U.S. sets date to cede control of key internet function

After a years-long transition, the U.S. will finally transfer control of the IANA function -- the "address book of the internet" -- to a global, multistakeholder organization.

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After a years-long transition, the U.S. has finally agreed to cede control of a key piece of the global internet's backbone. The National Telecommunications and Information Agency announced that it would not renew the contract that maps web addresses to numerical nodes on the internet.

The so-called IANA function (short for Internet Assigned Numbers Authority) has been contracted out by the U.S. government since the dawn of the public internet. The entity that handles the contract, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, has been retooled to take over the function on its own.

The move has been in the works since March 2014, when NTIA first announced its intention to cede the IANA function to a non-governmental organization. While privatization of the IANA function was part of the U.S. plan for the internet, it was accelerated by the Edward Snowden revelations about government surveillance of online communications.

The process has faced some headwinds, including opposition from congressional Republicans, who feared that a lack of U.S. control would lead to the increased influence from Russia and China over the openness of the global internet.

NTIA Director Lawrence Strickling announced that the U.S. would allow the current IANA contract to lapse on Oct. 1, and that ICANN would be taking over the important technical function the contract covered, "barring any significant impediment."

In an Aug. 16 blog post, Strickling wrote, "The IANA stewardship transition represents the final step in the U.S. government’s long-standing commitment, supported by three Administrations, to privatize the Internet’s domain name system."