The web may be thought of as being worldwide, but from its inception the internet was created, controlled and overseen largely by a single country: the United States. Now, however, the US Government has said it intends to yield the reins to the global digital community.
The US Commerce Department has announced that it has asked the California-based Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (Icann) to plan a handover to an as-yet-undefined group consisting of both private and public "stakeholders".
Fadi Chehad, the president and chief executive of Icann, said: "We are inviting governments, the private sector, civil society, and other internet organisations from the whole world to join us in developing this transition process All stakeholders deserve a voice in the management and governance of this global resource as equal partners."
Observers say the decision was prompted by the whistle-blower Edward Snowden's recent revelations, and that the subsequent backlash may have forced the administration to relinquish its historical control over the administration of the internet. As Rob Atkinson, of the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, a Washington DC think-tank, put it, the US is "giving up its traditional 'bodyguard' role of Internet governance".
The internet was developed as a US Defence Department initiative during the 1960s, and it remained an American project even as it grew into a global consumer tool. In order to maintain a unified, worldwide web, a single master list of web addresses was created, called the Domain Name System (DNS). Jon Postel, a computer scientist at the University of California in Los Angeles, was the first person responsible for DNS, a privilege that earned him the nickname "God".