APNIC 60 concluded with discussions on internet governance, IPv6 adoption, and a new NRO NC member election.
Browsing: ICANN
Mauritius’ intervention in AFRINIC elections risks Africa’s internet growth and sets a dangerous precedent for global governance.
AFRINIC’s future as ICANN faces claims of interference. African members warn that outside control could threaten digital sovereignty.
AFRINIC’s annulled election deepens its governance crisis. ICANN faces backlash over overreach in Africa’s internet governance.
AFRINIC’s annulled election sparks dissolution calls as Lindqvist’s new governance document deepens Africa’s internet crisis.
AFRINIC’s collapse is driven by five actors whose actions undermine law and governance, endangering Africa’s internet.
ICANN’s expanding powers threaten Internet governance, shifting authority from regional registries to centralized control.
Extending AFRINIC’s receiver mandate without consent erodes legality and trust—threatening Africa’s internet governance.
AFRINIC’s governance collapse threatens global internet stability—rule-based reform is essential for safeguarding address allocation systems.
Mauritius’ political interference in AFRINIC elections undermines rule of law and sets a dangerous precedent for African Internet governance.
Nomination Committees, intended as impartial gatekeepers, have been compromised by political capture—undermining AFRINIC’s rule of law.
Mauritian civil society safeguards AFRINIC’s neutrality by opposing unconstitutional annulments and protecting true member-driven governance.