Sean Aylward Smith on Tue, 20 Oct 1998 10:29:39 +0200 (MET DST) |
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Re: <nettime> DNS: Long Winded and Short Sighted |
i dont really know enough to take sides in the DNS debate, and i sure as hell dont want to get caught up in a proxy fight between <nettime> and <nettime.free>, but there are a few points worth making. firstly: pg stated that: 'If users want vanity license plates, then they should have them. If business want their trademark as their web address, then they should have them.' sorry, but personal (or corporate) desire is NOT a good enough reason to make public policy. even liberal political theory recognises this to be the case: its why Hobbes devised his Leviathan and Garrett Hardin wrote 'The Tragedy of the Commons'. such (bourgeois) arguments about 'free choice' always end with (bourgeois) problems of 'scarcity': if we all want the same thing, how do we adjudicate who gets it? and the answer is always resolved as 'whoever has the most power'. because this rhetoric of 'free choice' always masks the fact that one's ability to make a choice is always constrained by one's ability to enforce it. as existing intellectual property disputes have shown, even if i _want_ mcdonalds.com or me.mcdonalds, im not going to get it because the representatives of ronald will sue my arse - and win - for breach of copyright and trademark infringement. secondly: tb argues (i think) that we dont need infinite TLD's cos we can have '6gj-ud8kl.com' with, as i read it, a concommitant understanding that advances in name recognition search engines would make unnecessary the knowledge of the actual domain name (in much the same way as the current DNS makes knowing IP addresses unnecessary). however, doesnt this just defer the question of (again) intellectual property infringement from the DNS system to the searcg engine? if i search for 'FEED' am i going to be sent to 'www.feed.com'; 'www.feedmag.com'; 'www.feed.com.au'; etc...? thirdly: pg argues that: 'With the stroke of a delete key, whole countries can be blacked out from the rest of the net. With the "." centralized, this is easily done. With the "." decentralized such a deletion is not unilaterally possible. Control the "." and you control access.' has this been done? (this is a serious question: contrast it with access to newsgroups, which is defined by webmasters, much as pg seems to be suggesting DNS access should be. personally, i trust a committee of competing interests (even if only corporate interests) to not restrict my access to individual sites or entire domains far more than i trust individual webmasters and site owners. my ISP, for example, restricts access to a whole heap of the 'alt.' newsgroups - what is to stop them from restricting all my access to '.za' or '.de' for example? (more concretely: german authorities have being trying to shut down - without much success - access to illegal (in germany, that is) kurdish politcal groups based out of '.nl' sites. if they (or the webmasters under their national jurisdiction - the same thing) control the '.', they control access... dont they?) sure, i can reroute my newsgroups and presumably domain name access with a bit of knowledge, but lets be clear about this: 'deregulating' DNS control is an argument for reifying internet access according to yr possession of the necessary cultural capital. its an argument for _restricting_ access, not expanding it. it is, in fact, an argument about privatising (and thus stratifying) a public domain for to facilitate the extraction of surplus value for private benefit. or at least thats the way it sounds ;) sean smith --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl