7%. Who would overlook that contract in the new ICANN?"

.com - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: "...The domain name com is a top-level domain (TLD) in the Domain Name System of the Internet. Its name is derived from the word commercial,[1]indicating its original intended purpose for domains registered by commercial organizations. However, eventually the distinction was lost when .com, .org and .net were opened for unrestricted registration. The domain was originally administered by the United States Department of Defense, but is today operated by Verisign, and remains under ultimate jurisdiction of U.S. law.[2][3][4]..."

I really do not care what happens to ICANN since they have proven to be a poor steward of the internet domain name ecosystem, irresponsible, unaccountable, beholden to special interests and insiders, and very hostile to domain name owners and investors -- enabling and authorizing domain name "theft" a/k/a abusive UDRPs, irresponsibly flooding the market with dot whatevers, etc., but I do care about dot com. Whatever happens going forward, dot com MUST remain under the ultimate jurisdiction of US law, and the registry contract MUST continue to be approved by the US government (US Department of Commerce).

The Bottom Line: in light of the NSA abuses (ignore official denials, the Snowden revelations led to the NTIA announcement), and resulting damage to trust in the US government, US technology, and US tech companies, the world no longer trusts the US Department of Commerce to continue its benign stewardship role over the internet. ICANN has been maneuvering since last year to cut out the US government entirely and grab all of the power of control for itself alone--see: http://www.circleid.com/posts/20140221_icanns_uncertain_state_2014/ 

ICANN must be, and I believe will be, stopped in its attempted power grab. Thankfully, very capable people are already aware and have been talking openly about this at the ICANN meeting now in progress in Singapore (read transcript of March 21 meeting). I expect more will be said, discussed, and proposed at NETmundial in Brazil next month.  I do not know if ICANN will even be around a couple of years from now, and I certainly do not know who or what organizations will govern the internet. At this point, the only thing I care about is what happens to dot com -- that US legal jurisdiction and US government registry contract approval continue. Everything else is secondary. 

And as for the dot whatevers a/k/a the new gTLDs? For all I care, they can go to hell (most of them are already headed there anyway, or at least some kind of permanent purgatory) -- or give them to North Korea -- I hear Kim Jong-un loves to eat donuts, and who knows, even Frank (perhaps with Dennis Rodman's help) might be able to sell him a dot tattoo too! LOL!





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