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April 28th, 2008

Is Balkanization of the Internet inevitable?

Posted by Larry Dignan @ 4:40 am

Categories: General, Government, Web Technology

Tags: Web, Russia, Internet, Government, Larry Dignan

The openness of the Internet could fall to nationalism.

That’s just one of the side effects from nationalism and its impact on global trade, according to the Wall Street Journal. The Journal in its Monday edition zoomed out to look at the rise of nationalism. After all, talk of free trade has been shouted down. Governments are raising barriers across economic and political frontiers and entering daily lives more. And the world is becoming much less flat contrary what the New York Times’ Thomas Friedman argues.

All of this nationalism back and forth has an impact on the Internet. The Journal reports:

National boundaries are going up even on the Internet, the emblem of the borderless world. The Internet was designed to be beyond the reach of governments, shifting power to individuals or private organizations.

Now, pressured by Russia, China, India and Saudi Arabia, the U.S. company that assigns Internet addresses is working on ways for countries to use characters from their home languages. The familiar .org, .com and country codes in Web addresses will be replaced with their equivalents in Chinese, Hindi and many other languages. While that should help locals navigate the Web, it would also put many sites behind curtains to users from abroad. That would spell the end of the days when anyone with a keyboard that produces Latin letters can see sites in any land — essentially taking the “world wide” out of the World Wide Web.

“We’re facing a step-by-step Balkanization of the global Internet,” says Columbia University law professor Tim Wu. “It’s becoming a series of national networks.”

The Internet address governing body is ICANN and the effort the Journal refers to is summarized in a draft report on its site. The comment period on the draft expired Friday.

This local language Internet address plan raises a series of interesting questions to ponder.

  • Is the world wide really being taken out of the World Wide Web?
  • Is this the Internet predisposed to favor Latin-derived addresses because the first efforts kicked off in the U.S.?
  • Doesn’t it make sense to help the locals navigate the Web?
  • Does this local character address plan really lead to a Balkanization of the Web?

There are no black and white answers to those questions. I’d argue there’s a big gray area with outcomes determined by governments and their nationalistic fervor. If you’re a company in Russia wouldn’t you want an address that has local characters–assuming you harbor no global business ambitions? The only way we’d wind up with a big wall around Russia would be if the government mandated addresses have local characters. It’s possible, but the multinationals would probably howl.

On paper, ICANN’s plan makes sense. However, the unintended consequences need to be monitored. In any case, the Journal story provides a lot of food for thought on a Monday morning.

Larry DignanLarry Dignan is Editor in Chief of ZDNet and Editorial Director of ZDNet sister site TechRepublic. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 12 Talkback(s)
Phonetic search engines would help...
If most people locate the websites they like by links on already known websites and from results in search engines, then I think this "danger" will be avoided. Search engines would allow for phonetic ... (Read the rest)
Posted by: MV_z Posted on: 04/30/08 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Language doesn't mean blocked  jfp | 04/28/08
Nothing to worry about here. The sites that would use these domain names  DonnieBoy | 04/28/08
What?  James T. Kirk | 04/28/08
It is about Balkanization of the Internet, and the risk is Microsoft, NOT  DonnieBoy | 04/28/08
If you're gonna spread the FUD...  Wolfie2K3 | 04/29/08
Not the most significant issue.  Anton Philidor | 04/28/08
important enough to bring up  Narr vi | 04/28/08
apology to Anton Philidor  Narr vi | 04/29/08
RE: Is Balkanization of the Internet inevitable?  grujakg | 04/29/08
It'll get worse, not better: Just watch Turkey  henrik@... | 04/29/08
Yes, and we will all be the worse for it  Dr_Zinj | 04/29/08
Phonetic search engines would help...  MV_z | 04/30/08

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