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Homeland
Security wants master key for the Internet
The Inquierer | April 2, 2007
By Nick Farrell
THE US Department of Homeland
Security is insisting that Verisign hand over the master keys of the
Internet.
If it succeeds, the US will be
able to track DNS Security Extensions (DNSSec) all the way back to
the servers that represent the name system's root zone on the
Internet.
Effectively it would mean that US
spooks could snoop on anyone in the Worldwide wibble and place
control of the Interweb tubes firmly in the paws of the US
government.
The information that Homeland
security is after the "key-signing key", currently held by Verisign,
was revealed to the the meeting of the Internet Corporation for
Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) in Lisbon.
Not surprisingly other countries
in the world are a little concerned about this. According to the
German magazine Heise Online, a representative of the EU Commission
said that the matter is being discussed with EU member states.
The Internet Assigned Numbers
Authority (IANA), which handles route management within the ICANN,
could be entrusted with the task of keeping the keys. But the US
authorities claims the right to oversee ICANN/IANA.
English version of the story
here.
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