21 Sept 2008

The UN and the End of Anonymous Internet Communications

An alarming report shows that the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), the United Nations agency that coordinates global telephony policy, is quietly working to make anonymous Internet use impossible. 

The ITU’s "IP Traceback" proposal would enable governments (and some big companies) to spy on every individual’s Internet use via embedding specific technical standards in Internet communications protocols.  The surveillance proposal was originally sponsored by the Chinese government, but now the US National Security Agency (NSA) is one of it’s biggest proponents.   Companies such as Cisco Systems and VeriSign are also working closely with the ITU, NSA, and Chinese government to install this global spy network in the "Q6/17 Drafting Group". 

Anonymous communication is a well-recognized  and protected legal right in international treaties (such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights) and many national constitutions (such as the US), so it is deeply concerning that these governments are undermining the rights of their citizenry to communicate via the Internet.

Here are some more sources of information about the development of the standard directly from the ITU:

Rutkowski: IP traceback & callerID (pdf)

ITU meeting docs

Anonymous_Speech[1]

source: IP Justice

Also see: Remaining Anonymous on the Internet Might Soon Disappear! U.N. Agency Eyes Curbs on Internet AnonymityLoose Change