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US plan to end ICANN oversight could lead to 'Net censorship, lawmakers say

A U.S. National Telecommunications and Information Administration plan to end its formal relationship with the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers could open the door to Internet censorship by China, Russia or Iran, some U.S. lawmakers said.

The NTIAs plan to end its 16-year oversight of ICANN could embolden those countries to seek greater control of the Internet domain name system, several Republican members of a U.S. House of Representatives Energy and Commerce subcommittee said during a hearing Wednesday.

Representative Steve Scalise, a Louisiana Republican, questioned whether the NTIA plan, announced last month, contains assurances against an ICANN takeover by countries that want to censor the Internet. Russia and China have made it very clear they want to suppress freedom, he said. Russia and China have proven to be very resourceful in trying to figure out what that process is so they can manipulate it.

Under the NTIAs plan, the agency contract with ICANN to operate key domain-name functions would be allowed to expire, if the Internet community comes up with an acceptable alternative. The NTIA will not accept a transition proposal from ICANN that has government control as its outcome, agency administrator Lawrence Strickling said. Period. End of story, so it wont happen.

Some countries have been trying to influence ICANNs process for years without success, added Fadi Chehad, ICANNs president and CEO. ICANNs community has not allowed that to happen, he said.

No one has yet explained to me the mechanism by which any of these individual governments could somehow seize control of the Internet as a whole, Strickling added.

Still, some lawmakers questioned why the NTIA needs to end its contract with ICANN for the organization to operate the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) functions. Whats so wrong with the current system that we want to change it? said Representative Joe Barton, a Texas Republican.

The NTIA proposal would make good on a long-time promise to transfer ICANN oversight to the Internet community, Chehad said. In addition, the plan would take away a perception in some parts of the world that the U.S. government controls Internet governance, even though the NTIA role is largely symbolic at this point, he said.

The change sends the right message to the world that the U.S. government trusts a multistakeholder model of governance by the Internet community, he said.

Some Republicans called for the NTIA and ICANN to slow down the process. One possible date for a transition would be in September 2015, when the NTIAs IANA contract with ICANN expires, Strickling said.

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US plan to end ICANN oversight could lead to 'Net censorship, lawmakers say

Cambodian Police Beat Back Protests for TV License – Video


Cambodian Police Beat Back Protests for TV License
Prime Minister Hun Sen #39;s government maintains tight media control.

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Cambodian Police Beat Back Protests for TV License - Video

Senate report: CIA has been lying about torture – Video


Senate report: CIA has been lying about torture
The CIA has been misleading Congress and the public about its interrogation practices for years, according to The Washington Post. Post reporters spoke with ...

By: worldnewsstoday

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Senate report: CIA has been lying about torture - Video

Spredfast, Mass Relevance Unite Social Marketing Systems

Social media marketing firms Spredfast and Mass Relevance announced a merger today. Spredfast, whose CEO Rod Favaron will lead the joint company, helps brands manage their social content and plan engagement with their fans and followers.

Mass Relevance is a firm that helps brands curate social media content and display it on TV and on screens out of home. Mass Relevance recently committed to displaying strictly Twitter content on major network broadcasts, a deal that speaks to the social media rivalry for control of the TV.

We built Mass Relevance to connect relevant conversations from social networks and fuse them into a customer's brand story, CEO Sam Decker said in a press release today.

The companies shared an investor in Austin Ventures. The merged company will retain the Spredfast name.

The social media management space has been in consolidation mode with firms uniting to offer all the monitoring, activity and data needs in one place for advertisers. In another example, Sprinklr bought Dachis Group earlier this year.

Last month, Google shut down Wildfire, a social management platform that left a number of brands looking for new partners to help store troves of consumer data, which they harvest during digital marketing campaigns.

Brands increasingly need to take control of their social channels, which are ever changing and sometimes throwing up challenges, such as Facebooks evolving News Feed, which now limits the spread of unpaid messages.

The social media technology companies help brands manage the data about fans and followers in ways that make advertisers less beholden to a single channel to reach consumers.

Spredfast and Mass Relevance have worked with brands, including AT&T, Target, Whole Foods, Pepsi, GE, Campbells, Warner Bros. and Walgreens.

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Spredfast, Mass Relevance Unite Social Marketing Systems

Lisa Bloom on TYTs Attacks Prosecution as Racist? Pt 1 Trayvon Martin George Zimmerman – Video


Lisa Bloom on TYTs Attacks Prosecution as Racist? Pt 1 Trayvon Martin George Zimmerman
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Lisa Bloom on TYTs Attacks Prosecution as Racist? Pt 1 Trayvon Martin George Zimmerman - Video