Iran urges UN action to stop "defamation" of Islam, "Net Neutrality",...., the Art of Astrology - World Interest"/>

22 June 2006

Iran urges UN action to stop "defamation" of Islam


By Robert Evans

GENEVA (Reuters) - Iran backed efforts by Islamic states on Thursday to get the United Nations new Human Rights Council to counter what they call "defamation of religion" around the world.

But Canada accused the Iranians of discrediting the Council by including in their delegation the state Prosecutor-General who Ottawa says was linked to the arrest and death in Tehran of a Canadian woman journalist.

Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki told the 45-member Council, holding its first-ever session, that freedom of expression "should not constitute a pretext and a platform to insult religions and their sanctities.

"Defamation of religions, particularly the divine message of Islam, should be rejected," he declared. Action on this should be part of the rights standards set by the Council and pursued thr

01 June 2006

"Net Neutrality",....

In one of the most visible signs of strain yet, millions of U.S. internet customers saw large swaths of the web suddenly go dark last October. The culprit wasn't an errant backhoe slicing through a fiber-optic cable or some other physical breakdown in the network. Rather, it was the result of a business dispute between Level 3 and Cogent Communications -- two of the biggest internet backbone providers in the United States.

A similar breakdown roiled internet service for PSINet customers in 2001, when Cable & Wireless temporarily severed a peering agreement.

While ISPs generally pledge to carry traffic over each other's networks, they have wide latitude to set their own policies. For example, many ISPs attempt to filter peer-to-peer traffic and spam -- tactics that often land squarely in unregulated gray zones.

Verizon, for one, is mired in a lawsuit stemming from year-and-a-half-old allegations that it improperly blockaded all e-mail from parts of Europe and Asia in a bid to cut down on spam. A settlement agreement that was close to completion was postponed earlier this month by class-action lawyers eager to investigate new allegations of e-mail blocking in the United States.

By Michael Grebb| Also by this reporter
02:00 AM May, 31, 2006
WASHINGTON -- "Net neutrality" could be the most potent rallying cry for internet regulation in years.

Wired news story,..