The National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) sparked a fire when it issued a request for comments (RFC) on its policy of turning DNS management over to the private sector:

In June 1998, the Department issued a statement of policy on the privatization of the Internet DNS, which among other things articulated four primary functions for global Internet DNS coordination and management, the need to have these functions performed by the private sector and four principles to guide the transition to private sector management of the Internet DNS.

On June 30, 2005, NTIA released the U.S. Principles on the Internet’s Domain Name and Addressing System, which provides in general: the United States Government intends to preserve the security and stability of the Internet DNS by maintaining its historic role in authorizing changes or modifications to the authoritative root zone file; governments have legitimate interest in the management of their country code top level domains (ccTLD); ICANN (the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers) is the appropriate technical manager of the Internet DNS; and dialogue related to Internet governance should continue in relevant multiple fora.

Anti-ICANN forces seized the day. The Internet Governance Project (IGP) whipped up a boilerplate message that allows the angry-and-impotent to lash out at the press of a button.

“IGP is urging Internet users everywhere to respond to the NTIA request for comments with the following statement:”

The Internet’s value is created by the participation and cooperation of people all over the world. The Internet is global, not national. Therefore no single Government should have a pre-eminent role in Internet governance.

As the US reviews its contract with ICANN, it should work cooperatively with all stakeholders to complete the transition to a Domain Name System independent of US governmental control.

To help IGP demonstrate the power of a concentrated anti-ICANN effort, DNS watchdog ICANNwatch pushed its readers to deploy IGP’s powerful and insightful boilerplate, reasoning:

It will make it clear to the USG (US government) that its current insistence on unilateral governmental control is not where things should remain. It is particularly important to make the point that the US government’s global authority over Internet governance is not matched by any global accountability mechanisms.

After members of the combined groups mercilessly pounded the besieged bureaucrats for four torturous weeks, Email Battles took stock of the carnage.

All told, NTIA mail servers were forced to deal with… sixty comments. All but one were negative. The non-negative message was from an ITU official saying, in effect, “We’ll work with whatever kind of sausage you grind out.”

Fifty-six were unadulterated IGP boilerplate, offering no insight and shining no light. Fourteen actually came from individuals who were presumably eligible to vote in the US.

Frankly, if I was the US-owned bureaucrat doing the tally, I’d throw out all but fourteen, then ignore any remaining commenters who weren’t smart enough to think for themselves, leaving just three messages from sentient beings… but that’s just me.

Nevertheless, you still have time to send in your boilerplate.

No waiting.

Email Battles Backgrounder: