CrazyTech said:
Actually your determination to slant the comments of everyone on the board is the only laughable material here.
Me slanting? Pardon me, but this isn't slanting, but debating the issue. Thinking the opposite than you isn't right away slanting.
I ask that you at least respond to what I say and don't turn it into something else like you love doing in your little rampant tirades.
If you re-read this thread with unbiased thought, you see many other comments which could be seen too as tirades, if you so please to see them as.
1) Let me clarify my statement for politically correct reasons. English speaking traffic conducts the majority of ecommerce on the web. Its obvious from domains alone that English domains are the ones selling for the big bucks. Check DNJ if you don't believe me. Obviously, I didn't say that English users are somehow superior to everyone else. If I said that, please point it out.
Actually your response points out the wrong whing. You nor I never refered to ecommerce. Your post clearly refered to English speaking Internet users in general. Domain names and ecommerce have nothing to do with your comment. Nada. And yes, from a domaining point of view, the North American market is inevitably the largest and most crucial one.
2) Internet usage is not a priority in the developing world and it is absurd so somehow say that it is. People in the developing third world nations aren't starving for the internet and you're the one telling me that I can live without it. Thanks for the laugh. Perhaps the proverbial look in the mirror is in order.
I didn't say it's vital. You actually now totally dismiss the sentence in which I said it's not of great importance in extreme poverty. However you can't say, which you basically did, your Internet usage is more justified than someone using Google in a mudhut in Togo. Perhaps it's more plausible in some sense, but certainly you shouldn't look down at the man in the mudhut.
3)However, my original point, in which you apparently completely missed in your desire to twist and maim posts still goes back to the fact that there is currently no problem with the internet. Everyone who needs it has access to it including terrorist organizations and individuals. That's pretty much the ultimate sign of free internet usage. The same people who make it a habit to kill and maim have access and run websites.
Your original point? Well, certainly you now changed it to civil liberties from something else. As for claiming there's nothing wrong with the Internet as it is, I'm sure zounds of people disagree with you. We could even have a poll here and see what people think. My guess is some 75-80% saying the Internet isn't okay as it is. Some mention contents that they find frivolous, some mention illegal online file sharing, some mention pedophiles, some say the Internet isn't good to manage the fast groving load of new users, some find ICANN to be slow and fuzzy, some find it to be far too US centric, etc. Apparently something must be wrong if people think there's something wrong with it.
As for an ICANN prospective on what's wrong with the Net and ICANN, I already made a list of issues which have been also in the past recognised in discussions on eg. NamePros. Or dig up more in ICANNWatch or Slashdot.
It's more than hilarious to see you get amused, while actually I did make a point, which does have validity when it comes to if there's trouble with the Internet as it is.
Actually, it's more like a sound politician and businessman not taking apart and potentially compromising something that currently works just fine.
Well, it works to a point, but beyond that, future development seems vague and neither do they clearly have all the necessary means as it is to develop the Net freely.
Especially to hand it over to hands that seem to be washed in corruption. The UN has no credibility during these investigations and the EU is just as selfish in motive as they accuse of the US of being if not far worse. Sounds like organizations I want in charge.
As I gave already examples about corruption in the US, you must realise that nor is your federation of 50 states holier than the EU or the UN. All three are of course about as self-centric. That's why there's a need for a globally mutual body to govern it.