Any breakdown and there definitely will be no winners. Losers we all will be if the issue of control isn't sorted out soon.
The Internet belongs to all of us and should remain free from control the way it is. Whether the UN or anybody else, the issue here isn't of US dominance, the issue is of us, the users, who own a part of the Internet.
The issue is of keeping this free media alive the way it is. Puneet Mehrotra is a web strategist at www. More of a concept than an actual tangible entity, the Internet relies on a physical infrastructure that connects networks to other networks, writes Puneet Mehrotra.
Share Via. An Owner for the Internet Either nobody owns the Internet, or everybody owns the Internet, or something in between. The Battle of Control The Internet is a free media and an ultimate celebration of the free world. Chaos Internet If US relinquishes control there is only one possible scenario.
Get our Daily News Capsule Subscribe. Thank you for subscribing to our Daily News Capsule newsletter. Whatsapp Twitter Facebook Linkedin. Sign Up. Edit Profile. Subscribe Now. Your Subscription Plan Cancel Subscription. Home India News Entertainment. HT Insight. My Account. A frustrated judge sentenced him to a month in jail, according to the Miami New Times. A month was enough. Khaled was scared straight. I just had to.
It was like a big switch just got flipped on in my head," Khaled writes in his book. He arrived in Miami in , according to the New Times. It was time for me to conquer Miami. I didn't know exactly how I was going to do it, but I knew I had to. Khaled struggled to get his career as a DJ off the ground.
He DJed anywhere he could pick up a gig, and lived between his girlfriend's mother's place and his black Honda Civic. Slowly, his career gained momentum. There was no social media yet, "But the word of mouth in the streets talked about it," he told NYC radio host Ebrohim "Ebro" Darden in Going city to city. On pirate radio, giving a beats CD, whatever! That's how I came up. In , 99 Jamz gave Khaled his own show, where he stayed for another 10 years, according to the New Times.
Gradually, Khaled got the idea that he wanted to produce his own music. In , he started We the Best. His first nationally recognized album, " We Takin' Over ," came out in and featured half a dozen guest appearances, including Lil Wayne, Birdman and Akon.
It's all I do," writes Khaled, "The Keys. Though Khaled didn't work his way up in an era where he could leverage social media, his fame has skyrocketed in the last couple of years because of it. Khaled joined the platform at the end of while spending some time at home recovering from being on the road, according to a interview with Ebro. Khaled shared his daily routines, inviting fans into the more personal aspects of his life. While posting videos of himself doing everything from watering his plants to giving pop-psychology ruminations on success, Khaled was becoming a bona fide Snapchat star.
It took him from a well-known name in the hip hop world to a staple influencer for the millennial set. He went to the mall to get it fixed. Suddenly, he was surrounded.
Shortly thereafter, he was in Las Vegas for work and was again startled by a crowd gathered at his hotel. Khaled went so far as to broadcast the birth of his son on Snapchat. At just 1 year old, Asahd is already a phenom on social media with 1. I bring joy and light," Khaled told Rolling Stone shortly after having his son. If you thought I was going hard before, now I'm going super hard.
Part of what has made Khaled such a breakout sensation on the platform is that signature casual, positive language of success. He uses it with his followers, calling his lessons "the keys" hence the title of his book and his liberal use of key emojis. For example, Khaled always talks about the importance of staying away from naysayers, who he calls "they.
Who owns the Internet? The answer is no one and everyone. The Internet is a network of networks. Each of the separate networks belongs to different companies and organizations, and they rely on physical servers in different countries with varying laws and regulations.
But without some common rules and norms, these networks cannot be linked effectively. Fragmentation — meaning the end of the Internet — is a real threat. But further expansion is not guaranteed. The movement toward sovereign control of the Internet is growing, and a degree of fragmentation already exists. Many governments censor services that they think threaten their political control. While the world could muddle along this path, a great deal will be lost and many will be left behind.
Until recently, the debate about the most appropriate approach to Internet governance revolved around three main camps. The first, multi-stakeholder approach, originated organically from the community that developed the Internet, which ensured technical proficiency but not international legitimacy, because it was heavily dominated by American technocrats.
A second camp favored greater control by the International Telecommunications Union, a United Nations specialized agency, which ensured legitimacy but at the cost of efficiency.
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