---
author:
- Pranesh Prakash
authors:
- Pranesh Prakash
categories:
- Internet governance
citation:
  accessed: 2023-08-16
  author: Pranesh Prakash
  available-date:
    date-parts:
    - - 2012
      - 6
      - 2
    iso-8601: 2012-06-02
    literal: 2012-06-02
    raw: 2012-06-02
  citation-key: prakashWebOur2012
  container-title: Times of India
  issued:
    date-parts:
    - - 2012
      - 6
      - 2
    iso-8601: 2012-06-02
    literal: 2012-06-02
    raw: 2012-06-02
  title: The web of our strife
  type: article-newspaper
  URL: "http://web.archive.org/web/20140623022015/http://www.timescrest.com/opinion/the-web-of-our-strife-8047"
comments:
  hypothesis:
    theme: clean
date: 2012-06-02
engines:
- path: /opt/quarto/share/extension-subtrees/julia-engine/\_extensions/julia-engine/julia-engine.js
keywords:
- CIRP
- Internet governance
- India
license:
  text: CC BY-NC 4.0
  type: creative-commons
  url: "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/"
listing-page: ../press.html
original-url: "http://web.archive.org/web/20140623022015/http://www.timescrest.com/opinion/the-web-of-our-strife-8047"
publication: Times of India
title: The web of our strife
title-block-categories: true
toc-title: Table of contents
---

# The web of our strife

------------------------------------------------------------------------

At the 66th session of the UN General Assembly, India proposed the
formation of a Committee on Internet-Related Policies (CIRP) to address
what it sees as a policy vacuum in internet governance. This CIRP will,
in the view of India's government, address the US domination of internet
policymaking, and make it more democratic and 'multistakeholder'. As an
example of this domination, our government cites the oversight role that
the US government exercises over ICANN, the non-profit corporation that
controls the net's domain name system, as well as the control it exerts
over DNS root servers (with all changes needing to go through the US
Department of Commerce).

But many civil society organisations, technology companies, and even a
few Indian politicians (notably Rajeev Chandrashekar and P Rajeeve),
oppose the CIRP as being a proposal for the UN takeover of internet
governance. The role of nation-states in governing the internet has been
minimal so far. Many attribute the success of the internet to this lack
of interference from governments. They ask why we need to fix something
that is not broken? In effect, why regulate something that clearly works
without such regulation?

It is clear that this status quo will not suffice for many governments.
Various countries - like the US, with its Stop Online Piracy and Cyber
Intelligence Sharing and Protection acts, and India, with our
Information Technology Act and recent Intermediary Guidelines Rules -
look to actively regulate the net. ICANN, supposedly a purely technical
organisation, has got embroiled in policy issues too. This was seen in
the. xxx top-level domain name debacle, where governments tried to
intervene, but ultimately failed. Many such purely domestic regulations,
like SOPA, have international implications. Even India's Intermediary
Guidelines Rules, for instance, require compliance from internet
companies across the world. The US government has seized domain names of
Spanish file-sharing websites that are hosted in Spain, even though they
have been held to be legal there.

So while international forums exist for internetrelated policy
discussions, including the Internet Governance Forum (IGF), they are
limited by a lack of actual power to even so much as recommend policy
positions. Hence there are forums for discussions, but none for
resolving problems. The proposed CIRP seeks to be such a body, "with a
view to ensuring coordination and coherence in crosscutting
internet-related global issues".

Besides, apart from domestic legislation starting to encroach upon the
international nature of the internet, there's another issue: that of
countries like Russia and China pushing for a less 'multistakeholder'
approach to internet governance. So the status quo is unsatisfactory,
the alternatives are worrisome, and attempts at 'enhanced cooperation'
within existing frameworks (for instance, through India's proposal for
IGF reforms) have failed to find enough backers. Given this, a CIRP-like
mechanism might well be the preferred option. Importantly, a singular
body within the UN system for internet policy could help ensure that
other UN agencies which are even less 'multistakeholder' don't overstep
their mandates and start making regulations all by themselves.\
However, the current CIRP proposal lacks many safeguards that would
allay the fears expressed by those who oppose it as 'government control
of the internet'. First, while the Indian government has, in its
proposal, laid out the CIRP's mandate, it has not laid out the limits of
its powers in carrying out that mandate. Second, the CIRP is currently a
government body that is merely 'advised' by various stakeholders, with
nothing to indicate that this advice will be heeded. This is
unsatisfactory, given the internet policy transgressions that are
committed by various national governments, as seen, say, in Iran or
China. Arguments that the UN system is nation-state-centric do not
suffice, since processes that aren't nation-state-centric, such as the
Internet Governance Forum, are also being spearheaded by the UN.

If such criticism is addressed, then the CIRP should indeed be welcomed.
But we should also be realistic. Governments are effectively being asked
to cede certain aspects of sovereignty by being told that the internet
is a phenomenon that traditional approaches to policymaking just cannot
address. They will not do so easily.

Further, the reality of international realpolitik must be acknowledged -
about governments actually following the CIRP. The US, for instance,
regularly ignores rulings by the ICJ and the WTO with impunity.

More importantly, and as some cyberlibertarians like Milton Mueller and
Adam Thierer remind us, 'multistakeholderism' is only a process
(involving multiple stakeholders), and does not provide substantive
principles for internet governance (when may websites be blocked, for
instance;or who should control the domain name system). Such sobering
realpolitik, Mueller believes, is reason enough to be sceptical of the
CIRP proposal as it currently stands. He may well be right.

But given the current trend of states individually wielding excessive
powers over various aspects of how their citizens access and use the
internet, a CIRP-like body may well be what is needed to safeguard
democratic principles and innovation on the internet.

**The writer is with the Centre for Internet and Society, Bangalore**
